In the early 1980s, the independent Keith Committee recognised
poor trader compliance and considered that the then existing
criminal sanctions were ineffective. The Committee recommended a
range of civil penalties and these were progressively introduced to
provide the current civil penalty regime, set out in Part IV of the
VAT Act 1994.
Civil penalties were introduced to improve taxpayer
compliance and statistical evidence suggests that they have been
much more effective than the previous criminal regime. They are
compliance tools and exist, in the main, to provide deterrence to
non-compliance.
There are 4 things you should take into account when considering
imposition of a civil penalty when a liable person fails to comply.
The following three bullets should be followed before you
notify any civil penalty, and at the review stage of any formal or
informal appeal. It is important that in any appeal case you can
show proper consideration has been given to each of them. They
are