This is not my area but it suprised me a bit, so I did some digging...
That reads ambiguoulsy. It was publicly raised in August 2018:
The comment on the delay comes from the article linked to in the original article:
While this is dated 1 August 2019, the magazine has some long deadlines. It looks like the submissions were actually published on 28 May 2019, per the CIOT website. So not the longest delay. Obviously, I may not be right on this as there may be something else published later that also mentions MOO (this just isn't my area).
As an aside, there are regular meetings with HMRC and Treasury on various issues. Some can be discussed publicly. Some discussed under the Chatham House rules. Some cannot be discussed as a condition of having the meeting (e.g. when civil servants are shooting the breeze with furture changes or where they want to discuss draft legislation or draft amendments to Finance Bills). To me, this is entirely fair if you want workable policies and workable legislation.
This is not quite right. The draft Finance Bill is not before Parliament. It is a draft for public consultation. It will first go before Parliament when it is an actual Finance Bill.
Originally posted by JohntheBike
View Post
Originally posted by CIOT website
Originally posted by Tax Advisor Magazine
As an aside, there are regular meetings with HMRC and Treasury on various issues. Some can be discussed publicly. Some discussed under the Chatham House rules. Some cannot be discussed as a condition of having the meeting (e.g. when civil servants are shooting the breeze with furture changes or where they want to discuss draft legislation or draft amendments to Finance Bills). To me, this is entirely fair if you want workable policies and workable legislation.
Originally posted by JohntheBike
View Post
Comment