UK Finance Bill to keep pace with accounting changes

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

UK Finance Bill to keep pace with accounting changes

The government has unveiled changes to UK Generally Accepted Accounting Practice in the draft Finance Bill 2012, the legislation that will put into effect measures to be announced in the budget on March 21.

The change will mean that tax legislation dealing with changes of accounting policy apply to the accounting transition adjustments arising because of changes to UK accounting practice.

It will apply to accounts prepared after January 1 2012 and for accounting periods that start before this date. It is not expected to have any impact on the amount of revenue the government collects.

The change has had to be introduced because of an October 2010 announcement from the Accounting Standards Board that it intended to change UK GAAP during 2012. The Treasury explained that the law provides that, in particular circumstances, on a change of accounting policy income is taxed once and expenditure allowed once. The tax law as it stands now would not apply to the accounting transition adjustments arising from the changes to UK GAAP.

“The measure will ensure consistency and fairness across businesses. It will also prevent disadvantage to businesses and protect against Exchequer loss by maintaining the existing policy objective underlying current law. The policy remains that income should be taxed once and the expenditure should be relieved once,” the Treasury said.

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

While the manual should be consulted for any questions around MAPs, the OECD’s Sriram Govind also emphasised that the guidance is ‘not a political commitment’
The landmark Indian Supreme Court judgment redefines GAAR, JAAR and treaty safeguards, and rejects protection for indirect transfers and tightening conditions for Mauritius‑based investors claiming DTAA relief
The expansion introduces ‘business-level digital capabilities’ for tax professionals, the US tax agency said
As tax teams face pressure from complex rules and manual processes, adopting clear ownership, clean data and adaptable technology is essential, writes Russell Gammon, chief innovation officer at Tax Systems
Partners want to join Ryan because it’s a disruptor firm, truly global and less bureaucratic, Tom Shave told ITR
If Trump continues to poke the world’s ‘middle powers’ with a stick, he shouldn’t be surprised when they retaliate
The Netherlands-based bank was described as an ‘exemplar of total transparency’; in other news, Kirkland & Ellis made a senior tax hire in Dallas
Zion Adeoye, a tax specialist, had been suspended from the African law firm since October over misconduct allegations
The deal establishes Ryan’s property tax presence in Scotland and expands its ability to serve clients with complex commercial property portfolios across the UK, the firm said
Trump announced he will cut tariffs after India agreed to stop buying Russian oil; in other news, more than 300 delegates gathered at the OECD to discuss VAT fraud prevention
Gift this article