Her Majesty’s Revenue & Customs 2013-14 accounts
4 Jul 2014 01:04 PM
Full report: Her
Majesty’s Revenue & Customs 2013-14
accounts
Amyas Morse, the Comptroller and
Auditor General, has issued a report on the 2013-14 accounts of HM Revenue
& Customs. The report describes how HMRC deploys its compliance resources
and measures and reports the impact of its compliance work. It also covers
HMRC’s progress in operating the PAYE service and its implementation of
its new Real Time Information service and its performance in tax collection and
in reducing error and fraud in personal tax credits.
Performance in
2013-14
HMRC received total tax revenue
of £506 billion, £30 billion (6.3 per cent) more than in 2012-13.
The taxes that contributed most of this increase are income tax and national
insurance which increased by £16.2 billion (6.4 per cent), VAT by
£7.2 billion (7.1 per cent) and stamp taxes which have significantly
increased by £3.4 billion (35.8 per cent). The value of debt either
written off or ‘remitted’ (not pursued by HMRC for reasons such as
hardship or value for money) during the year was £5.1
billion.
Compliance
yield
HMRC reported compliance yield
(the additional revenue it generates through its compliance activities) of
£23.9 billion in 2013-14 – its highest yield to date. The
Department has improved its measurement of compliance yield since 2010-11.
However, in response to the NAO’s review, HMRC found that, when it agreed
performance targets with the Treasury for the spending review period, it had
made errors that led it to set its baseline £1.9 billion too low. This
made the targets easier to achieve and led HMRC to report that it had exceeded
its performance targets by £1.9 billion in 2011-12 and £2 billion
in 2012-13 when in fact it had achieved almost exactly the level of performance
anticipated.
It also led to HMRC
inadvertently overstating the extent of the improvement in its performance when
comparing the years up to 2010-11 with the compliance yield it has generated
since. It has explained the implications of its error in this year’s
annual report and recognized that changes in its measurement methodology
prevent direct comparisons of the data over the long term. It has also accepted
the principle that there should be external scrutiny before it publishes data
on its compliance performance in future, and has invited the National Audit
Office to undertake this work.
Progress in performance of
tax systems since last year
HMRC continues to modernize PAYE
by rolling out its Real Time Information (RTI) system for all employers. HMRC
has announced a package of support for some smaller employers who have
experienced problems as they struggled to adapt their systems in
time.
The Department’s
‘tax debt’ has increased to £13.3 billion (from £12.2
billion last year); but it collected £39.6 billion in 2013-14 and focused
on clearing debt older than one year, resulting in the balance of this debt
falling to £3.7 billion (£4.2 billion last year).
The UK-Swiss Tax Agreement,
which came into force in January 2013, had brought in £1 billion by 31
March 2014, compared with the £5 billion HMRC had originally forecast it
would collect by March 2016, but in line with its updated forecast of
£1.7 billion.
Tax credits error and
fraud
The C&AG has qualified his
audit opinion on HMRC’s 2013-14 resource accounts because of material
levels of error and fraud in the payments of personal tax credits. This is the
third consecutive year he has qualified the accounts on these grounds. The
2012-13 error and fraud percentages (the last year available) equate to
payments of between £1.8 billion and £2.2 billion being made to
claimants incorrectly because of error or fraud and a further £70 million
to £320 million not being paid to claimants because of error. The overall
levels of error and fraud in finalised awards are significant within the
context of the £29 billion spent on personal tax credits in
2013-14.
Tax credits debts rose to
£5.5 billion at 31 March 2014 (up £0.7 billion from a year
earlier). HMRC has undertaken a detailed analysis of its success in pursuing
debts and believes that only 34 per cent of the balance is likely to be
recovered (31 per cent at 31 March 2013). HMRC is making increased use of
private sector debt collection agencies to recover tax credits debt and is on
target to achieve a return of £90 million, though recovery rates to date
of 18 per cent are well below the 30 per cent it originally
forecast.
“HMRC has been
broadly successful in meeting its objective of securing additional tax revenue
by investing in compliance projects, as measured by its estimates of compliance
yield. I am concerned, however, that an error of as much as £1.9 billion
in HMRC’s baseline calculation led it to report the trend in its
performance in a way that inadvertently exaggerated the improvement since
2010-11. I welcome HMRC’s decision to invite the National Audit Office to
provide independent assurance on the data it publishes on compliance revenue in
future, and the greater clarity and transparency about its performance that
HMRC has provided in this year’s annual
report”.
Amyas Morse, head of the
National Audit Office, 3 July 2014
Notes for
Editors
- Press notices and reports are
available from the date of publication on the NAO website, which is atwww.nao.org.uk. Hard copies can be obtained by using the relevant
links on our website.
- The National Audit Office
scrutinises public spending for Parliament and is independent of government.
The Comptroller and Auditor General (C&AG), Amyas Morse, is an Officer of
the House of Commons and leads the NAO, which employs some 820 employees. The
C&AG certifies the accounts of all government departments and many other
public sector bodies. He has statutory authority to examine and report to
Parliament on whether departments and the bodies they fund have used their
resources efficiently, effectively, and with economy. Our studies evaluate the
value for money of public spending, nationally and locally. Our recommendations
and reports on good practice help government improve public services, and our
work led to audited savings of £1.1 billion in 2013.