Barnes Roffe Chartered Accountants

Pre-Budget Report 2003

Trusts

Gift relief

Where a capital asset, say shares or property, is the subject of a gift then for CGT purposes it is generally treated as a disposal of the asset at its market value so that either a gain or loss arises. However where a gain arises it is possible, so long as certain conditions are satisfied, to defer the gain using the gift relief provisions. The gain is then charged to tax on any subsequent disposal by the recipient.

The conditions to be satisfied are broadly either that the asset in question is a ‘business asset’ or that the gift is of the type that is immediately chargeable to inheritance tax (generally gifts to discretionary trusts).

The government is concerned that certain avoidance schemes are being used. The effect of these is to defer a gain under the gift relief provisions but in such a way that the deferred gain is ultimately eliminated or reduced.

Provisions are therefore introduced which take effect immediately to deny gift relief in certain circumstances. Two main scenarios are envisaged.

The first involves the gift of an asset to a trust in which the donor has some sort of interest (a ‘settlor interested trust’). With immediate effect gift relief is denied altogether on such transfers. The effect is to crystallise the gain on the transfer. Since CGT taper relief was introduced in 1998, settlor interested trusts have often been used to improve the taper relief position on the ultimate disposal of assets. Although this does not seem to be the mischief at which the Pre-Budget Report announcement is aimed such transactions appear to be caught.

The second is aimed at a more specific scheme where a discretionary trust is used to defer a gain on a property which is then occupied by one of the beneficiaries as their main residence. On disposal of the property by the trustees the whole gain is exempt from CGT under the main residence exemption rules. The government has moved to block this device so that either the gain on set up of the trust can be deferred or main residence relief can subsequently be claimed but not both. This measure also takes immediate effect and may also affect the main residence relief available where the property was transferred into the trust before 10 December 2003.

Rates of tax

From 6 April 2004 the rate of tax on the income and capital gains of trusts will increase from 34% to 40% (and the corresponding dividend trust rate from 25% to 32.5%). The government’s stated intent in making this change is to remove ‘a distortion that provides avoidance opportunities for some higher rate taxpayers’.


 
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