I hope you are keeping well.
13th January 2023 – Hillmans Weekly Update:
Welcome to our round-up of the latest business and tax news for our clients. Please contact us if you want to talk about how these updates affect you. We are here to support you!
I hope you have a good weekend.
Kind regards,
Steve
Steven Hillman BSc (Hons) ACA
Chartered Accountant
Tel: 01934 444100
https://www.hillmans.co.uk
2023 – A year for resilience?
Firstly, we wish all our clients a healthy
and prosperous New Year!
In 2022, despite the troubles with the
economy, we have been amazed at the resilience of our clients and how they have
energetically moved their businesses into new areas, products and services.
Many of our clients have redesigned delivery and payment systems, moved their
entire processes digital, accepted remote working and adopted to new
technologies to survive and indeed prosper.
You have demonstrated to us how we can all
readily adapt to a change in circumstances and have given us inspiration and
optimism for the future. We hope that by this time next year we will be back to
where we want to be, and the economy will return to some kind of normality
again.
For January we are encouraging all clients to
take time to prepare a 2023 Strategic plan and set up your targets for
success!
“A sailor without a destination
will never get a favourable wind”
It is easier to get to your destination with
a plan. We all know this simple truth. If you are driving from A to B it helps
to know where B is and the direction you need to take.
If you have a vision of what you want your
business to look like when it is “complete” then you are able to drive your
business towards the vision and you can monitor how you are doing as you go
along.
If you do not have a strategic plan, you
could get blown around like flotsam in the sea, “this way and that way”,
without any control.
If you agree it is hard to accomplish
anything without a plan, let’s start thinking about putting one in place. A
plan looks at all the things a business could do and narrows it down to the
things it is actually good at doing. A strategic plan also helps you determine
where to spend time, resources and money.
How do you do a strategic plan?
·
Take time to review your own
personal objectives – the business is there to provide you with what you want
from life; do not forget this.
·
Look at where you are now: your
strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats, so you have a clear
understanding of your position in the marketplace, the competition, your
systems, the way you do things, what you are good at, and what you are not.
·
Focus on where you want to be
(say) in 2 years: what you want your business to look like when it is running
profitably and successfully. Then you can determine your priorities – the big
issues that you need to focus on. This is the strategic plan!
·
Write down your vision and define
what you must achieve and the actions you need to take. Monitor how you are
doing each month, noting which actions have been completed and what needs to be
done to keep you moving forward.
·
Allocate responsibility for
taking the actions.
·
Review and adjust your regular
activities to keep you on track.
We have useful tools and
checklists to help you analyse where you are now, set a strategy, agree actions,
and monitor them. Please talk to us about how we can help you achieve your
goals – we have helped many other businesses grow and succeed!
More time to prepare for Making
Tax Digital for Income Tax Self-Assessment
The mandatory use of software for Making Tax
Digital for Income Tax Self-Assessment is being phased in from April 2026.
Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Income Tax
Self-Assessment (ITSA) was due to be phased in from April 2024. However, the
government, recognising the current economic environment and the significant
change that a transition to Making Tax Digital represents, has pushed this back
to April 2026. In addition, the previously announced £10,000 threshold for
self-employment and property income has been raised, as detailed below.
Under MTD for ITSA,
businesses, self-employed individuals, and landlords will keep digital records,
and send a quarterly summary of their business income and expenses
to HMRC using MTD-compatible software. In response, they will
receive an estimated tax calculation based on the information provided to help
them budget for their tax. At the end of the year, they can add any non-business
information and finalise their tax affairs. This will replace the need for a
Self-Assessment tax return.
Making Tax Digital from April
2026
From April 2026, self-employed individuals
and landlords with an income of more than £50,000 will be required to keep
digital records and provide quarterly updates on their income and expenditure
to HMRC through MTD-compatible software.
Making Tax Digital from April
2027
Those with an income of between £30,000 and
£50,000 will need to do this from April 2027. Most customers will be able
to join voluntarily beforehand, meaning they can eliminate common errors and
save time managing their tax affairs.
Income below the £30,000
threshold
The government has also announced a review
into the needs of smaller businesses, particularly those under the £30,000
income threshold. The review will consider
how MTD for ITSA can be shaped to meet the needs of these
smaller businesses and the best way for them to fulfil their Income Tax
obligations. It will also inform the approach for any further rollout
of MTD for ITSA after April 2027.
Mandating
of MTD for ITSA will not be extended to general
partnerships in 2025 as previously announced.
See: Government announces phased mandation of Making Tax
Digital for ITSA - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Safety net for Horizon Europe
applicants extended
The UK government has extended the Horizon
Europe guarantee to provide a financial safety net for successful Horizon
Europe applicants. The guarantee will be in place to cover all Horizon Europe
calls that close on or before 31 March 2023.
The extension will ensure that eligible
Horizon Europe awardees will continue to be guaranteed funding, supporting them
to continue their important work in research and innovation.
Eligible, successful Horizon Europe UK
applicants will receive the full value of their funding at their UK host
institution for the lifetime of the grant. Awardees will be able to remain in
the UK to receive this funding, which will provide reassurance for future
collaborations, and support UK researchers whether UK association to Horizon
Europe is confirmed, or otherwise.
See: Apply for Horizon Europe guarantee funding – UKRI
Government extends Mortgage
Guarantee Scheme
The Mortgage Guarantee Scheme will be
extended by a year to the end of December 2023, helping people with 5% deposits
on to the property ladder.
Under the scheme the government offers
lenders the financial guarantees they need to provide mortgages that cover the
other 95%, subject to the usual affordability checks, on a house worth up to
£600,000.
Launched in April 2021, the scheme has
already helped over 24,000 households. It was originally planned to close at
the end of 2022 but will now be extended until the end of 2023.
See: Government extends Mortgage Guarantee Scheme - GOV.UK
(www.gov.uk)
Know where your old stamps are?
Royal Mail are adding barcodes to their
regular stamps. After 31 January 2023, regular stamps without a barcode will no
longer be valid. You can either use up these stamps before this deadline or
swap them for the new barcoded ones.
The stamps that are changing are the stamps
(pictured below) that will be familiar to you. They feature the profile of Her
Late Majesty The Queen on a plain coloured background.
See: Know where your old stamps are? | Royal Mail Group Ltd
Consultation on R&D tax
reliefs draft guidance
HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) has published
draft guidance ahead of the implementation of reforms to the Research and
Development (R&D) tax reliefs on 1 April 2023
To ensure the guidance is as helpful as
possible, HMRC is inviting comments from any individuals or organisations who
make use of or provide tax agent services for R&D tax reliefs.
The guidance clarifies technical aspects of
how the reforms will work in practice and includes a list of the additional
information that will be required for claims.
See: Research and Development (R&D) tax reliefs - draft
guidance - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Customs Declaration Service
exporter deadline extended
Following consultation with the border
industry, exporters will now have until 30 November 2023 to move across to the
Customs Declaration Service (CDS), 8 months later than previously announced.
After 30 November 2023, businesses will need
to use CDS to make export declarations for goods they send out of the UK, as
they already do for import declarations.
CDS has been running since 2018 and is
already being used for making import declarations when moving goods into the
UK.
The service will replace the Customs Handling
of Import and Export Freight (CHIEF) service, representing a significant
upgrade by providing businesses with a more user-friendly, streamlined system
that offers greater functionality.
HMRC will provide further information about
the timeline for CDS exports by the end of January.
See: Customs Declaration Service - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Changes to flexible working
requests
Employees in Britain will be able to request
flexible working from day one of their employment, under new government plans
to make flexible working the default.
Flexible working doesn’t just mean a
combination of working from home and in the office – it can mean employees
making use of job-sharing, flexitime, and working compressed, annualised, or
staggered hours.
Workers on contracts with a guaranteed weekly
income on or below the Lower Earnings Limit will also be protected from
enforced exclusivity clauses, which restrict workers from having multiple
employers.
The new legislation, backed in the government’s
response to the Making flexible working the default consultation, will also remove
the requirement for employees to set out the effects of their flexible working
requests to employers.
Visas for seasonal workers
45,000 visas for seasonal workers will be
available for businesses this year, the UK Government confirmed, providing a
lift for the UK’s horticulture industry.
The allocation will allow businesses to
recruit foreign workers to come to the UK for up to six months through the
Seasonal Worker visa route – an uplift of 15,000 compared to what was available
to businesses at the start of 2022.
Businesses to be given UK product
marking flexibility
Businesses will be given an additional 2
years to apply new product safety marking.
The UK Conformity Assessed (UKCA) marking has
been introduced as part of the UK’s own robust regulatory framework. It shows
that products comply with product safety regulations which are designed to
protect consumers.
However, given the difficult economic
conditions the UK Government does not want to burden business with the
requirement to meet the original 31 December 2022 deadline.
The UK Government will continue to recognise
the CE marking for 2 years, therefore allowing businesses until 31 December
2024 to prepare for the UKCA marking. Businesses can also use the UKCA marking,
giving them flexibility to choose which marking to apply.
See: Businesses to be given UK product marking flexibility -
GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Help to Grow: Digital scheme
Help to Grow: Digital is a UK-wide scheme to
help small and medium-sized businesses adopt digital technologies proven to
increase productivity.
The scheme offers:
- free, impartial advice and guidance about what digital
technology is best suited to your business and how it can boost your
business' performance; and
- targeted financial support, if your business is
eligible, worth up to £5,000 towards the costs of buying approved digital
technologies.
Help to Grow: Digital will close to new
business applications for discounts on 2 February 2023. Discounts issued for
eligible software must be redeemed within 30 days from issue date.
See: Final opportunity for businesses to access Help to Grow:
Digital scheme - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Funding for novel, low-emission
food production systems
Part of Innovate UK’s Plan for Action, this
competition aims to support the development of novel production systems that
create new sources of resource efficient, low-emission foods, particularly
proteins, while delivering healthy and sustainable diets.
To be eligible, projects must progress
emerging novel food production systems towards commercial viability and ability
to supply mainstream consumer markets.
Projects must have the potential to
significantly shift the current state of the art in one or more of the
following six priority areas:
- plant based products or production systems;
- acellular food production, for example, algal,
bacterial or fungal fermentation systems;
- cellular food production, for example, cell culture
systems for meat production;
- novel aquaculture systems, for example, fin-fish and
shell-fish;
- new food production systems, for example, insect
farming, seaweed cultivation and other alternatives to traditional animal
production systems; or
- Total Controlled Environment Agriculture (TCEA)
systems.
The competition opens on 18 January and
closes on 19 April 2023.
For feasibility studies see: Competition overview - Novel, low-emission food
production systems: Feasibility studies - Innovation Funding Service
(apply-for-innovation-funding.service.gov.uk)
For industrial research see: Competition overview - Novel, low-emission food
production systems: Industrial research - Innovation Funding Service
(apply-for-innovation-funding.service.gov.uk)
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