Broad, inflexible and redundant?: Fixing the anti-avoidance rule in Section 75A Finance Act 2003

Sections 75A - 75C of the Finance Act 2003 (‘the Sections’) were enacted with the intention of countering schemes that have the effect of reducing Stamp Duty Land Tax (‘SDLT’) liability. These sections were subjected to criticism right from the start, with practitioners noting its exceptionally broa...

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Main Author: OOI, Vincent
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2015
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/2788
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/4746/viewcontent/Broad_inflexible_redundant_fixing_anti_avoidance_rule.pdf
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sol_research-47462018-10-23T05:47:40Z Broad, inflexible and redundant?: Fixing the anti-avoidance rule in Section 75A Finance Act 2003 OOI, Vincent Sections 75A - 75C of the Finance Act 2003 (‘the Sections’) were enacted with the intention of countering schemes that have the effect of reducing Stamp Duty Land Tax (‘SDLT’) liability. These sections were subjected to criticism right from the start, with practitioners noting its exceptionally broad scope and some going so far as to call it ‘fundamentally deficient’ and ‘almost unworkable in practice’. The recent decisions of the First-Tier Tribunal in Project Blue Ltd v Revenue and Customs Commissioners (‘Project Blue FTT’) and its subsequent appeal to the Upper Tribunal in Project Blue Ltd v Revenue and Customs Commissioners (‘Project Blue UT’) have since provided some clarification about the interpretation of the scope of the Sections.The article will focus on the three main flaws of the Sections, as elucidated from the interpretation of the court in Project Blue: 1) the lack of discretion for HMRC to determine the cases to apply the Section to; 2) their excessively broad scope; and 3) the lack of flexibility in determining the consideration paid for the land. The article will then concentrate on four potential solutions to the problem of the excessively broad scope of the Sections. It will be argued that the scope of the Sections could be narrowed by: 1) a greater exercise of the powers of the Treasury to widen the scope of exceptions; 2) restoring the power of discretion to HMRC on when to apply the Sections (preferably by amending the statute based on the current General Anti-Avoidance Rule (‘GAAR’)); 3) refining the requisite connection test and basing it on whether the transaction is in substance one of the disposal and acquisition of land; or 4) accepting motive as a regulatory mechanism. 2015-09-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/2788 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/4746/viewcontent/Broad_inflexible_redundant_fixing_anti_avoidance_rule.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Tax Law Stamp Duty Land Tax Anti-Avoidance Tax Law
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Tax Law
Stamp Duty Land Tax
Anti-Avoidance
Tax Law
spellingShingle Tax Law
Stamp Duty Land Tax
Anti-Avoidance
Tax Law
OOI, Vincent
Broad, inflexible and redundant?: Fixing the anti-avoidance rule in Section 75A Finance Act 2003
description Sections 75A - 75C of the Finance Act 2003 (‘the Sections’) were enacted with the intention of countering schemes that have the effect of reducing Stamp Duty Land Tax (‘SDLT’) liability. These sections were subjected to criticism right from the start, with practitioners noting its exceptionally broad scope and some going so far as to call it ‘fundamentally deficient’ and ‘almost unworkable in practice’. The recent decisions of the First-Tier Tribunal in Project Blue Ltd v Revenue and Customs Commissioners (‘Project Blue FTT’) and its subsequent appeal to the Upper Tribunal in Project Blue Ltd v Revenue and Customs Commissioners (‘Project Blue UT’) have since provided some clarification about the interpretation of the scope of the Sections.The article will focus on the three main flaws of the Sections, as elucidated from the interpretation of the court in Project Blue: 1) the lack of discretion for HMRC to determine the cases to apply the Section to; 2) their excessively broad scope; and 3) the lack of flexibility in determining the consideration paid for the land. The article will then concentrate on four potential solutions to the problem of the excessively broad scope of the Sections. It will be argued that the scope of the Sections could be narrowed by: 1) a greater exercise of the powers of the Treasury to widen the scope of exceptions; 2) restoring the power of discretion to HMRC on when to apply the Sections (preferably by amending the statute based on the current General Anti-Avoidance Rule (‘GAAR’)); 3) refining the requisite connection test and basing it on whether the transaction is in substance one of the disposal and acquisition of land; or 4) accepting motive as a regulatory mechanism.
format text
author OOI, Vincent
author_facet OOI, Vincent
author_sort OOI, Vincent
title Broad, inflexible and redundant?: Fixing the anti-avoidance rule in Section 75A Finance Act 2003
title_short Broad, inflexible and redundant?: Fixing the anti-avoidance rule in Section 75A Finance Act 2003
title_full Broad, inflexible and redundant?: Fixing the anti-avoidance rule in Section 75A Finance Act 2003
title_fullStr Broad, inflexible and redundant?: Fixing the anti-avoidance rule in Section 75A Finance Act 2003
title_full_unstemmed Broad, inflexible and redundant?: Fixing the anti-avoidance rule in Section 75A Finance Act 2003
title_sort broad, inflexible and redundant?: fixing the anti-avoidance rule in section 75a finance act 2003
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2015
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/2788
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/4746/viewcontent/Broad_inflexible_redundant_fixing_anti_avoidance_rule.pdf
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