Pro Installer January 2019 - Issue 70 | Page 18

18 | JANUARY 2019 News Read online at www.proinstaller.co.uk MTD AND YOUR ACCOUNTANT MTD, or Making Tax Digital is going to have a profound impact on businesses over the next few years. But it’s not only businesses, it will also make a big difference to the way that accountants support their clients. Benjamin Dyer, CEO of Powered Now, looks at how MTD will impact the relationship between clients and their accountants. With the government recently reaffirming the MTD for VAT deadline as 1st April, 2019, the race is now on to educate the whole ac- counting profession as well as VAT registered business- es. There was a widespread belief that the deadline would be put back further so many companies put Making Tax Digital on the back burner. As a result, we are probably in for a bumpy ride and this could be a painful time for installers. Recap on Making Tax Digital Just as a reminder MTD is HMRC’s initiative to bring all record keeping relating to tax onto digital platforms. Their argument is that in the long term it will be better for honest businesses while they will collect more tax – known as closing the “tax gap”. Critics argue that it will be much more work for everyone and is being badly implemented to boot. The specifics of MTD for VAT are twofold: • All quarterly VAT reporting needs to be done through new tech- nology. The old web form is being dropped and software that talks to the new MTD portal must be used for VAT returns. Businesses on VAT annual reporting will follow 6 months later. • There must be a link from the individual re- cords to the VAT return and these records must be kept on computer. MTD is a rolling program and MTD for VAT is just the first of the major initiatives that will end up impacting virtually all businesses. The one after VAT is likely to be quarterly profit and loss reporting for all business- es with annual sales over £10,000. MTD will also apply to individual tax returns but that is currently on hold. The state of things AccountingWeb and sys- tem supplier Quickbooks undertook a survey of 271 accountants a couple of years ago and the top concern, at 35% of respons- es, was client’s poor record keeping. The big danger with data being plugged straight through to a VAT return, with little oppor- tunity for review, is that the proportion of wrong returns will soar, at least initially. Given that errors are likely to be in both directions, this is somewhat worrying. Businesses could either end up over-paying which is bad for cashflow or underpaying and then getting an unexpected catch up charge later which is also bad. Of course, you might ex- pect accountants to regard their clients as incompetent – it’s a temptation that we all have. Accountants might do better to look at them- selves. A fairly recent sur- vey of accountants found that 25% of them hadn’t even heard of MTD – that survey was by accounting software company Xero. How do you work with accountants? The critical thing in determining the way to ad- dress MTD is to start with the way that you currently work with your accountant (if at all) and how you want to work in the future. There are broadly two ways of working: • You submit your own quarterly VAT return using the current web form (or paper return). • You pass information to your accountant and they do the return for you. It’s likely that after the MTD for VAT deadline you will continue to work in a similar way. The big difference is that your sales and supplier invoices and expenses must all be recorded digitally. It will be against the law to simply total up the amounts of VAT, sales and costs and key the totals into the HMRC web form. They must be put into a system by either you or your accountant. That’s the big change. There is one important point to note which is that the detailed information can be entered onto a spread- sheet and then “bridging software” can be used to submit it to MTD. However, it’s not clear how long this recent concession will be available. How ready are accountants? The lack of readiness of accountants mentioned earlier is worrying as many installers are likely to be looking to their accountants for how to comply with MTD. In fact, there is a further worry. Accountants are professionals and charge by the hour. They are not set up for lots of calls and a sudden surge of implemen- tation work. Unlike other companies, most do not have banks of people to take incoming calls. Nor are they usually backed with a great CRM (Customer relationship man- agement) system to track everything and make sure nothing falls through the cracks. Given the scale of change needed, the limited time and the education that needs to permeate out into the market, there is a big danger that accountants will simply get overwhelmed. This also applies to software vendors, but given their history, help desks etc. the issue is likely to be more manageable. The role of accountants Complying with the law The MTD system has been designed by HMRC with the role of accountants in mind. In HMRC’s parlance, they are “agents”. That is, they can act on behalf of a business. This means that they can make VAT submis- sions under the new regime on behalf of businesses and will be able to do other types of MTD return in the future too. One of the problems is that this is yet more com- plex to set up. Installers can authorise HMRC to allow agents (accountants or bookkeepers) to both send and get information on their behalf. Once that is done, the agent is able to sign up the installers business to any particular MTD service, and then use their own soft- ware to interact with HMRC on the installer’s behalf. So, there is a two- step pro- cess while it is a single step when installers do things entirely for themselves. MTD requires at least one system and there are really only three ways of complying with the law: • Run a system under your control that ena- bles you to capture all the information you need for a VAT return and submit it to MTD from your system. • Use a system to cap- ture all the necessary information and send it to the system used by your accountant or bookkeeper, then they send it to MTD. • Send copies of all of your paperwork to your accountant or bookkeeper and they key it into their system and submit to MTD from there. This may come with a higher price tag and has the maximum danger of account- ants being unable to cope.