Tag: Treasury

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Millennium Gift Aid Extended to Charities Working with Kosovan Refugees [April 1999]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Millennium Gift Aid Extended to Charities Working with Kosovan Refugees [April 1999]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 6 April 1999.

    All charities helping refugees from Kosovo are to benefit from an extension to the Millennium Gift Aid scheme, announced Chancellor Gordon Brown today.

    The extension means that donations to charities helping Kosovan refugees will from today come within the scheme, regardless of where the refugees are situated.

    Chancellor Gordon Brown said:

    “Everyone has been moved by the plight of the people of Kosovo. Many charities in the UK are already swinging into action in response to the crisis. This change to the Millennium Gift Aid scheme will enable taxpayers in the UK to do their bit to help and ensure that Government money backs up their donations.”

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Extending Powers of Friendly Societies [May 1999]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Extending Powers of Friendly Societies [May 1999]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 28 May 1999.

    Measures to give incorporated friendly societies greater flexibility in extending the range of permitted services available to their members were announced by the Economic Secretary Patricia Hewitt today.

    These proposed measures will allow friendly societies :

    • own subsidiaries which may themselves, in turn, have a subsidiary or more than one level of subsidiary;
    • to own subsidiaries formed in non-EC countries.

    Commenting on the proposals, Ms Hewitt said :

    “Friendly societies carry out invaluable work by encouraging saving, especially by those of modest means. The movement has asked for the restrictions on subsidiaries to be lifted. The Government has listened and acted. These changes will enable societies to more easily set up or acquire subsidiaries, providing a wider range of services for their members.”

    The proposals are outlined in a consultation document, “Proposed Amendments To The Friendly Societies Act 1992”. The proposed changes can be made through a Deregulation Order under the Deregulation and Contracting Out Act 1994. The consultation period ends on 30 July 1999.

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Size Matters – Less Tax on Smaller Cars from Today [May 1999]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Size Matters – Less Tax on Smaller Cars from Today [May 1999]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 31 May 1999.

    Own a small car? Or thinking of buying one? This may help – from today, the Vehicle Excise Duty (VED) on vehicles with an engine of 1100cc or less is cut to £100 – a saving of £55.

    1.8 million cars in the UK will benefit from the reduced rate, said Economic Secretary Patricia Hewitt today:

    “Size obviously does matter – and those people with smaller, cleaner cars will from today reap the benefit of a significant cut in VED.

    “Safeguarding the environment and protecting people’s health is a major commitment of this Government – and using the tax system to encourage people to use environmentally-friendly cars is one way to do this.

    “Today’s cut is only the first step in a major reform of the VED system. From autumn 2000, a completely new system will be introduced for new cars, where owners will pay according to their car’s rate of CO2 emissions. This Government is sending a clear and strong environmental signal to motor manufacturers and owners alike that measures will be taken to protect the environment.”

    NOTES TO EDITORS

    1. In the 1998 Budget, the Chancellor promised to introduce a system of graduated VED for cars, to encourage people to manufacture, use and buy more fuel-efficient vehicles. Today’s reduced rate is the first step of that commitment. A graduated VED system for new cars based primarily on their carbon dioxide emissions will apply from autumn 2000.

    2. The models of cars that will qualify for the reduced rate include:

    • the lowest engined-sized models of the Vauxhall Corsa, Volkswagon Polo, Volkswagon Lupo, Nissan Micra, Fiat Seicento, Toyota Yaris, Suzuki Alto, Suzuki Swift, Suzuki Wagon R, Daihatsu Cuore, Daihatsu Move, Daihatsu Sirion, Hyundai Atoz, Daewoo Matiz, Seat Arose, Perodua Nippa and Citroen Saxo.
    • There will also be a number of older models of Minis, Ford Fiesta Populars, Metros, Fiat Pandas, Fiat Unos, Citroen AX and Peugeot 106 that will qualify.

    3. Around 8 per cent of all the cars in the Private and Light Goods vehicle class have engines up to 1100cc – around 1.8 million cars will therefore be eligible for the £55 reduction.

    4. The DVLA have written to motorists who will benefit from the lower rate inviting them to relicence at the reduced rate from today and (where appropriate) claim a refund on their current licence. The Post Office will deduct the refund due on their current licence from the cost of their new one.

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Financial Education Must Start Early [May 1999]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Financial Education Must Start Early [May 1999]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 25 May 1999.

    Proposals to improve financial literacy and consumer awareness of mortgages, pensions and other savings investments starting at school age have been welcomed by Economic Secretary Patricia Hewitt.

    Welcoming the initiative, developed by the Financial Services Authority (FSA) under its consumer protection and awareness remit and due to be published later this week, Ms Hewitt said:

    “Savers and investors are often intimidated by the complexity and range of financial services products available. They need to understand them better to have the confidence to use them effectively. The new role in consumer education for the FSA is a major step forward towards achieving wider understanding and confidence in the financial services industry.

    “Helping young savers to learn about savings opportunities and providing league tables for authorised investment products are two ways which the FSA is already developing to improve public awareness of what effective savings products can do for them. At the same time, increased confidence will help the financial services industry to continue to develop the range of products and services it can offer them.”

    Speaking about the wider role of the new FSA at the Securities Institute, she added :

    “But the new regime we are proposing is about more than just individual consumers. An efficient and effective financial services industry is vital for prosperity, stability and international competitiveness. Millions of people depend on the availability of modern financial services and fair and honest markets and advice. Consumer confidence is the key to success, and simpler, more effective regulation is central to that.

    “The FSA will not just be a new regulator: it will be a new kind of regulator. Its new role will cover improving market confidence; protecting savers and investors through increased financial literacy and better consumer education as well as by regulating those involved in financial services; and reducing financial crime.

    “It will deliver effective and proportionate regulation of financial services, with a light touch in regulation to minimise burdens on financial services providers but effective consumer protection where necessary. It will offer regulation that works with the grain of customer needs and industry innovation and development: a winning formula for both.

    “There will be a single ombudsman scheme to deliver better access to redress when things do go wrong, together with effective safeguards in the disciplinary and market abuse provisions which will ensure effective regulation and increase confidence in the UK industry as the place to do financial services business.

    “The FSA will promote public awareness of the financial system, with better understanding of the benefits and risks of the various ways to save and invest, with easy to understand, authoritative information. This will help more people to benefit from savings and investment through better understanding of the financial services market place, encouraging them to demand simpler, cheaper and more flexible products.

    “The FSA is already delivering on this. It has published guides to financial advice, pensions, ISAs and the euro, and set up public enquiry points and pensions review help-lines. And as part of its strategy for promoting public understanding of the financial system it has also:

    consulted widely on a consumer education strategy to deliver savings education to young savers;
    looked at effective ways to improve financial literacy for adult savers so that they can ask the right questions of those selling them financial products; and is developing ideas for league tables of authorised investment products, which could cover cost, access and other terms, enabling consumers to compare products and get the best deals.

    “These are all welcome developments. They show that the FSA is already working for the industry and for savers and investors. It is at the heart of our drive towards a new kind of regulation, achieving even higher standards and improving professionalism in the financial services industry.

    “We already have one of the best financial services industries in the world, setting standards which other still aspire to. But this should not make us complacent: markets change, technologies develop, consumer requirements grow.

    “We must continually strive to find further means to increase professional and consumer confidence and enhance the reputation of the industry at home and abroad. The Financial Services and Markets Bill which will shortly be going before Parliament is a major step towards that goal.”

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Gordon Brown Announces $2,000 Million Fund to Help the World’s Poorest Countries [May 1999]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Gordon Brown Announces $2,000 Million Fund to Help the World’s Poorest Countries [May 1999]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 20 May 1999.

    A $2,000 million Millennium Trust Fund to speed up the debt relief process and cut the debts of the world’s poorest countries by $50 billion by the end of the year 2000 has been called for today by the Chancellor Gordon Brown and Clare Short, Secretary of State for International Development.

    The aim of the Trust will be to fund over time a more ambitious programme of faster, wider and deeper debt relief which will remove a country’s unsustainable debt burden and allow resources to be reallocated to programme that reduce poverty.

    To support the new Trust Fund the Chancellor and Ms Short challenged the world’s richest countries to increase their contributions to the HIPC Trust Fund and called on the European Commission to contribute resources from the European Development Fund (EDF).

    The Chancellor said:

    “We propose that the developed world should ensure that the Trust Fund has $2,000 million to meet the costs of an enhanced scheme. This is the final building block in our proposals, which will go the G7 meetings next month, to finance debt write-off by $50 billion by the end of the year 2000.

    “We are convinced that resources from the EDF could make a major contribution to debt relief. They could be used to unshackle the poorest countries from their unsustainable debt burdens and allow those countries to tackle the greatest problem of our generation – the lack of primary education and healthcare for the poorest and most deprived. To provide the key that will unlock the door to chronic poverty”

  • PRESS RELEASE : HM Treasury and the Ministry of Finance of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia sign new MoU on Financial Services [December 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : HM Treasury and the Ministry of Finance of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia sign new MoU on Financial Services [December 2022]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 21 December 2022.

    The Chancellor of the Exchequer and the Minister of Finance of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on financial services cooperation on 20 December 2022.

    • The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Jeremy Hunt MP, and the Minister of Finance of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Mohammed Al-Jadaan, met yesterday, 20 December 2022, in London to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on financial services cooperation, and to discuss issues of mutual interest.
    • This MoU reiterates our joint ambition to strengthen bilateral financial services cooperation and aims to enhance cross-border trade in financial services, promote financial stability, and foster greater cooperation on priority issues, such as green finance, in support of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030.
  • PRESS RELEASE : Two Glasgow company directors, Shahzad Arshad and Alexander Stewart Cooper, banned for a total of 21 years for Bounce Back Loan Abuse [December 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Two Glasgow company directors, Shahzad Arshad and Alexander Stewart Cooper, banned for a total of 21 years for Bounce Back Loan Abuse [December 2022]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 21 December 2022.

    Shahzad Arshad, 43, and Alexander Stewart Cooper, 70, from Glasgow, have been disqualified as company directors following separate investigations which found they had both made false claims in order to receive Bounce Back Loans for their businesses.

    Shahzad Arshad was the director of two companies – Town Discount Ltd and Naz Accessories Ltd – which were both based in Glasgow.

    Town Discount Ltd was incorporated in January 2020 and began trading a month later as a retailer of games, toys, clothes, watches and jewellery, until it went into liquidation in December 2021.

    Naz Accessories was incorporated in December 2017 and traded as a clothes retailer until it went into liquidation in January 2022. Both companies traded from Dougrie Drive in the city.

    Arshad applied for Bounce Back Loans for the two companies during the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, stating in the loan application that Town Discount’s turnover for 2019 was £250,000, and Naz Accessories’ turnover was £200,000.

    Bounce Back Loans were a government scheme to support businesses through the pandemic. Under the rules of the scheme, companies could apply for loans of between £2,000 and £50,000, up to a maximum of 25% of their 2019 turnover.

    Both companies received the maximum £50,000 loans based on Arshad’s application, but later went into liquidation owing a total of more than £106,000, including around £93,400 that was owed for the Bounce Back Loan, triggering an investigation by the Insolvency Service.

    Investigators discovered that Arshad had made a false claim about Town Discount Ltd’s turnover, as it had only begun trading in February 2020. It was therefore not entitled to any funding through the Bounce Back Loan scheme. And they found that Naz Accessories Ltd’s true turnover had been around £98,300, which meant the maximum loan it could have claimed was £24,500.

    Investigators also found that between June 2020, when Town Discount Ltd received the loan, and August 2020, £16,000 had been withdrawn from the company bank account in cash, and the remainder of the loan money was paid out to expense and trade creditors.

    But Arshad had been unable to prove that the money had been used to provide an economic benefit to the business, as per the rules of the scheme.

    The second Glaswegian boss, Alexander Stewart Cooper, was appointed as a director of Traprain Homes Ltd in August 2016, becoming sole director in October 2019. The company traded as a construction company until it went into liquidation in June 2021.

    Cooper applied for a Bounce Back Loan for Traprain Homes in June 2020, stating that the company’s turnover was £1,014,930. Traprain Homes received the maximum loan of £50,000.

    The company later went into liquidation, owing the full amount of the loan, which triggered an investigation by the Insolvency Service.

    Investigators discovered that Traprain Homes Ltd had been insolvent at the time Cooper applied for the loan. Company accounts to January 2020 had shown a loss of more than £113,000, and the company had not been actively trading since February 2020. The business bank account had shown a balance of just £96 when the loan was received.

    They also discovered that once the loan had been received, Cooper paid more than £9,400 to himself from the firm’s account, and later transferred more than £40,000 of the money between the company’s different bank accounts before paying it out to himself.

    In October 2022 the Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy accepted disqualification undertakings from both directors.

    Cooper did not dispute he had caused his company to breach the rules of the Bounce Back Loan scheme by claiming the loan when he knew, or ought to have known, that Traprain Homes Ltd was not eligible, and later misused the funds, resulting in Cooper being banned for 10 years from 14 November 2022.

    Arshad did not dispute that he had caused Town Discount Ltd to apply for a loan to which the company was not entitled, and failed to show that it had been used for the economic benefit of the company.

    And he also did not dispute that he had breached the terms of the scheme by overstating Naz Accessories Ltd’s turnover to obtain a loan of £50,000 – more than twice the amount it was entitled to – resulting in Arshad being banned for 11 years from 21 November 2022.

    Cooper has fully repaid the loan for Traprain Homes following recovery action by the company’s liquidator. Arshad had repaid £3,549 and £3,333 respectively towards the Bounce Back Loans for Town Discount Ltd and Naz Accessories Ltd, prior to their liquidation.

    Steven McGinty, Investigation Manager at the Insolvency Service, said:

    Bounce Back Loans were an emergency measure made available to help British businesses trading through the most testing of times.

    Cooper breached the eligibility criteria and then took the money for personal gain, while Arshad should have known his companies weren’t entitled to the loans, yet he took them anyway.

    This abuse of government support has led to lengthy bans and should serve as a warning to others that we will not hesitate to take action against directors who have abused Covid-19 financial support.

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Chancellor Gordon Brown Outlines Government Plans to Help Britain´s ´Lost´ Youngsters [May 1999]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Chancellor Gordon Brown Outlines Government Plans to Help Britain´s ´Lost´ Youngsters [May 1999]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 11 May 1999.

    A new future for the 150,000 16-18 year olds not in work, education or retraining was outlined today by the Chancellor Gordon Brown.

    Speaking to the Foyer Federation Conference in London the Chancellor said that the current support system for 16-18 year olds was “perverse and indefensible” and outlined a system of Educational Maintenance Allowance of up to £40 a week to persuade teenagers to stay on at school.

    The Chancellor said:

    “This is a wasted generation. There are 150,000 teenagers who are neither in work, education or training.

    “This system of Education Maintenance Allowances of up to £40 we propose is developed to persuade them to stay in school. They will offer real scope to make a difference to the lives of many young people who are in danger of losing out.”

    The allowances will be paid in pilot areas where more young people leave school early than is the national norm. The Government will pay up to £40 a week for young people in families where the household income is below £13,000.

    Educational Maintenance Allowances will start in September this year in 12 pilot areas. The areas are: Bolton, Nottingham, Cornwall, Doncaster, Gateshead, Leeds, Middlesborough, Oldham, Southampton, Stoke-on-Trent, Walsall and the four London boroughs of Lambeth, Lewisham, Southwark and Greenwich.

    The Chancellor said that more must be done than just home the homeless. He said:

    “Our ambition is not limited to bricks and mortar; it is to enable young men and women bridge the gap between what they are and what they have in themselves to become. So we must not only deal with the consequences of poverty, we must tackle its causes.

    “We are determined to provide a new future for the many thousands of people who had been written off for too long, unable to realise their potential.

    “Our challenge amongst young people is to persuade them to stay on at school or college, to take careers advice and to recognise the need for even the most basic qualifications is they are to secure a job.”

    This was one of the most powerful motivating force behind the introduction of the new Educational Maintenance Allowance.

    The Chancellor said the allowances “will make a real difference to the lives of many young people from disadvantaged backgrounds”. And there would be a true partnership between the Government, educational authorities, schools, colleges and foyer and housing agencies to make them a success.

    The Chancellor said:

    “What most people remember of the 1930s is unemployed men standing on street corners. What people identify with the 1980s are youngsters begging and sleeping rough in our city streets.

    “I want the 1990s and the new Millennium to be remembered for inclusion – when individuals, the voluntary sector and Government work together with a shared purpose.”

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Gordon Brown Seeks Partnership with Nigeria to Assist Reform [May 1999]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Gordon Brown Seeks Partnership with Nigeria to Assist Reform [May 1999]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 4 May 1999.

    Chancellor Gordon Brown has pledged UK Government support for reform in Nigeria, but said Nigeria must demonstrate real commitment to economic and institutional reform. Economic Secretary Patricia Hewitt gave further details of the assistance that could be made available at a conference on Nigeria today.

    Gordon Brown set out his plan in a letter to the Nigerian Finance Minister, Mallam Ismaila Usman, following their meeting at the IMF and World Bank Spring meeting in Washington last month. He said that Nigeria had a unique window of opportunity to accelerate the process of economic and institutional reform, and outlined a new package of measures to support Nigeria’s efforts.

    Mr Brown said:

    “I have offered the UK’s support to Nigeria on a wide range of issues in order to help build a stable platform upon which reform can be based.

    “A clear commitment to openness, transparency and good financial management are essential parts of the reform process, and will be seen by the international community as major steps on Nigeria’s reform path.”

    The UK aims to help Nigeria to build a stable platform upon which reform can be based, by:

    • pro-actively seeking support for an IMF funded programme for Nigeria in the autumn and a quick return to World Bank lending;
    • arguing for a permanent IMF monitoring mission at the Ministry of Finance and Central Bank to instill international confidence in the progress of reform;
    • building support for a rescheduling of Nigeria’s substantial Paris Club debt, which amounts to $20 billion;
    • advocating a partial debt cancellation, subject to the successful completion of funded programmes and reforms, and a debt sustainability analysis showing that Nigeria’s debt burden is unsustainable;
    • sending a Treasury debt team to Nigeria in the autumn to assist in preparing their bid for debt rescheduling at the Paris Club, together with a team to provide advice on privatisation.

    DFID are also providing technical assistance to the Nigerian government in the area of debt management, in addition to their significant aid programmes in the areas of health, water, education and rural livelihoods.

    This assistance is offered on the basis that Nigeria demonstrates a real commitment to reform. The first step must be getting back on track with the current IMF Staff Monitored Programme (SMP) and regularising their position with the Paris Club in order to prepare for a debt rescheduling once a funded IMF programme is established.

    Nigeria needs to rebuild its financial and economic reputation by moving towards greater openness and transparency. Progress in this regard will seen by the international community as major steps on Nigeria’s reform path.

    A permanent IMF monitoring mission at the Ministry of Finance and Central Bank would help to ensure cooperation and would contribute to international confidence in the progress of reform. Independent audits of the Central Bank and Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) would be valuable in demonstrating this new commitment to sound financial management

    These measures, along with early steps to tackle corruption, will be essential in building investor confidence in Nigeria.

    Speaking at the FT Nigeria conference in London today, Patricia Hewitt said:

    “This Government believes that poverty and social exclusion must be tackled worldwide as well as at home. This is a moral duty, fully in line with the humanitarian instincts which the people of the UK display when confronted with the plight of people in desperate need.

    “Our joint aim with the Nigerian government must be no less than the elimination of abject poverty and social exclusion amongst the Nigerian people. Nigeria must take the lead, but we will support them as a partner in this effort alongside the rest of the international community.

    “It is absolutely essential that Nigeria makes significant and rapid progress on economic and institutional reform. It is Nigeria’s responsibility to lead on undertaking reform itself.

    “Assistance from the international community will only be of benefit in the context of wide ranging reform, undertaken by Nigeria itself. This must encompass not just economic and institutional restructuring, but also the introduction of anti-poverty policies and efforts to build public support for reform.”

    The assistance is offered on the basis of continuing commitment to economic and institutional reform on the part of Nigerian government and its successors. The UK and international assistance will be effective on the basis of the Nigerian government’s commitment to economic and institutional reform continuing and accelerating leading to Nigeria’s international credibility being restored.

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Anti-Fraud Focus in European Community Report [June 1999]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Anti-Fraud Focus in European Community Report [June 1999]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 30 June 1999.

    Latest developments on anti-fraud measures in the European Community were published today as part of the Government’s annual statement on the EC Budget.

    Commenting on the publication of European Community Finances – the nineteenth statement in the series – Economic Secretary, Patricia Hewitt said :

    “As in previous years, this Statement clearly sets out the latest key developments and measures to counter fraud and financial mismanagement in the EC.

    “We are determined to crack down on fraud at every level within the European Community. That is why we pressed hard, and won agreement for, UK proposals to reform the EU’s anti-fraud system, drawing on a number of strengths of the UK model:

    • a strong, independent Head of Fraud investigations, with statutory protection from dismissal, like the independent Comptroller and Auditor General;
    • a Head with wide ranging powers to initiate any investigation on his own initiative, with rights of immediate and unannounced access to papers and buildings and to question officials and Commissioners;
    • powers matched by responsibility for making recommendations and ensuring speedy follow up when problems are found;
    • powers matched by accountability through the Council and the European Parliament to the taxpayer.

    “The new European Anti-Fraud Office meets our requirements. The EU fraud buster will be independent, will initiate its own investigations, and will make sure its recommendations are followed up.

    “But getting the new Anti Fraud Office in place is only the vital first step. We need thorough reform in Brussels. And it is coming. The Cologne European Council stressed the importance of reform and modernisation of the Commission and of the European civil service, and proposals will come forward soon.”

    Details about EC financial management and measures to counter fraud include:

    • the European Court of Auditors’ Annual Report for 1997 and Statement of Assurance, published on 17 November 1998;
    • the Council’s recommendation to the European Parliament on the discharge to be given to the Commission for its implementation of the 1997 budget;
    • details of progress on the major areas of work under the Commission’s Sound and Efficient Management 2000 Programme;
    • the 1998 “Fight against Fraud” report;
    • the new European Anti-Fraud Office.

    The Annual Statement also sets out a breakdown of expenditure and sources of revenue in the 1999 Community Budget, along with details of the UK’s contributions to, and receipts from, the Budget.