HM Revenue and Customs reckons a million employees still owe it money for 2010/11, though many more can expect a refund Up to 4.7 million people have paid the wrong amount of tax during the 2010-11 tax year, HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) has revealed. It estimates that about 1.2 million people have paid too little through the pay as you earn (PAYE) system, and owe an average of between £500 and £600, a total debt of around £660m. A larger number will receive good news in the next few months: they have paid too much tax and will receive a refund. HMRC says that between 1.7 million and 3.5 million people paid too much, and will be sent cheques for, typically, just under £340. The taxman will be hoping this disclosure will not trigger a repeat of the storm that blew up last September when it emerged that almost 6 million people had been caught up in what was dubbed a PAYE “tax blunder”. The Revenue said: “We are in a happier place than we were last September.” Every year, HMRC checks that the amount of tax and national insurance deducted by employers matches the information on its records. Last year, the department was bedding in a new IT system which trawled through all the tax records and discovered millions of discrepancies. It is about to begin the process for the 2010-11 tax year. The Revenue has long said the vast majority of the 40 million people who pay through PAYE are correctly taxed but, because people’s circumstances change during the year, there will always be a minority who have paid too much or too little. Those most likely to be affected are people who have changed jobs, taken on an extra source of income, received a new benefit through work or retired. HMRC said the range of 1.7 million to 3.5 million for those who have paid too much tax were “very much an estimate”. “We won’t know [the precise figure] until we have crunched the numbers, which will start from mid-July.” Those due a refund should receive it by the end of September. Last year the average overpayment was £340, but this year it is expected to be “a bit less”. The department will then concentrate on those who have underpaid tax. Last year the typical underpayment was £1,027. The vast majority of those affected will not get a bill – instead, their tax code will be changed. In effect, they will pay back what they owe via deductions from their salary during the 2012-13 tax year. By December, they should have received their “tax calculation” letter (form P800) giving more information. Note that HMRC is not referring to these as tax demands. “Most people have paid the right amount of tax so won’t get a letter from us with a revised tax calculation. So don’t worry if you don’t receive a letter,” it says. Last autumn it emerged that many people who owed tax would have their underpayments written off, after HMRC said it would not pursue cases where the amount owed was less than £300, but this concession will not be in place this year, and the threshold has gone back to the standard £50. The Revenue says it is sympathetic to cases of genuine hardship, and those who cannot afford to pay the tax should get in touch to see if it can come to some arrangement with them. Tax Rupert Jones guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Despite insults from a huge crowd of fuming shareholders, Tokyo Electric Power Co. voted down a motion to end the company’s stricken nuclear business. At its biggest-ever shareholder meeting, attended by more than 9,000, the firm also managed to appoint 17 board members, the New York Times reports. The…
Continue reading …Russian Mission Control says the International Space Station’s crew has briefly taken seats in escape capsules due to a close encounter with space debris. The six crewmen spent about half an hour today in two Soyuz escape capsules docked at the station before the space junk passed by without jeopardizing…
Continue reading …MP says hardliners of both sides should reflect on effects of being strident, but that immediate action is ‘sensible’ Hardliners on opposing sides in the battle over climate change are guilty of a weird “religiosity” which hinders a sensible debate, energy minister Greg Barker has said. In a Guardian interview, Barker said sceptics were failing to accept the “broad base” of scientific opinion, while climate change campaigners could be guilty of behaving in an arrogant manner. Amid frustration in Whitehall at the tone of the debate, Barker said: “If you look at the extremes of the climate debate, whether it is the extreme climate sceptics or the extreme climate zealots, there is a slight religiosity there which is weird.” He said hardliners on both sides should reflect on the consequences of adopting such strident stances. “I think the broad base of sound scientific opinion, of sensible and respected science, supports urgent climate action,” he said to sceptics who question the need for action. “Of course science is constantly evolving. The notion that you need to have 100% certainty on any given issue is unhelpful anyway. Acting now on climate is the prudent sensible thing to do.” But Barker warned that climate change campaigners needed to be careful not to dismiss sceptics such as the former Conservative chancellor Lord Lawson of Blaby. “We need to make sure don’t behave in an arrogant or offhand way because that really pisses people off,” he said. Barker, a close ally of the prime minister, has been a key figure in building up Tory credibility on climate change since being given the brief by David Cameron after his election as Tory leader in 2005. This allows Barker, who travelled with Cameron on his famous “huskies” trip to a Norwegian glacier in 2006, to deliver messages that could alarm climate change campaigners. Barker, who sits next to a cushion in his Whitehall office emblazoned with the words “Save Our Planet”, said: • Mistakes made by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the email scandal at the University of East Anglia had put the climate agenda “on the back foot”. • In rebalancing the economy away from an over-reliance on service industries to new green technology, the government needed to be careful not to penalise traditional industries which were “energy intensive users”. Barker, who announced an extra £20m to encourage the growth of marine energy during a visit to Edinburgh, indicated that ministers believe climate change scientists have done themselves few favours in recent years. The IPCC faced intense criticism after its fourth assessment in 2007 included the mistaken statement that the Himalyan glaciers could disappear by 2035. Climate scientists at the climatic research unit at the University of East Anglia were accused in an official report last year of being “unhelpful and defensive” in response to “reasonable requests for information”. But they were cleared of accusations that they fudged results and silenced critics. Barker said: “Over the last two years the climate agenda has been on the back foot. The IPCC scandal last year, the email leaks from the University of East Anglia – all were grist to the mill of the climate sceptics. “Although their significance was greatly exaggerated and the actual substance of those incidents did nothing to undermine the science, the impact on the reputation of climate science was huge. We underestimate it at our peril. There is a need for new voices and a new coherence for those advocating urgent action on climate change. Hopefully that will have shaken us out of that slight complacency that the climate establishment had wandered into. I do not underestimate for a second that all of us who are passionate about finding urgent solutions to the global issues have got a big job to do and need to be incredibly responsible at the COP [UN Conference of the Parties climate change negotiations in Durban later] this year.” Barker was careful not to talk in detail about the emails at the UEA, but he said: “That was symptomatic of a view that you must win at all counts. In science, it is really important that dissenting voices are heard and listened to.” Barker acknowledged that the Conservative party includes one of the most prominent climate change sceptics – Lawson – who needs to be handled with care. “Nigel has got a long history in this area. The important thing is those of us in office shouldn’t dismiss out of hand people that have concerns or refuse to engage.” There was a clear explanation why sceptics are more likely to be found in his party, he said. “The climate debate, which was started by Margaret Thatcher who was the first world leader to call for concerted action on man-made climate change, was subsequently almost hijacked by the centre left,” Barker said. “They gave it the narrative and it became a post-cold war means of advocating large-scale government programmes. It almost instinctively drew the antipathy of free marketeers and the centre right who felt uncomfortable with some of the language of the climate change agenda.” Barker was speaking to the Guardian after a busy period on climate change which has seen the government announce ambitious targets for the fourth carbon budget, to run from 2023-27, outline how the £3bn Green Investment bank will work and introduce plans to insulate 14m homes by 2020. The climate change minister believes he has built up enough credibility with the green lobby to make clear that the government is keen to make space for “energy intensive users” such as the steel and aluminium industries. “The big shift in thinking on climate change policy is a recognition that we need to rebalance our economy. But decarbonisation must not mean de-industrialisation,” he said. “On the contrary, we actually need to build an economy that has more advanced manufacturing where we stop just reducing our carbon emissions by sending stuff offshore to less regulated markets and actually see the energy challenge of the next two decades as a real opportunity to see more advanced manufacturing here in the UK, importing less and looking to successful advanced economies like Germany as the way forward rather than thinking we can simply be ever more dependent on the services sector.” Climate change Climate change Climate change scepticism Green politics Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The head of Afghanistan’s central bank resigned yesterday, and says he won’t return to the country for fear of reprisals thanks to his investigation of the Kabul Bank corruption scandal . Abdul Qadeer Fitrat is currently in the US, the New York Times reports. In a scathing resignation letter, he says…
Continue reading …Megan Fox was theoretically dating now-husband Brian Austin Green while filming Transformers , but that apparently didn’t stop co-star Shia LaBeouf. Asked by Details if he ever hooked up with Fox, LaBeouf nods and explains, “Look, you’re on the set for six months, with someone who’s rooting to be attracted to…
Continue reading …In its battle with Google, Apple’s hearing echoes of the 1990s: Android activations are blowing iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch activations out of the water. Some 500,000 Android phones and tables get activated daily across the world, says Google’s boss for the platform—and that figure is climbing 4%…
Continue reading …Culture minister says country will take serious action over films that ‘ruin Muslims’ sanctity’ Iran’s minister of cultural and Islamic guidance has attacked an upcoming BBC2 documentary series on the life of the founder of Islam, the prophet Muhammad, saying the “enemy” was attempting to “ruin Muslims’ sanctity”. The three-part series, The Life of Muhammad, presented by Rageh Omaar, a Somali-born British Middle East correspondent for Al Jazeera English, is scheduled to be broadcast on BBC2 in mid-July and has been drawing increasing criticism from senior figures in Iran. The documentary makers say it seeks to “retrace the actual footsteps of the prophet” from his birthplace in the Saudi Arabian city of Mecca, his struggles with his prophetic role and divine revelations, his migration to Medina and establishment of the first Islamic constitution before his final return to Mecca following armed conflicts. But the Iranian culture minister, Mohammad Hosseini, who has not seen the programme, said in an interview on Monday that he was worried about the BBC film. Speaking to Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency, he said: “The BBC’s decision to make a documentary on the life of [the] prophet Muhammad seems dubious and if our suspicions are proved to be correct, we will certainly take serious action.” Hosseini added: “What the enemy is trying to do in ruining the Muslims’ sanctity is definitely much more than causing us to react and unfortunately, some Islamic countries are not taking this issue seriously. One way to show objections is to express condemnation of the West over their despicable actions.” Iran and the West have previously clashed, famously, over publication of Salman Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses in 1988 and more recently in the row over threats to burn the Qur’an by a US pastor. It is thought officials in Iran, where the population is predominantly Shia, could be worried that the BBC2 documentary might only be limited to a Sunni interpretation of Muhammad’s life. But Aaqil Ahmed, the BBC’s commissioning editor for religion and ethics, told the Guardian that they had consulted a Shia scholar for
Continue reading …Is Hugh Hefner trying to prove something? It didn’t take him long to move on to Anna Sophia Berglund after Crystal Harris dumped him pre-altar, and now he’s added a second girlfriend into the mix, People reports. Shera Bechard, a 27-year-old Canada native who’s starred in at least one movie,…
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