- VAT base broadening identified as a priority revenue lever
The IMF highlights broadening the VAT base (reducing exemptions and preferential rates) as a key option to support fiscal consolidation. - Preference over rate increases amid limited tax space
With constrained scope for further tax rises, reforming the VAT system is seen as more feasible than increasing headline VAT rates. - Part of a broader revenue and compliance strategy
VAT reform would complement improved tax administration and compliance efforts to strengthen public finances while limiting economic distortions.
Key VAT Takeaways
- Potential VAT base broadening
- The IMF explicitly identifies broadening the VAT base as a candidate revenue measure to support fiscal consolidation.
- This implies:
- Possible reduction of exemptions and zero rates
- Review of reduced rates and sectoral reliefs
- Aim: increase revenue without raising headline rates.
- Role of VAT in fiscal consolidation
- VAT is seen as a central and relatively efficient tool for raising revenue.
- Fits within the strategy of tax-led deficit reduction over the medium term.
- Constraints on further tax increases
- The IMF notes limited scope for increasing overall tax levels beyond already planned rises.
- Therefore, reforms like VAT base broadening are preferred over:
- Increasing VAT rates
- Introducing entirely new taxes
- Link with tax administration improvements
- Revenue projections partly rely on “tax administration measures”, which indirectly include:
- Improving VAT compliance
- Reducing VAT gaps
- Enhancing digital tax reporting and enforcement
- Revenue projections partly rely on “tax administration measures”, which indirectly include:
- Policy design considerations
- Any VAT reform should:
- Support fiscal neutrality or deficit reduction
- Be carefully targeted to avoid disproportionate impact on lower-income households
- Potentially be accompanied by compensatory measures (e.g. targeted transfers)
- Any VAT reform should:
Interpretation (implicit but relevant for VAT policy)
- No immediate VAT changes announced, but:
- Clear signal that VAT reform is under consideration in future budgets
- Likely direction: base expansion rather than rate increase
- Alignment with broader OECD/IMF thinking
- Consistent with:
- Reducing distortions from exemptions
- Enhancing neutrality of the VAT system
- Using VAT as a stable revenue source in high-debt environments
- Consistent with:
One-line summary
The IMF sees broadening the UK VAT base as a key, realistic option to strengthen public finances, given limited room for further tax increases and rising long-term spending pressures.
Source IMF
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