Example
Suppose (a variation on the example at
BLM70235):
The original 'loan' of £780 compounded at 12% interest for three years at annual rests produces a debt of £1,096 at the end of the three years. Ignoring the tax effects, this might be the lump sum the lessee has to pay to get the asset back. If the lessee does not pay, the rentals are calculated using the usual repayment mortgage principles as follows. (Because of rounding errors the figures don't always add up precisely).
| Years | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | Totals |
| Total rent | 0 | 0 | 0 | 304 | 304 | 304 | 304 | 304 | 1,520 |
| Capital | 0 | 0 | 0 | 172 | 193 | 216 | 242 | 271 | 1,095 |
| SSAP21 interest | 94 | 105 | 117 | 132 | 111 | 88 | 62 | 33 | 740 |
In Years 1 to 3 the commercial accounts show total 'interest'
earnings of £316 (£94 + £105 + £117). But there
are no actual cash receipts. This SSAP 21 'interest' is the amount
taxed by FA97/Sch 12.
If the lessee doesn't acquire the asset for £1,096 at
the end of Year 3 it has to pay the 'total rent' of £1,520
shown for Years 4-8. The 'interest' in the rent for these five
years is £424 (£132 + £111 +£88 + £62 +
£33). This £424 includes 'interest' due for the first
three years of the lease (£316) when no rentals were paid.
Since Schedule 12 will tax that £316 over those first three
years there is a mechanism to reduce the amounts of actual rent
taxable (in years 4 – 8) by the amounts previously taxed (in
years 1 – 3). So avoiding a double charge.