PRESS ASSOCIATION -- Considerable dissatisfaction exists among the public and tax professionals with the service provided by Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (HMRC) to taxpayers and benefit claimants, a group of MPs has warned.
In a report, the Commons Treasury Committee concluded there is a "serious risk" that if communicating with the HMRC becomes too time-consuming, difficult and expensive, "respect for the tax system, and with it voluntary compliance, may be undermined".
Entitled Administration And Effectiveness Of HM Revenue And Customs, the report said three issues of concern in particular stood out, including access to advice over the telephone, delays in responding to post, plus the need for off-line alternatives to internet-based filing and guidance for those without access.
The committee noted the "flawed implementation" of the PAYE system had done "significant damage" to the public perception of HMRC and the general tax system.
It noted HMRC had committed to an "ambitious timescale" to introduce Real-Time Information (RTI), driven in part by the project's importance in delivering the Universal Credit. It recommended Government go ahead with full implementation only once the system had been fully tested.
The committee acknowledged HMRC operated "under significant pressures" such as implementing increasingly complex tax legislation, restructuring, plus continuing resource reductions and its impact on staff.
It said: "HMRC collects revenue for the Government of more than 100 times the amount it costs to run.
"Given the fiscal position, it would make little sense for the department to be cut back further if resource reductions in addition to those plans already agreed would have the effect of reducing receipts, displacing disproportionate costs on to the wider economy or further eroding public confidence in the tax system."
The committee made a series of recommendations including rapidly improving its phone service, particularly in relation to complex queries, and looking into providing alternatives to 0845 numbers.
It also advocated drawing up minimum service standards for dealing with post "in a timely and accurate fashion", plus considering cost-effective ways of providing more face-to-face advice and offering alternatives to online communication.