Schedule 14
Finance Bill
Public Bill Committees, 20 May 2008, 12:00 pm

Kitty Ussher (Economic Secretary, HM Treasury; Burnley, Labour)
I beg to move amendment No. 98, in schedule 14, page 225, leave out line 7 and insert—
‘1A (1) Subsection (1C) of section 437 (general annuity business: income limit) is amended as follows.
(2) In paragraph (b)(ii), omit “capital elements and”.
(3) Omit paragraph (c).
(4) In paragraph (d), for the words after “2005” substitute “are so much of the payments under the new annuities as would be within the exemption in subsection (1) of that section if—
(i) section 718 of that Act were omitted, and
(ii) that exemption were an exemption applying in relation to companies as well as individuals.”
2 Omit sections 539 to 551A (corporation tax in respect of gains arising in connection with life policies etc).’.

Jimmy Hood (Lanark & Hamilton East, Labour)
With this it will be convenient to discuss Government amendments Nos. 99 to 104.

Kitty Ussher (Economic Secretary, HM Treasury; Burnley, Labour)
Clause 33 and schedule 13, which we have just agreed, are simplification measures, when combined with schedule 14, which is before us. They are about profits on life insurance policies owned by companies. Together they turn some 60 pages of legislation into three, including some of the transitional provisions, leading to far lower compliance costs for industry. I trust that that too will be welcomed by the Opposition.
Government amendments Nos. 98 to 104 show that we can take the simplification in schedule 14 slightly further by also repealing some rules that apply to a purchased life annuity owned by a company. The rules set out how to calculate the non-exempt part of the annuity, which is the taxable income part. Amendment No. 99 repeals the relevant legislation on the special tax rules, which are no longer needed to identify separately a taxable part of the annuity. Amendment No. 98 ensures that, following the repeals, the tax treatment of an insurance company’s profits from its purchased life annuity business remains the same. An insurance company must continue to calculate a non-exempt amount for the purpose of its tax computations, where the annuity is owned by a company, in the same way as it does now. To do so, it must apply the rules that apply to purchased life annuities held by individuals; those rules continue in force. Amendments Nos. 100 to 104 repeal a number of provisions that are no longer needed or that inserted amendments into legislation that is being repealed.
I regret that we were not able to introduce the amendments with the original published Bill, but only once the possibility of simplifying further came to our attention. I hope that all sides of the Committee will agree that introducing the amendments is the right thing to do.
Amendments made: No. 99, in schedule 14, page 226, line 23, at end insert
‘(further provisions about corporation tax in respect of gains arising in connection with life policies etc).
6A Omit sections 656 to 658 (purchased life annuities).’.
No. 100, in schedule 14, page 227, line 7, at end insert—
‘(aa) in FA 1991, section 76(1),’.
No. 101, in schedule 14, page 227, line 13, after ‘1999,’ insert ‘section 80 and’.
No. 102, in schedule 14, page 227, line 18, leave out ‘paragraph 25’ and insert ‘paragraphs 25 and 27’.
No. 103, in schedule 14, page 227, line 19, after first ‘paragraph’ insert
‘(b) of section 473(2) and the “or” before it, paragraphs 268(1) and (2), 269 and’.
No. 104, in schedule 14, page 227, line 21, leave out ‘paragraph 111’ and insert ‘paragraphs 111 and 141’.—[Kitty Ussher.]
