I would take the other side of that coin, many restaurants could greatly benefit from companies being allowed to expense customer entertainment/dining. It all has to roll downhill, The tax code makes this difficult if not impossible.
Reading the above, I would not bother bringing customers out, but in the US I do it all the time. I tip 20% too.
Exactly my point, there are a few small changes that can inject cash into the system, you have to make it easy for corps to spend their money
I've yet to see a business refer to the lack of tax relief as a reason not to entertain clients.
Some of these posts imply that businesses would spend more on client entertainment if tax relief was available. I like to see the evidence to support that.
When businesses entertain clients the focus is single minded - keep the client happy/woo the potential client. Lack of tax relief would generally be regarded as a pain, but I don't think it would be a factor in deciding to spend on client entertainment.
I've yet to see a business refer to the lack of tax relief as a reason not to entertain clients.
Some of these posts imply that businesses would spend more on client entertainment if tax relief was available. I like to see the evidence to support that.
When businesses entertain clients the focus is single minded - keep the client happy/woo the potential client. Lack of tax relief would generally be regarded as a pain, but I don't think it would be a factor in deciding to spend on client entertainment.
Some of these posts imply that businesses would spend more on client entertainment if tax relief was available. I like to see the evidence to support that.
+1 on that as well.
There's no way two directors of a business should be able to pop out for lunch and then count that as a cost. They shouldn't pay for it with a company credit card either; it's not a business expense. If the business does pay for it the directors should pay BIK.
I would take the other side of that coin, many restaurants could greatly benefit from companies being allowed to expense customer entertainment/dining. It all has to roll downhill, The tax code makes this difficult if not impossible.
This is the strawman that it is dragged out every time this subject is discussed. Oddly enough, it is utterly irrelevant as the tax treatment of bona fide directors travel costs is actually benign. However it is not so benign for sole traders and partners.
Can you expend on that?
I'm not disagreeing with you but what do you mean by "the tax treatment of bona fide directors travel costs is actually benign"?
If you want to incentivise spending on these businesses, why would you limit it to corporate spending? Surely it would make more sense to cut VAT rates, so that business spenders AND personal spenders are more inclined to spend?
I thought it was rather obvious to be honest. Directors, like all employees, can avail of tax-free civil service rate subsistence payments in respect of work-related travel, even for unreceipted costs. In contrast, this concession is not available to self-employed and partners, even for some receipted costs.
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