EM3651 - Recalculating Profits: Personal and Private Expenditure: General
Once you have established that the business records are not
as accurate as they should be, you will need to look at the private
side, the taxpayers personal and private expenditure
EM3550.
Establishing levels of personal and private expenditure is
difficult and the taxpayer may be uncomfortable with questions that
they consider intrusive.
Details of private and personal expenditure are usually best
established during a meeting. The agenda for the meeting should
state the main areas of concern to enable the taxpayer or the agent
to carry out any necessary research.
For example you might state on the agenda your intention to
discuss certain items in the private bank accounts and aspects
regarding levels of household expenditure, investments, holidays,
private assets, other areas of personal spending. You want to
establish certain facts about the income of a spouse or partner.
It is reasonable to ask for access private accounts, credit
cards, store cards etc where the record keeping system upon which
the Return or the accounts have been based is found to be
inadequate.
In your discussions, you should be precise. Avoid using terms
that have different meanings in different contexts. 'Living
expenses' might be felt to cover only expenditure on food and
shelter, while 'personal expenditure' could imply spending on
clothes and entertainment.
It can be very difficult to quantify exactly what is spent on
individual items. Could most of us say how much we spent last
month? We can work it out fairly easily because we can refer back
to monthly pay slips, bank statements etc. even saying how much
cash was spent from cash withdrawals from the bank account. But
even so remembering what the cash was spent on can be difficult.
In an enquiry case you will often be examining the
possibility that the taxpayer has spent unrecorded cash. So actual
cash expenditure has to be built up or estimated. It is likely that
if you work back from your net monthly salary you will identify
much expenditure quickly, but as the amount remaining to be tied
down diminishes it gets progressively more difficult to say on what
it was spent. Your task in an enquiry is to get the taxpayer beyond
what is easily remembered into those areas which are easily
forgotten or underestimated.
Where amounts are unrealistically low it is relatively easy
to show that they are inadequate to meet the taxpayer's needs.
However, as income levels rise it becomes more difficult to be
precise about spending, unless the bulk of it is done through bank
accounts or credit cards. There may be little apparent difference
between the life styles of someone spending £18,000 and his or
her next door neighbour who is spending £20,000 - it could
easily be accounted for by a dinner out for two every week.
For these reasons, you should not rely on a method of profit
recalculation involving personal and private expenditure (PPE),
without some other back-up check, unless you have to. It will only
be as accurate as the figures which you agree for PPE. Therefore,
if in an important or large case you are preparing capital
statements, it is essential that you take adequate time and trouble
to establish as far as you can the correct level of spending.
You should look critically at the information the taxpayer
provides. Does the level of spending fit with what you know about
the taxpayer and their lifestyle? Does it fit with what you know
about general levels of household expenditure?
The UK Family Expenditure Survey (FES) is a continuous survey
of household expenditure and income and can provide you with
guidance as to general levels of household expenditure. Information
can be obtained through Experian on the internet.
The taxpayer's life style and approach to spending will not
necessarily be like your own. You know your salary will be paid
each month. Some people are very cautious; others have an approach
to spending along the lines of: 'If I've got it I can spend it, if
I haven't I can't.'
Is there a certain life style which is imposed on the
taxpayer by their business? Some will be drawn into circles where a
lot of money is spent on maintaining a conspicuously expensive
standard of living. It is vital to try to get the feel of the life
style of the taxpayer and his business. Is he or she the type of
person who has a pattern of spending? Is he or she likely to be
spending large amounts on a whim?
If the trade is seasonal, is this reflected in the private
spending pattern?
At the end of the day you are attempting to gain as accurate
a picture as possible of the taxpayers standard of living, spending
and savings patterns and lifestyle. Be prepared to challenge the
details given if you have reason to believe that these appear
inadequate or lack credibility.
Where the underlying records have been shown to be inadequate
and you base your recomputation of profits on the results of a
personal and private expenditure review, the acceptance of figures
that are unrealistically low will mean that you will not arrive at
a realistic figure of revised profit.
