Members United Kingdom  

UK Angel Investment Network

Member's Area
Entrepreneur Investor
Forgot your password?
Remember me

Home
Entrepreneurs


Find Funding

• Register
• Submit a Proposal
• Funding Events
• Corporate Acquisitions

Site Info

• FAQ
• Our Rates
• Refund Policy

Get Investor Ready

• Useful Documents
• Business Plan Help
• Funding Guides
• Courses
• Articles
• Videos


Investors
Blog
Intermediaries
Testimonials
In The Press
Twitter
Linkedin
Facebook
What our members have to say...

"I enrolled with you yesterday as an investor and have already committed an investment of 150,000 Dollars in a Forex Management plan. All documentation is done, awaiting for the final confirmation. Wanted to congratulate you on creating a wonderful platform."
Pankaj Shah - Earthstone Group


What will the March 2011 Budget mean for UK Entrepreneurs and Startups

Should entrepreneurs and business owners around the UK expect more from the 2011 Budget than a reduction in red tape?

It certainly ought to deliver more for the business community to justify its ‘Budget for Growth’ moniker.

The final report of the Office of Tax Simplification (OTS), which reviewed the UK’s tax reliefs and allowances, concluded that ‘whole areas of tax law are particularly complicated’ and that ‘many areas may need a more in-depth review’.

One of the central recommendations of the report is to merge national insurance contributions with income tax. But of particular interest to entrepreneurs and investors is the recommendation that conditions for investing in Enterprise Investment Schemes and Venture Capital Trusts should be standardised and simplified.

What will be interesting to see is whether EISs will be extended. At present investors in an EIS enjoy 20 per cent tax relief on up to £500,000 of investment in an approved business that has less than 50 employees and gross assets of under £7 million. Many would like to see the relief extended to those people who provide loan funding to businesses, an increasingly popular source of capital since the banks have virtually closed their doors to business funding.

But what of Entrepreneur’s Relief, which of course was never as simple in practice as it first appeared when introduced? The report echoed the sentiments of business groups that it ought to be simplified and extended to those investors holding less than five per cent of the company, currently left out in the wilds having to fork out 18 per cent capital gains tax on sale of the company.

What we would really like to see, which would get serial entrepreneurs working again, is the removal of the £5 million lifetime limit of Entrepreneur’s Relief. This would be, in effect, a move back to the very conducive incentive of business taper relief, which ended almost exactly three years ago.



Source: Business Sale << Back

Author: Chris St Cartmail




Create Proposal
Register Today and submit
your Investment Proposal.
Create Proposal
Register Today and start
Reviewing Investments


Angel Investment Network

Home Home Home Contact

Entrepreneurs | Investors | About | Our Privacy Policy

© 2010, Angel Investment Network Ltd. All rights reserved.

Connecting UK Entrepreneurs and Angel Investors.

Find out more about: