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By: Tim Sarson

Tim Sarson is Head of tax policy at KPMG UK.

All 42 Articles
  • With no wiggle room to cut or raise taxes, it’s time to sweat the small stuff

    October 17, 2023

    When you have no room to make sweeping cuts, every change to taxes becomes hyper-political - like VAT on private schools or inheritance tax, writes Tim Sarson.

  • We’ve maxed out our credit card of taxes but we still need more cash

    September 19, 2023

    We can't raise taxes, but we need more money to fix our crumbling services.

  • We were never going to have a great British bonfire of the tax system after Brexit 

    August 15, 2023

    We have neglected to reintroduce VAT-free shopping for foreign tourists, doubtless to squeals of delight from shopkeepers in Milan or Paris. 

  • In loving memory of the Office of Tax Simplification – but hopefully not its dream

    July 19, 2023

    We should radically reshape our taxes, making the legislation a 20 page pamphlet - but we probably won't.

  • Fighting for low tax rates is so 2010, now the game is in offering the best incentives

    June 20, 2023

    Gone are the days when countries jostled for the lowest tax rate to attract investment, now companies are looking for the best packages of incentives, and governments are delivering, writes Tim Sarson

  • Our tax system is not as bad as we think – but it won’t be our magic bullet for growth

    May 16, 2023

    Our taxes are not attracting nor repelling many businesses; they sit somewhere in the middle. It's not that bad, but we shouldn't rely on our tax system to boost our economy any time soon, writes Tim Sarson

  • Businesses were hunting among the slim pickings for fresh cash to boost growth across the UK

    March 16, 2023

    There wasn't much fresh cash for businesses in yesterday's Budget. But it certainly showed a calmer approach after the political upheaval of only months ago, writes Tim Sarson

  • Appease the markets and his own party? Jeremy Hunt has a frightful task

    November 16, 2022

    Tomorrow, Jeremy Hunt needs to deliver a plan that both wins the confidence of the city – and the financial markets – and is politically palatable.   This comes off the back of a narrative which has converged around terms like “black holes” and “difficult decisions”. The emerging theme is that there is a gap in [...]

  • Uncertainty is a tax in itself which is damaging Britain on the world stage

    October 17, 2022

    Every now and then the normally dry subject of taxation makes it onto the front pages. It’s a short-lived chance for professionals like me to air our long-held views on the oddities, distortions and iniquities of the system: its head-scratching complexity and the patches of unfairness – between social classes, regions and age groups – [...]

  • Sunak wants to be a low-tax Tory but instead he’s following the US and picking winners

    March 25, 2022

    When Frank Sinatra first uttered the words “the best is yet to come”, the UK’s fiscal strategy probably couldn’t have been further from his mind. But the words ring true after a spring statement that did little to make life any easier for those of us who make a living trying to read the Chancellor’s [...]

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