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North Sea tax revenues plummet to negative for the first time in sector's history

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    North Sea tax revenues plummet to negative for the first time in sector's history

    An interesting read. So has the Chancellor planed for a further £3+billion loss in tax receipts for this bankrupt country?

    What happens when retail prices go the same way, as they've been recently threatening?

    What's next, housing?

    Printing money is not looking so hot now and there's no more road left to kick the can down.



    North Sea tax revenues plummet to negative for the first time in sector's history | Business | The Guardian

    North Sea tax revenues plummet to negative for the first time in sector's history

    Offshore supply ships in Aberdeen harbour.
    North Sea tax receipts have plunged into the red for the first time in the sector’s history after the steep decline in global oil prices.

    HM Revenue and Customs figures show that offshore corporation tax receipts for April to September were only £203m, compared with a six-monthly peak of £3.3bn in 2011. Petroleum revenue taxes for those six months stood at -£242m, compared with periods where PRT raised £577m in a single month.
    The latest figures for the most important North Sea tax revenues – corporation tax and petroleum revenue tax – show the sector effectively cost the taxpayer £39m over the first six months of this financial year.

    Excluding other minor tax receipts, which will be calculated by the Treasury at the end of the financial year and may see a small overall surplus, the North Sea generated negative tax receipts from April to September after oil prices again crashed to as low as $43 (£28) a barrel.

    The new data has shattered the most recent official forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility, which had predicted in July the sector would generate £700m for the Treasury this year, and undermined even more optimistic predictions by the Scottish government.

    John McLaren, an economist and honorary professor at Adam Smith business school at Glasgow university, said: “It may be the first time there has been a negative tax take over a six-month period and means it will be very difficult to attain even that £700m figure, which itself is much revised down from a year ago.”

    McLaren added that the latest data reinforced the fact that this was “nearing the end of the North Sea as a source of revenue” for the government. “Really, its future importance is in maintaining economic activity and retaining jobs,” he said.

    The figures imply that the sector will generate modest tax receipts this year, only 12 months after the Scottish National party promised voters North Sea oil would help fund independence. Scottish public spending far exceeds its tax revenues, with spending about £1,300 per head greater than the UK average.
    The Scottish government’s independence white paper released in November 2013 claimed that oil revenues for Scotland – which has a 90% geographical share of North Sea receipts – could hit £7.9bn in the financial year 2016/17 alone. That figure was based on a $113-a-barrel oil price.

    But, in June this year, after the first oil price slump to $40 a barrel, the Scottish government admitted that tax revenues would fall sharply for 2015. Scottish ministers urged the UK government to cut taxes and levies, and increase tax allowances, to help it limp through the crisis.

    Fergus Ewing, the Scottish energy minister, declined to make any statement on the fiscal impact of the negative tax revenues but confirmed that his SNP administration supported the UK government’s tax cuts and subsidies. He said those changes would eventually see the sector return to better health.

    “The fiscal reforms from the UK government, which the Scottish government has long called for, will encourage additional production and investment that will boost government revenues in the coming years,” Ewing said. Recent data suggested production was increasing, adding to the potential for higher tax receipts in future.

    A senior Conservative party source said the UK government was likely to forgo billions of pounds in taxation and in tax incentives for the sector to help it survive the slump in prices and the financial challenges posed by decommissioning old platforms.

    “Once again, this demonstrates the benefit of pooling resources and sharing risks across the UK and how the UK and Scottish government working together can best support one of our major sectors in the years and decades ahead,” he said.

    Jackie Baillie, Scottish Labour’s public services spokeswoman, said it was “remarkable” that the sector had effectively cost taxpayers money for the first time, adding that it raised challenging questions for the SNP’s promises during the independence referendum.

    “The dramatic collapse in the oil price, and the devastating impact this would have had on our ability to pay for schools and hospitals, shows we made the right decision to keep Scotland in the UK and reject the SNP’s fantasy economics,” she said. “The SNP government need to be transparent about Scotland’s finances and the impact falling oil revenues has.”
    "Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience". Mark Twain

    #2
    He will lose £1 bln on stamp duty for last year, and more this year unless he reduces crazy VAT like rates on purchases, in fact, it's worse than VAT - at least that is paid only once.

    Comment


      #3
      The end game is beginning to unfold. Increasing interest rates and inflation to erode our debt will no longer save us. The credit card bill is going to come in one day and we'll have a missed payment.

      I reckon it'll start when one of the rating agencies downgrades the UK.


      Good grief, does that look like a stable currency to you?

      Last edited by scooterscot; 20 January 2016, 07:09.
      "Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience". Mark Twain

      Comment


        #4
        Scottish independence is not looking so financially viable now is it...

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by SlipTheJab View Post
          Scottish independence is not looking so financially viable now is it...
          All it needs is courage.
          http://www.cih.org/news-article/disp...housing_market

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by SlipTheJab View Post
            Scottish independence is not looking so financially viable now is it...
            It never was and no doubt the Nats knew it, but still why let a small thing like finances get in the way of ego.
            In Scooter we trust

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by The Spartan View Post
              It never was and no doubt the Nats knew it, but still why let a small thing like finances get in the way of ego.
              Weren't the jocks banging on about how the oil revenues meant that they would be rolling in it (money not Brent crude) once free of the shackles of Westminster

              Comment


                #8
                The figures imply that the sector will generate modest tax receipts this year, only 12 months after the Scottish National party promised voters North Sea oil would help fund independence. Scottish public spending far exceeds its tax revenues, with spending about £1,300 per head greater than the UK average.
                The Scottish government’s independence white paper released in November 2013 claimed that oil revenues for Scotland – which has a 90% geographical share of North Sea receipts – could hit £7.9bn in the financial year 2016/17 alone. That figure was based on a $113-a-barrel oil price.
                the North Sea generated negative tax receipts from April to September after oil prices again crashed to as low as $43 (£28) a barrel.



                The Chunt of Chunts.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by PurpleGorilla View Post
                  All it needs is courage.
                  And someone stupid enough to underwrite Scotland

                  Don't all rush at once!
                  Socialism is inseparably interwoven with totalitarianism and the abject worship of the state.

                  No Socialist Government conducting the entire life and industry of the country could afford to allow free, sharp, or violently-worded expressions of public discontent.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by MicrosoftBob View Post
                    And someone stupid enough to underwrite Scotland

                    Don't all rush at once!
                    When it all goes t*ts up, it will give MM yet another thing to blame the boomers for
                    The Chunt of Chunts.

                    Comment

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