A bill being debated in Brussels would force UK citizens to disclose ‘reams’ of private, financial information on a public register
New legislation planned in Brussels is set to heap fresh costs and
paperwork on families’ financial planning, as well as leaving their
affairs open to unwanted public scrutiny.
A European law is being drafted whose original aim was to prevent
corporate money-laundering. The objective, supported by the UK, was to
force companies to disclose on a register the money and other assets
held inside trusts or equivalent legal arrangements.
But officials in Brussels have widened out the proposals as the bill
has evolved, to include trusts. The effect could be to force millions of
families to compile elaborate accounts of their assets and financial
arrangements including insurance policies, property and bequests made in
their wills, for entry into a register. And that register, if
legislators get their way, could be made available to any member of the
public.
British lawyers and tax experts are baffled by the potential
implications. Most are bitterly opposed to the costs and intrusion that
could result. The use of trusts or what the EU would define as “legal
arrangements” is commonplace in Britain and Ireland, but not elsewhere
in Europe. As a result many run-of-the-mill transactions between British
individuals, or between individuals and financial institutions, would
fall within the net of the law if applied to the UK. Similar
transactions in Europe would not be affected, lawyers say.
Richard Frimston, partner at solicitors Russell-Cooke, said: “The
European Parliament thinks all trusts are the work of the devil designed
to aid tax dodgers. But trusts are an integral part of English law and
underpin the most everyday of transactions.”
The proposed law is under debate. The draft bill will be subject to a
vote on Thursday and, if approved, will go through to the European
Parliament, forming the basis of decision-making there. After that it
would become a component of the European Commission’s
anti-money-laundering directive which all member states would have to
implement.
David Cameron voiced concern about its implications for private families in a letter to Herman Van Rompuy, President of the European Council, in November. Other politicians such as Mark Field, MP for the City of London and Westminster, are also objecting. Mr Field has said the proposals “threaten a family’s right to keep their affairs confidential”.
Trusts, although widely used in the UK, are little understood both here and abroad. This partly explains why the matter has been overlooked outside legal and tax circles. If a strict regime of disclosure were introduced, what would be the implications on our personal finances? A number of experts unravelled the issue for The Telegraph.
Joint property owners
Where property is owned by more than one person, as is the case with millions of married and unmarried couples, the ownership is formed as a trust. Mr Frimston said: “When you buy in joint names, at the end of the Land Registry transfer document there is an express trust, where the buyers declare the basis of their ownership.”
For Mr Frimston this neatly illustrates the extent to which trusts underpin UK, but not European, financial arrangements. “In the UK being a trustee means you remain liable to HMRC and other authorities,” he said. “But in German, France, Italy and Spain the idea is that trusts are about avoiding liability, and that they are somehow dodgy.”
Estate planning and wills
Many families of even modest wealth establish trusts to protect their estates from inheritance tax. The effect is to remove some of the individual’s assets from their estate so at death they are excluded from tax. When in 2007 it was made easier for married couples to transfer unused allowances between themselves the use of trusts diminished. Subsequent tightening of the rules has also limited their application. But hundreds of thousands remain in force.
There is also the issue of privacy. Tony Mudd, director at wealth manager St James’s Place, and a specialist in tax and trusts, said: “There is a misconception that the use of trusts is about avoiding tax. Many people set up trusts because, for example, they do not want the beneficiaries of their will to be known. A will is a public document whereas inside a trust the information is not revealed. It seems perfectly reasonable that people might not want it known that half of their estate was to go to A, and not B, and so on.”
Mr Mudd also raises the potential costs and logistical difficulties in updating the register in which trusts’ details are lodged. “Many beneficiaries and other details change over the years,” he said. “Who would be responsible for updating the information, and would there be penalties for families who did not?”
Families seeking to protect children or other vulnerable members
Trusts are commonly used to ensure income or assets are set up to provide for vulnerable family members, such as a disabled child. But there are many other, less obvious uses.
Tina Riches, tax expert at accountant and investment manager Smith & Williamson, said: “We see more examples where, say, a parent wants to help a child buy a home but where that child’s partner is a potential risk, say, because he or she is self-employed and in debt. So a very simple trust will be established, giving the child what is called ‘interest in possession’.
“We can see where this law comes from because, yes, some trusts are large, corporate entities where public interest might be justified. But others are set up for purely private, family reasons.”
Life insurance policies
Life insurance is bought for many reasons but is often held in trust, particularly where it is being used to meet a tax bill. Mr Frimston said: “It makes perfect sense to establish a policy in trust to pay for inheritance tax if, for example, the tax will become due on the owner’s death but the family want to keep the home.” In such a case the proceeds of the policy would pay the tax with no expense incurred by the surviving family.
Relationships and divorce
Trusts are so embedded in English law that courts increasingly acknowledge them, even where formal paperwork does not exist.
Ms Riches said: “There are growing cases in court where there is no formal trust or deed but where the situation has the nature of a trust and so is treated by courts as a trust.”
These instances often applied in divorces where “assets are in the name of one person but the court finds the nature of ownership is akin to a trust”.
The spirit of our age favours transparency. Whether light is being shone on the previously dark corners of intelligence, executive pay, MPs’ expenses or overall tax take from global corporations, an insatiable quest for information is rooting out bad practice. But when does this drive for openness morph into an invasion of privacy?
In a bid to beef up EU anti-money-laundering laws, pressure is fast growing on the Treasury to introduce a publicly accessible register of family trusts. And why not? After all, many people assume that trusts in the UK are used almost exclusively by wealthy families, often as a means of avoiding tax. But this is a misconception which, unless challenged, risks exposing to public view the private financial affairs of countless ordinary British families.
Far from being the preserve of the elite, trusts are in fact part of everyday life in the UK – so much so that we often do not even notice them. Though they may not realise it, any couple that owns a home, has a will and life assurance will probably have several trusts.
The result is that while the concept of trusts is almost unknown across much of the EU – reflecting a different civilian legal tradition – there are millions in existence here. Most are very low risk from a money-laundering point of view. Furthermore, UK trusts are rarely used for tax avoidance – indeed they are often taxed at high rates.
The bureaucracy and sheer cost of establishing from scratch a comprehensive trust register, which will have to record millions of such family trusts, should give any government committed to cutting red tape pause for thought. Disproportionate cost, however, is not the only worry. Crucially, a family’s right to keep their affairs confidential is also under threat. Among trust funds that have taxable income, HMRC research indicates that about one in four has been established because one or another of the beneficiaries is considered vulnerable in some way. If parents or grandparents wish to set aside some money to help a vulnerable child, should this arrangement be paraded on a compulsory public register?
David Cameron has already personally intervened in the debate in Brussels, arguing that while he is an advocate of greater transparency for companies, trusts are different. He is right. The principle of transparency is a good thing, but in the case of family trusts there are very strong arguments for maintaining the status quo. The EU Parliament nevertheless continues to press ahead with registry plans.
Substantial damage could be done if we allow the rest of the EU to push the UK into establishing a public trust register. Continental bureaucrats championing this legislation have little or no experience of trusts and we risk an unhelpful precedent being set unless we robustly defend the uniqueness of our system.
A register would be costly, cumbersome and, most seriously of all, intrusive. The invisible line between openness and privacy is about to be crossed.
Mark Field is MP for the City of London and Westminster
David Cameron voiced concern about its implications for private families in a letter to Herman Van Rompuy, President of the European Council, in November. Other politicians such as Mark Field, MP for the City of London and Westminster, are also objecting. Mr Field has said the proposals “threaten a family’s right to keep their affairs confidential”.
Trusts, although widely used in the UK, are little understood both here and abroad. This partly explains why the matter has been overlooked outside legal and tax circles. If a strict regime of disclosure were introduced, what would be the implications on our personal finances? A number of experts unravelled the issue for The Telegraph.
Joint property owners
Where property is owned by more than one person, as is the case with millions of married and unmarried couples, the ownership is formed as a trust. Mr Frimston said: “When you buy in joint names, at the end of the Land Registry transfer document there is an express trust, where the buyers declare the basis of their ownership.”
For Mr Frimston this neatly illustrates the extent to which trusts underpin UK, but not European, financial arrangements. “In the UK being a trustee means you remain liable to HMRC and other authorities,” he said. “But in German, France, Italy and Spain the idea is that trusts are about avoiding liability, and that they are somehow dodgy.”
Estate planning and wills
Many families of even modest wealth establish trusts to protect their estates from inheritance tax. The effect is to remove some of the individual’s assets from their estate so at death they are excluded from tax. When in 2007 it was made easier for married couples to transfer unused allowances between themselves the use of trusts diminished. Subsequent tightening of the rules has also limited their application. But hundreds of thousands remain in force.
There is also the issue of privacy. Tony Mudd, director at wealth manager St James’s Place, and a specialist in tax and trusts, said: “There is a misconception that the use of trusts is about avoiding tax. Many people set up trusts because, for example, they do not want the beneficiaries of their will to be known. A will is a public document whereas inside a trust the information is not revealed. It seems perfectly reasonable that people might not want it known that half of their estate was to go to A, and not B, and so on.”
Mr Mudd also raises the potential costs and logistical difficulties in updating the register in which trusts’ details are lodged. “Many beneficiaries and other details change over the years,” he said. “Who would be responsible for updating the information, and would there be penalties for families who did not?”
Families seeking to protect children or other vulnerable members
Trusts are commonly used to ensure income or assets are set up to provide for vulnerable family members, such as a disabled child. But there are many other, less obvious uses.
Tina Riches, tax expert at accountant and investment manager Smith & Williamson, said: “We see more examples where, say, a parent wants to help a child buy a home but where that child’s partner is a potential risk, say, because he or she is self-employed and in debt. So a very simple trust will be established, giving the child what is called ‘interest in possession’.
“We can see where this law comes from because, yes, some trusts are large, corporate entities where public interest might be justified. But others are set up for purely private, family reasons.”
Life insurance policies
Life insurance is bought for many reasons but is often held in trust, particularly where it is being used to meet a tax bill. Mr Frimston said: “It makes perfect sense to establish a policy in trust to pay for inheritance tax if, for example, the tax will become due on the owner’s death but the family want to keep the home.” In such a case the proceeds of the policy would pay the tax with no expense incurred by the surviving family.
Relationships and divorce
Trusts are so embedded in English law that courts increasingly acknowledge them, even where formal paperwork does not exist.
Ms Riches said: “There are growing cases in court where there is no formal trust or deed but where the situation has the nature of a trust and so is treated by courts as a trust.”
These instances often applied in divorces where “assets are in the name of one person but the court finds the nature of ownership is akin to a trust”.
‘UK trusts are rarely used for tax avoidance’
By Mark FieldThe spirit of our age favours transparency. Whether light is being shone on the previously dark corners of intelligence, executive pay, MPs’ expenses or overall tax take from global corporations, an insatiable quest for information is rooting out bad practice. But when does this drive for openness morph into an invasion of privacy?
In a bid to beef up EU anti-money-laundering laws, pressure is fast growing on the Treasury to introduce a publicly accessible register of family trusts. And why not? After all, many people assume that trusts in the UK are used almost exclusively by wealthy families, often as a means of avoiding tax. But this is a misconception which, unless challenged, risks exposing to public view the private financial affairs of countless ordinary British families.
Far from being the preserve of the elite, trusts are in fact part of everyday life in the UK – so much so that we often do not even notice them. Though they may not realise it, any couple that owns a home, has a will and life assurance will probably have several trusts.
The result is that while the concept of trusts is almost unknown across much of the EU – reflecting a different civilian legal tradition – there are millions in existence here. Most are very low risk from a money-laundering point of view. Furthermore, UK trusts are rarely used for tax avoidance – indeed they are often taxed at high rates.
The bureaucracy and sheer cost of establishing from scratch a comprehensive trust register, which will have to record millions of such family trusts, should give any government committed to cutting red tape pause for thought. Disproportionate cost, however, is not the only worry. Crucially, a family’s right to keep their affairs confidential is also under threat. Among trust funds that have taxable income, HMRC research indicates that about one in four has been established because one or another of the beneficiaries is considered vulnerable in some way. If parents or grandparents wish to set aside some money to help a vulnerable child, should this arrangement be paraded on a compulsory public register?
David Cameron has already personally intervened in the debate in Brussels, arguing that while he is an advocate of greater transparency for companies, trusts are different. He is right. The principle of transparency is a good thing, but in the case of family trusts there are very strong arguments for maintaining the status quo. The EU Parliament nevertheless continues to press ahead with registry plans.
Substantial damage could be done if we allow the rest of the EU to push the UK into establishing a public trust register. Continental bureaucrats championing this legislation have little or no experience of trusts and we risk an unhelpful precedent being set unless we robustly defend the uniqueness of our system.
A register would be costly, cumbersome and, most seriously of all, intrusive. The invisible line between openness and privacy is about to be crossed.
Mark Field is MP for the City of London and Westminster
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