**The £17 Billion Question: Why HMRC is Leaving Tax Revenue Uncollected**

The £17 Billion Question: Why HMRC is Leaving Tax Revenue Uncollected

In an era of strained public finances, a startling figure has emerged from the UK’s fiscal landscape: an estimated £17 billion in tax revenue that His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) is effectively choosing not to pursue. This is not a story of sophisticated tax evasion hidden in offshore acco

Richard J Murphy · · 3 min read ·

In an era of strained public finances, a startling figure has emerged from the UK’s fiscal landscape: an estimated £17 billion in tax revenue that His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) is effectively choosing not to pursue. This is not a story of sophisticated tax evasion hidden in offshore accounts. It is a story of administrative policy, resource allocation, and a deliberate decision to write off billions in owed taxes from small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).

The core mechanism behind this gap is a policy known as the "commercial approach" to debt management. HMRC, facing a significant backlog and limited resources, has implemented a system of triage. When a business falls behind on its tax payments, the agency assesses the cost of recovery against the likelihood of success. For debts under a certain threshold—often cited as £20,000—or for businesses deemed to be in significant financial distress, HMRC frequently writes off the debt without aggressive pursuit.

This is not mere inefficiency; it is a calculated risk assessment. The logic is that pursuing a small debt from a company that is likely to go bankrupt anyway costs more in administrative time than it yields in revenue. However, the cumulative effect is staggering. With millions of small businesses across the UK, these "uncollectable" small debts aggregate into the billions.

Critics argue that this policy creates a perverse incentive. If businesses know that HMRC is unlikely to chase debts under a certain value, the moral hazard increases. Furthermore, this approach disproportionately impacts the public purse. While large corporations often have the legal and financial resources to negotiate complex tax settlements, the "commercial approach" essentially gives a free pass to the sector that forms the backbone of the UK economy.

The data reveals a stark reality. HMRC’s own annual reports show a ballooning "tax gap"—the difference between tax owed and tax collected. While some of this gap is due to criminal evasion and error, a significant and growing portion is attributed to "failure to pay on time" and "non-payment." The £17 billion figure represents a conservative estimate of this uncollected debt, money that could fund public services, reduce borrowing, or lower taxes for compliant citizens.

The situation is further complicated by the economic climate. As interest rates rise and the cost of living increases, more businesses are struggling. HMRC’s "Time to Pay" arrangements, which allow struggling firms to pay in installments, have surged in popularity. Yet, when these arrangements fail, HMRC often faces a binary choice: enforce bankruptcy or write off the debt. Increasingly, it chooses the latter.

This is not a partisan issue. Both Conservative and Labour governments have overseen this trend, prioritizing "support for business" over aggressive tax collection during economic downturns. The result, however, is a silent fiscal crisis. The £17 billion represents a hidden subsidy to struggling businesses, paid for by the rest of the taxpayer base.

The question for policymakers is whether this is a prudent, compassionate policy or a fundamental failure of the state to collect its dues. As the national debt climbs, the answer to that question carries a price tag of £17 billion.

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