Value Added Tax-free Exports from the Channel Islands

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Value Added Tax-free Exports from the Channel Islands are exports of goods from the Channel Islands on which Value added tax (VAT) is not levied. In recent years, companies in the United Kingdom have expressed concern at the competition thereby offered to their goods on which VAT is levied.

Contents

[edit] Background

The Channel Islands consist of the two crown dependencies of Guernsey and Jersey, which are self-governing, but historically linked to the Crown. As such they are not part of the European Union and do not charge VAT on purchases (although a Goods and services tax is due to be introduced in Jersey in 2008).

When goods are imported into the United Kingdom from a non EU territory, an excise duty is charged at the same rate as VAT (currently 17.5% for most goods). However due to an EU regulation designed to reduce the cost of tax collection on small consignments, an exception is made on shipments where the total value is less than £18.[1] This is an administrative relief known as Low Value Consignment Relief or LVCR. It can be set between 10 and 22 Euros by individual member states of the EU. The UK set the limit at its maximum level.

Items such as DVDs and CDs commonly cost less than this £18 threshold, and therefore if sold from one of the Channel Islands, no VAT or Excise Duty needs to be paid.

Often the reduced tax liability outweighs the increased postage costs, meaning that the Jersey-based retailer can undercut competing retailers based on the UK mainland. Because the Channel Islands are so close to the UK it is easy to export UK goods to the Islands and in recent years the Jersey Post Office, through its sister company Jersey Post Logistics, has set itself up as an internet fulfilment operation taking full advantage of the LVCR service so that goods can be sent from the UK to Jersey and back again by mail within 48 hours.

As it has become easier to sell by mail order with the growth of the internet, the practice of selling CDs and DVDs through the Channel Islands has become more common, particularly since Jersey and Guernsey are part of the UK postal system and benefit further from lower postage rates.

A similar situation does not exist between the Isle of Man, another Crown Dependency, and the UK, as VAT is levied in the Isle of Man.

[edit] Controversy and legal arguments

Certain UK companies have described this position as a loophole and have described the trade as tax avoidance, claiming that they are losing turnover on low value items through losing customers to companies selling direct from the Channel Islands. What is certain is that the bulk of the goods sold through the Channel Islands are UK products exported to the Islands and then mailed back into the UK VAT free.

Some legal commentators have pointed out that this practice runs contra to the intent of the EU legislation covering Low Value Consignment Relief and in January 2007 a group of UK retailers threatened to take the UK Treasury to Judicial Review if it failed to properly impliment EU regulations surrounding Low Value Consignment Relief. The retailers pointed out that the EU directives disallowed relief on any goods that distorted competition in the home market or created a vehicle for tax avoidance. This legal argument is yet to be resolved and the UK Treasury have yet to clearly announce their position so the threat of Judicial Review remains.

The Channel Islands have no say over the operation of Low Value Consignment Relief as they are not members of the EU and the relief is granted to the importer of the goods and not the exporter.

[edit] Government reaction

The Government of the United Kingdom mentioned the issue in the 2006 Budget wherein they stated that they were aware of the abuse of the Low Value Consignment Relief by companies who had set up in the Channel Islands and that they would introduce legislation to stop the avoidance of VAT if companies continued this behaviour. The 2006 budget also stated that £85 million per year was currently being lost in unpaid VAT as a result of this trade. This amount is expected to rise to £200m soon.[2]

The States of Jersey in March 2006 announced a new policy to govern the fulfilment industry on the island and stated that companies who export to the UK by mail order must first obtain a licence. They argued that this was to ensure that the Island was not taken advantage of and that tangible economic benefits would remain on the Island. More recently, owing to the bad press generated by the expansion of the fulfilment industry in the Channel Islands, the Jersey Government has announced that it has asked certain UK retailers to cease their operations there although wholly owned Jersey companies will still be allowed to continue trading. One of the companies asked to leave is Tesco and despite keeping their offices in Jersey they have moved their fulfilment operations to Switzerland. This has provoked some Jersey Government ministers to point out that the new policy is not actually stopping the trade or helping the Islands economy. Despite these changes the bulk of customers for CDs and DVDs remain on the UK mainland and the VAT avoidance mail order industry continues to flourish in the Channel Islands.

[edit] Retailers operating from the Channel Islands

The following is an incomplete list of retailers that sell to the UK from the Channel Islands to profit from the tax regime.

[edit] Jersey

  • Play.com– Whilst regarded as a Jersey company Play.com operate offices in Cambridge in the UK.
  • Amazon Jersey – visitors to amazon.co.uk will be given the option to buy from the sister site
  • Tesco Jersey – visitors to Tesco.com will be given the option to buy from the sister site although in early 2007 Tesco re-located fulfilment to Switzerland having been asked to leave Jersey as part of the Islands attempt to clean up the trade.
  • Sendit.com – Orders under £18 are fulfilled by a sister company Sendit (Jersey) Limited

[edit] Guernsey

[edit] References

  1.   Are import duties and import VAT always payable?. Notice 143: A Guide for international postal users. Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (August 2005). Retrieved on 2005-12-29.
  2.   "Call to end CD sales loophole", BBC News, 2005-06-14.
  3.   "New moves to close VAT loophole", BBC News, 2005-07-22.