Kneerly Down wrote: ↑Wed Jan 20, 2021 11:52 am
I don't think it is to 'good effect' if food is transported hundreds of miles out of the country, and then hundreds of miles back in for no reason other than the tax loophole itself.
I didn't think that would be such a controversial point.
- Ethically bad to transport stuff to minimise tax? Well, yes, but. Businesses exist to make profit.
- Unfair advantage to the industry big boys because they can? Perhaps, but they probably look at the little boys and point out their relatively small overheads (dividends to shareholders, maintaining all of the corporate overheads, etc).
- Environmentally bad? Yup? Although the raw materials are presumably not locally grown, so high food miles for a non essential / luxury product.
- Money away from the UK exchequer? Seemingly previously paid elsewhere, at a rate low enough to cover all of the costs incurred, so a result of the UK's choices on rates applied?
Don't think anyone's arguing with any of that.