The R&D tax credit is one of the biggest scams around, actually.
The bulk of the qualifying expenditure is salaries, of course, so let's look at...
1) A large company. It pays a scientist £100,000 salary, on top of which it has to pay approx. £12,000 Employer's National Insurance during the course of the year. When it prepares its corporation tax return, it can reduce its taxable profits not just by the £112,000 but by an additional 30% thereof, so its corporation tax bill is reduced by 28% x 30% x £112,000 = £9,408, which is rather less than the Employer's National Insurance that it paid in the first place.
If you want to dot i's and cross t's, I suppose you could argue that the company also got 28% tax relief on the £12,000, which is another £3,360, bring the total relief to ever so slightly more than the Employer's National Insurance it paid, but it's one heck of a long way round.
2) A small or medium sized company which is in start-up mode and doesn't have taxable profits (yet) employing a scientist on the same salary as before. It can reclaim, in cash, a maximum of 14% x 75% x £112,000 = £11,760, a tad less than the Employer's National Insurance it paid. Again, one heck of a long way round.
Is it just me, or would it not be easier to just phase out Employer's National Insurance? Don't forget that the relief only applies to incorporated businesses - not sole traders or partnerships (or indeed LLPs, which don't count as incorporated for most tax purposes).
Virtuous can-kicking
22 minutes ago
5 comments:
I was aware it was a scam but it's nice to have some figures on that.
JH, always pleased to be of service.
"It pays a scientist £100,000 salary": that would be nice.
D, OK, £50,000, £20,000, make up your own starting figure, the end result is much the same.
Hmmm, not sure about other countries, but ... at least with regard to the R&D tax credit for U.S. companies (FYI), about 25% of U.S. companies claiming the Federal R&D credit are VERY small, with total assets under $1m. A much larger % of the total credits claimed are by companies still small with total employees under 100. The R&D credit program is far from a "hand out" for big corporations. My own firm, Tax Point Advisors,works with small to mid-size companies around the country - most companies are under $50m in revenues and many are under $20m. This IS an important part of stimulating jobs in the U.S., as companies which employee 100 or fewer workers account for about 70% of the workforce. And many of these companies can now qualify for RD credits. For more info, please visit us at www.taxpointadvisors.com or call us at 800-260-4138.
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