{"id":7054,"date":"2023-03-30T08:35:53","date_gmt":"2023-03-30T07:35:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.taxpolicy.org.uk\/?p=7054"},"modified":"2023-05-30T12:20:17","modified_gmt":"2023-05-30T11:20:17","slug":"football","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/heacham.neidles.com\/2023\/03\/30\/football\/","title":{"rendered":"New report: how Premier League Football clubs have avoided \u00a3470m of tax, and how to stop it"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

Tax Policy Associates today reveals that Premier League football clubs are avoiding tax on an industrial scale, by artificially structuring their payments to football agents. We estimate it cost \u00a3250m in lost tax<\/strong><\/em> from 2019-2021, and \u00a3470m since 2015.<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n

In our view this is failed tax avoidance – it was never compliant with the law, and HMRC can and should require all the lost tax to be repaid.<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n

There’s extensive BBC Newsnight coverage and analysis here.<\/a><\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Football clubs at all levels are using an artificial tax avoidance scheme to avoid VAT, income tax and national insurance\/social security. In the Premier League alone we estimate that this has resulted in \u00a3250m of lost tax in the last three years, and \u00a3470m of lost tax since 2015:<\/p>\n\n\n\n

\"\"<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

And here’s our estimate for each Premier League club’s tax avoidance in 2021:<\/p>\n\n\n\n

\"\"<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

The purpose of the scheme is to avoid employment taxes and VAT on the large commissions paid to football agents. In reality, these agents act for players. But the scheme works by constructing artificial contracts where the agent acts for the club as well as the player \u2013 so-called \u201cdual representation contracts\u201d. Half the fees are then paid by the club – even though it is the player who is really benefiting from all (or almost all) of the agent\u2019s work – and these fees escape income tax, national insurance and VAT.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

The defence of dual representation contracts by clubs is that \u201ceverybody does it\u201d. That is true. But it\u2019s our view that the arrangements are improper \u2013 they contravene both the letter and the spirit of the law. This isn\u2019t \u201clegal tax avoidance\u201d \u2013 it\u2019s a failure to comply with the law. HMRC should be aggressively challenging it (and we understand that, in least some cases, it already is).<\/p>\n\n\n\n

There are potentially serious consequences for football. If HMRC were able to recover all \u00a3470m then Premier League clubs would struggle to pay it – the Premier League’s total profits in 2022 were the largest for some time, but still only \u00a3479m<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

This report explains how the scheme is supposed to work, why it technically fails, and what should be done to stop it<\/p>\n\n\n

Football agents and fees<\/h2>\n\n\n

Football agents usually act for players. Sometimes the agent is one individual who is close to a particular player and acts for them and nobody else. Sometimes the agent is a business which acts for multiple players. But the role is much the same in either case: connecting the player with clubs, managing contract negotiations, finding sponsorship, and generally advancing the player\u2019s career.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Agents (sometimes called \u201cintermediaries\u201d1<\/a><\/sup>The football industry currently prefers to use the term “intermediary\u201d, but in our view it is both clearer and more accurate to use the traditional term \u201cagent\u201d, and that is the term we will use in this report.)<\/span>) are typically paid by receiving a percentage of their players\u2019 remuneration. In the past this has sometimes led to extraordinarily high payments, with a FIFA report<\/a> suggesting $3.5bn was paid to agents between 2011 and 2020, and another report estimating $500m in agent fees were paid in 2021 alone<\/a> (a slight decline on the $650m paid in 2019, probably as a result of Covid).<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Of all the tasks undertaken by the agents, the contract negotiations are the most critical, given that the outcome of those negotiations drives remuneration for the player, and therefore the agent.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

New FIFA rules were approved in December 2022<\/a> capping agent fees at (for large amounts) broadly 6% of the remuneration paid to the player. Given the size of transfer payments, \u00ad\u00adthat still equates to very large fees to agents but, whilst the rules are supposed to enter force in October 2023, it is unclear whether that will happen.2<\/a><\/sup>It is likely that agents will assert that there are competition law\/anti-trust problems with the proposal and, whilst we have no expertise in competition law, that does not seem a frivolous objection.<\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n

The usual treatment of agent fees<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Everyone who is employed and working in the UK pays income tax and national insurance on their wages. When we hire someone to carry out a service (plumber, lawyer, estate agent, etc) we are not entitled to deduct that cost from our taxes. In other words, we pay almost all service providers on an after-tax basis. In addition, if the service provider is VAT registered, then we usually pay VAT on their fee.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

In some cases, it will be the employer who pays the cost of the service. For example, an employer may agree to cover an employee\u2019s personal legal fees. That will usually be a \u201cbenefit in kind\u201d with the employee taxed in exactly the same way as if he or she had received the cost of the legal fees as additional salary or bonus. The legal fees will also be subject to VAT, which the employer will not be able to recover (unlike the company\u2019s own legal fees, which will often be recoverable).<\/p>\n\n\n\n

So whether an employee engages a service provider directly, or their company does so on their behalf, should make no difference to the tax result.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

How should agents and clubs be taxed on agent fees?<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

The same principles should apply for clubs and football agents. The agents are hired by the player, represent the player in fee negotiations, and their loyalty is to the player. The player therefore shouldn’t be able to deduct the agent’s fees from his income tax bill, and the player should have to pay 20% VAT on the agent fees.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

And, as with the legal fee example above, none of this should change if the football club agrees to pay the agent’s fee – they’re doing so on behalf of the player, and so it’s a benefit in kind. The tax bill ends up the same – income tax, national insurance and VAT on the agent’s fee.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

This example shows how it should work, with \u00a31m paid in agent fees. HMRC ends up receiving \u00a3612,000 of tax. It would be the same if the club was paying \u00a31m in legal fees or estate agent fees. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

\"\"<\/figure>\n\n\n

The tax avoidance scheme<\/h2>\n\n\n

The scheme<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Historically, agents were hired by players, and either paid by players or paid by clubs (with the benefit-in-kind and VAT consequences discussed on the previous page). However, many years ago, some people in the football industry realised they could avoid a significant amount of tax if they wrote all the contracts so the agent purported to be the agent of the football club, not the player.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

This had two sizeable tax benefits. First, the club could now pay the agent fee without it being a taxable benefit for the player – saving (at current rates) 45% income tax, 2% employee national insurance, and 13.8% employer national insurance. Second, the club (unlike the player) could recover the 20% VAT the agent will charge on the fee. Add these up, and the total tax saving is equal to 80.8% of the agent fee.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Over time, a degree of caution from advisers meant that this approach was replaced with \u201cdual representation\u201d \u2013 the agent supposedly acting for both the player and the club. By 2021, the fees were typically (and, we understand, almost universally) allocated 50-50 as between player and club.3<\/a><\/sup>Interestingly, the 50-50 split has now been formalised by FIFA in its new regulations<\/a> (see Article 12(8)(a). Indeed, at first sight, the regulations seem to incentivise joint representation, because the cap on agent fees will be 3% (rather than 6%) if an agent is acting solely for a player. The reason for this is unclear, but we would speculate that agents and\/or clubs lobbied for the rule to give cover to the dual representation tax avoidance scheme.<\/span> This reduced the total tax saving to (at current rates) 40.4% of the agent fee (i.e., half the benefit compared to if the agent was solely acting for the club).<\/p>\n\n\n\n

This second example shows what happens when the 50-50 dual representation avoidance scheme is used. As with the first example, \u00a31m is paid in agent fees – but the effect of the scheme is that HMRC ends up receiving \u00a3311,000 less tax.:<\/p>\n\n\n\n

\"\"<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Why call this a \u201ctax avoidance scheme\u201d?<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

A common characteristic of tax avoidance schemes is that an arrangement which would usually have one tax result is structured in a different and artificial way, and claimed therefore to have a different and more favourable tax result. That is exactly what is happening here.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

The \u201cdual representation\u201d arrangement is fundamentally artificial. Whatever the contract says, everybody knows the agent isn’t really <\/em>the agent of the club. The agent is hired by the player, and their principal role is representing the player in negotiations with the club, to extract as a high a price as possible from the club for the player.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

There\u2019s an obvious conflict of interest. The player wants to be paid as much as possible. The agent is paid a percentage of the player’s earnings, and so also wants the player to be paid as much as possible. On the other hand, the club wants to pay as little as it can get away with.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

It is often asserted that the agent does in fact provide real services for the club. For example, the agent may assist with work permits, and help the player get settled into their new home. However, there are two obvious responses to this. First, these services primarily benefit the player. Second, the value of the services is low, and can\u2019t begin to justify half the fee being allocated to the club.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Are joint representation contracts permitted by the Football Association and FIFA?<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

The Football Association prohibits an agent from acting for both the player and the club – but with a remarkably wide exemption4<\/a><\/sup>see section E of the FA guidance here: https:\/\/www.thefa.com\/-\/media\/files\/thefaportal\/governance-docs\/agents\/intermediaries\/the-fa-working-with-intermediaries-regulations-2020-21.ashx<\/a> <\/span> that in fact allows an agent to act for both the player and the club, provided the right boxes are ticked.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

FIFA was at one point proposing to end joint representation contracts, but the final version of the rules mirrors the Football Association in having an apparently clear prohibition followed by an extremely wide exception to the prohibition:5<\/a><\/sup>See the new regulations<\/a>, Article 12(8)(a)<\/span><\/p>\n\n\n

A Football Agent may only perform Football Agent Services and Other Services for one party in a Transaction, subject to the sole exception in this article.<\/em><\/p>\n

a)        Permitted dual representation: a Football Agent may perform Football Agent Services and Other Services for an Individual and an Engaging Entity in the same Transaction, provided that prior explicit written consent is given by both Clients.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n

So triple representation is prohibited, but dual representation has been given the green light.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

How much tax is being avoided?<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

We estimate \u00a3470m of tax was avoided in the Premier League between 2015 and 2021:<\/p>\n\n\n\n

\"\"<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Looking at 2021 in detail, we estimate that the \u00a381m of tax avoided was split between clubs as follows:<\/p>\n\n\n\n

\"\"<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

And the \u00a391m avoided in 2020 was split as follows:<\/p>\n\n\n\n

\"\"<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

The biggest clubs pay the biggest fees, and so dominate the charts above. However, if we look at the proportion of transactions using the dual agent structure in 2021, it is clear that some clubs use the structure all the time; others are less consistent. Generally, the richest clubs are the most frequent users, but Burnley and Brentford are also heavy users:<\/p>\n\n\n\n

\"\"<\/figure>\n\n\n

What are HMRC doing?<\/h2>\n\n\n

In the 2010s, clubs convinced themselves that there was a “safe harbour” that meant HMRC wouldn’t challenge dual representation structures provided the split was no greater than 50-50. However we don\u2019t believe that is correct \u2013 there never was a safe harbour, and HMRC never accepted these arrangements.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

HMRC became aware of the urban myth of a “safe harbour”, and issued particularly clear guidance in May 2021<\/a> refuting the claim. The guidance says that a 50-50 split cannot be the default position, and has to be carefully justified by reference to the work actually undertaken by the agent for the club, and with detailed records kept<\/a>. This was in the context of an overall high level of HMRC scrutiny on football and football agents in particular.6<\/a><\/sup>See for example https:\/\/www.gov.uk\/government\/news\/top-football-agent-scores-12-million-tax-avoidance-own-goal<\/a> and https:\/\/www.mirror.co.uk\/sport\/football\/news\/taxman-probing-thousands-football-agents-16228503<\/a><\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n

HMRC guidance is just an expression of HMRC\u2019s opinion, and is not legally binding. Given the likelihood of a dispute, well-advised taxpayers typically are very cautious before ignoring HMRC guidance. However, it is not uncommon for some taxpayers (and advisers) to follow the letter of the guidance and ignore the spirit. That seems to have happened in this case; we understand from sources in the industry that most clubs still use a 50-50 split (albeit they are more careful to justify it, and create a supportive \u201cpaper trail\u201d which purports to demonstrate value being provided to the club). <\/p>\n\n\n\n

Perhaps for this reason, there is no evidence of dual representation contracts declining in 2021 \u2013 68% of relevant contracts were dual representation that year, the same as in 2020, and only slightly down on 2019 (when it was 70%)<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Part of the problem is the competitive dynamic between clubs – agents will play one off against another, and any club that’s too scrupulous in its tax planning can find itself losing out in the race to hire new talent. This is a common dynamic that drives tax avoidance in many industries, and the solution is public pressure, aggressive enforcement by HMRC, and a change in the law. We discuss this further below.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Another problem is that we understand there is close collaboration between the tax teams at the Premier League clubs. That can create an atmosphere that their tax positions are “too big too fail” – for surely HMRC wouldn’t challenge everyone? In most industries, competition law concerns mean that tax teams in different companies do not coordinate their positions in this way. It is unclear why football is different. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

We understand there are several live HMRC enquiries into the use of dual representation structures by Premier League clubs, but the scale of HMRC\u2019s work in this area is not clear. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

If HMRC does pursue the structures aggressively, and across several past years, there could be serious financial consequences for the clubs involved. In the worst-case scenario for the clubs, all the tax we identify as having been avoided could be repayable, plus interest and potentially penalties. Whilst there is certainly lots of money in the Premier League, there is very little spare cash available to fund unexpected tax liabilities \u2013 total Premier League profits for 2022 were only \u00a3479m. <\/p>\n\n\n

Our view – is the dual representation structure lawful?<\/h2>\n\n\n

Dan Neidle worked as a tax lawyer for 25 years, and was head of UK tax for one of the world\u2019s largest law firms7<\/a><\/sup>It is important to note that Dan never advised on the use of dual representation contracts, and so holds no client-confidential information relating to these schemes.<\/span>. He had particular expertise advising clients who had previously entered into tax\/VAT avoidance schemes, or who were exposed to risk as a result of other parties\u2019 use of such schemes.8<\/a><\/sup>This is a common commercial problem that tax lawyers are asked to solve, for example where a bank is lending to a business that had might have entered into a tax avoidance scheme, or a company taking over a business in that position. In both cases, the lawyer\u2019s client will want to understand the nature and risks of its counterparty\u2019s tax planning, and whether and how that planning should be conceded and settled with HMRC.<\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dan\u2019s view of the dual representation scheme is as follows:<\/p>\n\n\n

“In my view it is clear that the dual representation schemes do not work. HMRC should challenge current and historic use of dual representation contracts, and in my view HMRC would win.<\/p>\n

In relation to income tax and national insurance, modern caselaw has established that these taxes apply realistically to the actual commercial transaction, and not to artfully constructed paperwork.9<\/a><\/sup>There is an accessible summary of modern direct tax principles of interpretation in Barclays Mercantile Business Finance Limited (Respondents) v. Mawson (Her Majesty\u2019s Inspector of Taxes (Appellant) – <\/em>see paragraph 26 here<\/a>. <\/span> Realistically, the agent is acting only for the player. The most economically valuable part of the agent\u2019s role, and the basis on which agents are remunerated, is their negotiation of the player\u2019s remuneration. When entering into these negotiations, the agent can only be acting for the payer, and not the club (as otherwise the agent would be negotiating against him or herself). The club may be making the payments, but this is a matter of convenience \u2013 the agent is not, in reality, acting for the club (other than for minor ancillary services). Hence, I expect a tribunal would simply apply the income tax and national insurance legislation on the basis that all, or almost all, the payments made by the club to the agent are made on behalf of the player, for services provided by the agent to the player.<\/p>\n

In some cases, where the agent in reality provides no services at all to the club, the contractual appointment of the agent by the club might be a sham.10<\/a><\/sup>The sham doctrine in Snook v London and West Riding Investments Ltd<\/em> (available here<\/a>) is narrow in scope, and requires that parties create a document which appears to HMRC (or other third parties) to do one thing, but actually intend and act in a different way. Hence a typical artificial tax avoidance scheme is not a sham, because the parties do intend to be bound by the documentation. In this case the divergence between reality and documentation means that the potential for a sham cannot be entirely excluded, although it will depend upon the precise facts.<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n

Different civil law-style “abuse” principles apply for VAT (see the Halifax decision<\/em><\/a>), but in this case it is likely that those principles are not necessary, and the correct VAT result will simply follow from a proper analysis of the nature of the services that are actually being provided. In particular, a Tribunal is likely to readily conclude that the supplies by the agent are \u201cmade to\u201d the player and not \u201cmade to\u201d the club under Article 168 of the VAT Directive11<\/a><\/sup>The VAT Directive remains part of UK tax law post-Brexit \u2013 that was necessary to avoid the huge amount of uncertainty which would have resulted had it been repealed.<\/span> and section 24 of the Value Added Tax Act 1994 (and the fact the club is making the payment to the agent is irrelevant). That conclusion is consistent with the Supreme Court judgment in the Airtours<\/em> case<\/a>.<\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n

The key question for clubs to answer is why they thought it was appropriate to say that half the value provided by agents was provided to clubs, when it’s the players who receive almost all the benefit.<\/p>\n

I expect the clubs will say that they have tax advice that the dual representation structures are appropriate. But I understand that advice is usually based upon a critical factual assumption that agents really provide value equal to half of their fees – an assumption that is plainly incorrect. If that’s right, then the advice is worthless, and the clubs should have known that. I would also query whether it was appropriate for advisers to advise on the basis of an assumption that, if they’d thought about, they would have realised was false.<\/p>\n

The clubs may have thought they were avoiding tax; but in fact they were simply failing to pay tax that was due, based upon factual assumptions they should have known were false. If they actually knew the assumptions were false, then it is possible that criminal offences were committed.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n

Recommendations<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

We have three key recommendations:<\/p>\n\n\n\n

    \n
  1. Parliament should enact specific income tax, national insurance and VAT anti-avoidance rules, to put beyond all doubt that the dual representation schemes do not work. Ministers have previously<\/a> warned<\/a> that employment tax avoidance can be countered by retrospective legislation, and that is something that should be considered in this instance. This would save the time and cost of litigating against dozens of clubs across the Premier League and Championships – the result of which is not realistically in doubt.<\/li>\n\n\n\n
  2. Absent retrospective legislation, HMRC should aggressively challenge all the clubs which have historically used joint representation contracts. The starting point should be that little or none of agents\u2019 fees should be allocated to the club \u2013 they act solely (or almost solely) for the players. The tax\/VAT result should follow straightforwardly from that (with late payment interest also due). Where these contracts were constructed without a reasonable contemporaneous justification for the fees allocated to clubs, penalties should be charged.12<\/a><\/sup>Penalties apply where, broadly speaking, a taxpayer has been \u201ccareless\u201d. Allocating fees without a reasonable commercial justification in our view falls into that category. HMRC guidance on penalties is here: https:\/\/www.gov.uk\/guidance\/penalties-an-overview-for-agents-and-advisers<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n\n\n\n
  3. Unless full disclosure was provided to HMRC (including the amount of value provided by agents) then HMRC should be able to open a \u201cdiscovery assessment\u201d and challenge the previous four years of tax returns (and any earlier years which remain \u201copen\u201d13<\/a><\/sup>Meaning that an enquiry was opened on this or some unrelated matter for that year, and it has not been resolved<\/span>). If a failure to provide full disclosure can be said to be \u201ccareless\u201d (which is very plausible, particularly where there was not contemporaneous justification for the allocation), HMRC should be able to challenge six years of tax returns. The fictitious nature of the structure also creates the possibility that the 20 year time limit for deliberate loss of tax could apply.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n\n\n\n

    We understand that dual representation contracts are used elsewhere in Europe, and that \u2013 as with the UK \u2013 the principal purpose is tax avoidance. Other countries\u2019 tax authorities and football associations may wish to consider taking similar steps to those recommended above.<\/p>\n\n\n

    Methodology<\/h2>\n\n\n

    Sources of data<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

    In April 2015, FIFA required national football associations to publish statistics on agents (“intermediaries”). Originally it only published the total agent fees paid by each club, and limited data on transactions. However, from 2019, that data also includes whether agents were instructed on a sole or joint basis, which enables the analysis in this paper. The full data is here<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

    The fee and transaction datasets are separate, so that it is not possible to ascertain the fees paid to any individual agent, or in respect of any individual player.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

    Approach<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

    We can take the Football Association statistics for 2019, 2020 and 2021<\/a> (running from February in each year to the end of January in the next year) and estimate the total tax avoided, using the approach set out below. All the calculations are available in the spreadsheet here<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

      \n
    1. For each year 2019-2021, take the FA transactions list and exclude duplicate entries (which we assume are errors). The lists are in the spreadsheet on the “transaction data” tabs for each year.<\/li>\n\n\n\n
    2. Take the FA lists of total fee payments to agents. These are in column B on the “calculations” tab for each year.<\/li>\n\n\n\n
    3. Include only permanent transfers in, loans in, updated contracts, and international loans in (as other transactions are not likely to give rise to material fee payments). These are the “in scope transactions” on the “assumptions” tab. Count the number of payments made by each club on “in scope” transactions – this is column C on the “calculations” tab.<\/li>\n\n\n\n
    4. For each club, calculate the number of those payments which involve joint representations (i.e. where agents were acting for both the player and the club). This is column D on the “calculations” tab. This gives us the percentage of dual representation transactions – column E.<\/li>\n\n\n\n
    5. Assume we can simply apply that percentage to the total agent fees paid by each club (probably resulting in too small a number, because joint representation is likely more common on larger transactions, where more tax is at stake). That gives us the “implied dual representation fees” in column G of the “calculations” tab (which excludes VAT).<\/li>\n\n\n\n
    6. Assume that all the joint representations are 50-50 (the industry standard), and so multiply the total joint representation fees by 50%. The assumption is in cell C4 of the “assumptions” tab.<\/li>\n\n\n\n
    7. Calculate the total rate of tax avoided on this VAT-exclusive agent fee. That will be VAT (20%) plus the top rate of tax (45%) plus the highest rate of employee national insurance (2%) plus the highest rate of employer national insurance (13.8%). That totals 80.8%. This total is in cell C8 on the “assumptions” tab.<\/li>\n\n\n\n
    8. Multiply the VAT-exclusive agent fee allocated to the club (from step 5) by the 50% figure (step 6) by the rate of tax avoided (step 7). This gives the estimate for tax avoided for each club for each year 2019, 2020 and 2021 (column H of the “calculations” tab for each year).<\/li>\n\n\n\n
    9. For the years before 2019, we have agent fee data but no data on the proportion of dual representation contracts. So we proceed on the assumption that the percentage of tax avoided (out of total agent fees) will be broadly the same as in the later years where we do have that data. So a simple pro-rata calculation provides the tax avoidance estimate for 2015 (where we only have the last quarter data), 2016, 2017 and 2018. This is a conservative assumption given that the industry settled on 50% as a supposed “safe harbour” – previously a higher percentage was used. The calculation here is in cells D6-D9 of the “calculation” tab.<\/li>\n\n\n\n
    10. The total tax avoidance estimate sums to \u00a3469m (cell D14).<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n\n\n\n

      The data also shows a smaller number of cases where the agent is solely acting for the club. Many of these appear to be cases where there are separate contracts between agent and player, and agent and club. We do not know if this is a legitimate arrangement which splits bona fide<\/em> obligations and fees between player and club, or a tax avoidance arrangement which is effectively the same as a dual representation contract, but splits the contract into two halves. We are conservatively assuming it is the former, and not including any figures from these cases in our estimates of tax avoided.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

      We are focussing on the Premier League, as its financial predominance means that the amount of tax avoided is disproportionately focussed here. However, \u201cjoint representation contracts\u201d are also used in the Championship\/lower divisions. Agent fees in the Championship are about 15% of those in the Premier League – so as a rough order of magnitude estimate, we’d expect Championship tax avoidance to be around \u00a370m (i.e. simply calculating 15% of \u00a3470m).<\/p>\n\n\n\n

      An important assumption in our analysis is that fees were allocated between players and clubs 50-50 on all \u201cjoint representation\u201d contracts, and that this continued through to 2021 (despite the HMRC warning in the middle of that year). We understand from industry and HMRC sources that this is correct, and that clubs responded to the HMRC warning by being more careful about how they justified the 50-50 split, but not changing it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

      If Premier League clubs wish to dispute our use of the 50-50 figure, they can respond by disclosing what the actual dual representation figures are, and we will then immediately update this report.<\/p>\n\n\n

      Response from Premier League clubs<\/h2>\n\n\n

      Until the BBC published its story, the Premier League clubs were entirely unresponsive. We contacted the press office of each club for comment late last year, and know that our messages were received \u2013 but not a single club replied. BBC Newsnight also contacted the Premier League clubs for comment more recently – again no response was received. Nor did the BBC get a response from the Association of Football Agents.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

      It is highly unusual for a company which is credibly accused of tax avoidance to fail to provide even a short form response. It is even more unusual for an entire sector to refuse to respond to enquiries. The obvious inference is that the Premier League clubs collectively realise that their position is impossible to defend.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

      Since the BBC published its report tomorrow, we finally do have a response. Of sorts.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

      The Association of Football Agents now says it disputes our findings, saying we’re making “fundamental misunderstanding of how the football transfer market works”. Oddly they don’t bother saying what that misunderstanding is. They’ve had months to come up with something better.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

      The Premier League also provides a non-answer: “We believe that the overall figure suggested here is based on assumptions that do not recognise the individual circumstances of each transaction”. What are those assumptions? How are they wrong? They don’t say. And, again, they’ve had months.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

      Note what these responses don’t do. They don’t provide a principled justification for dual representation contracts existing at all. They don’t deny that the industry is using 50-50 across the board, despite HMRC guidance saying they shouldn’t.<\/p>\n\n\n

      Acknowledgements<\/h2>\n\n\n

      Thanks to Mike Cowan, Ben Chu and the Newsnight team for helping to develop the story, and to all the tax professionals \u2013 solicitors, accountants, barristers and retired HMRC officers, who commented on early drafts of this paper. Particular thanks to Max Schofield for his invaluable comments on the VAT analysis, and to A, F and T for their equally valuable input on the income tax and national insurance analysis. And many thanks to the industry contacts who prompted this investigation, and provided background information on the historic and current use of dual representation contracts. Final thanks, as ever, to J.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

      <\/div>\n\n\n\n
      \n\n\n\n

      Image by DALL-E<\/a> \u2013 \u201ca soccer ball with cash exploding from it, on a grass football pitch, digital art\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n