freelander2, on 23 October 2015 - 05:40 PM, said:
Another observation, a real head-scratcher!
Y/E 06/11
£270,179 of social security costs were charged to the P&L account
£73,178 of taxation & social security was shown as a liability on the balance sheet
Y/E 06/12
£289,737 of social security costs were charged to the P&L account
£70,652 of taxation & social security was shown as a liability on the balance sheet
Y/E 06/13
£259,410 of social security costs were charged to the P&L account
£90,240 of taxation & social security was shown as a liability on the balance sheet
Y/E 06/14
£329,043 of social security costs were charged to the P&L account
£97,484 of taxation & social security was shown as a liability on the balance sheet
So, over the past four years (2011 - 2014) social security costs have averaged £287,227 pa & the taxation and social security liability has averaged £82,889 at the year end.
Now this is where the real fun starts!
Y/E 06/15
£374,770 of social security costs were charged to the P&L account
£257,997 of taxation & social security was shown as a liability on the balance sheet. Given that the previous 4 years worth of accounts have shown an average liability of £82,889 at year end, what's going off here? Why has the liability to HMRC grown so significantly compared with previous years?
If you strip down 'taxation & social security' it really covers three areas, Corporation Tax (which in this case is not applicable), National Insurance & VAT. We know from looking at the P&L that total social security costs for the year were £374,770. Assuming that best practice is adopted by the club and only 1/12th (approximately £31,231) of this was outstanding at the year end, it just leaves the VAT liability at approximately £226,766.
Assuming that the club haven't changed their VAT period from previous years and all payments to HMRC are up-to-date, I'm struggling to identify what, from a trading point of view has caused this significant increase, even allowing for the VAT on the increased level of turnover for the year.
Before I post in another thread on this messageboard, I'd like a second opinion on the above from 60s/70s Spireite.
I've a feeling that transfer fees are chargeable to VAT - perhaps someone can confirm.
If so, then bearing in mind transfer fees received will have increased significantly, then this could be responsible for some of this increase. Also, I would have thought that the VAT outstanding at year end would be likely to be higher due to a combination of the higher turnover, the move to profit and increase in non-vatable costs.
Just throwing a few ideas in - not expert opinion - but perhaps someone could indicate whether these suggestions have any merit? Also if it is linked to transfer fees received, how much in fees would have been received in the last quarter of the financial year.
This post has been edited by Torteval: 23 October 2015 - 11:33 PM