{"id":7232,"date":"2022-07-19T08:58:12","date_gmt":"2022-07-19T07:58:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.taxpolicy.org.uk\/?p=7232"},"modified":"2022-09-27T16:42:26","modified_gmt":"2022-09-27T15:42:26","slug":"zahawi_questions","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/heacham.neidles.com\/2022\/07\/19\/zahawi_questions\/","title":{"rendered":"Nine questions for Nadhim Zahawi"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

Nadhim Zahawi has provided a series of unsatisfactory answers about his tax affairs. At least two are provably false (and one I characterised as a \u201clie\u201d \u2013 something I do not do lightly). Another answer is, in my judgment, probably false. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

This is a list of the nine outstanding questions, some of which are very serious, as they suggest that significant tax may have been due as a consequence of Mr Zahawi’s peculiar arrangements, but that this tax may not have been paid.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

In summary:<\/p>\n\n\n\n

  1. Why did Zahawi initially give a provably false explanation for the Balshore shares, that his father provided startup capital (I previously termed this, I think fairly, a “lie”)?<\/li>
  2. Why did Zahawi subsequently give a second, different, explanation, that his father provided valuable advice in exchange for the shares? And why is it so contrary to common-sense, usual practice, and the evidence?<\/li>
  3. If Zahawi’s second explanation is true, why was no VAT paid on the valuable services provided by his father to him? <\/li>
  4. Why did Zahawi deny that he benefited from the trust, when we know that he did?<\/li>
  5. Was this a tax avoidance scheme? If not, what was going on?<\/li>
  6. When a UK person receives a gift from a trust, that is normally taxable. Did Zahawi pay UK tax on the gift from the trust? If not, why not?<\/li>
  7. Zahawi says he took a loan from a Gibraltar company. He should have paid (“withheld”) UK tax on his interest payments. Did he?<\/li>
  8. Why is that same loan not recorded in the Gibraltar company accounts?<\/li>
  9. Zahawi has taken a series of loans from offshore companies. Were these funded from dividends and gains on the Balshore shares? If they were, did Zahawi pay UK tax on this?<\/li><\/ol>\n\n\n\n

    I have drawn Zahawi\u2019s advisers\u2019 attention to this post, and I am hoping that they or he will respond.<\/p>\n\n\n

    1. Why did Zahawi initially give a provably false explanation for the Balshore shares (which I called, I think fairly, a “lie”)?<\/h2>\n\n\n

    Zahawi and Stephan Shakespeare founded YouGov. Shakespeare held about 42.5% of the YouGov shares. But Zahawi held none. A Gibraltan company, Balshore Investments Limited, owned by a trust controlled by Zahawi\u2019s parents, held 42.5% of YouGov. What was the reason for this unusual arrangement? <\/p>\n\n\n\n

    Following publication of my first<\/a> report, and an FT article<\/a>, Zahawi told several newspapers that the explanation for the Balshore holding was that, when Zahawi co-founded YouGov, he was not in a position to provide startup capital. His father therefore provided startup capital and took a shareholding in YouGov through Balshore.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

    I investigated this at length<\/a> and found no evidence that Balshore had provided startup capital. It may have paid \u00a37,000 for its holding (although possibly this was two years\u2019 later), but given that the other founding shareholder, Neil Copp, paid \u00a3287,500 for his shares, the \u00a37,000 could not realistically be described as \u201cstartup capital\u201d. And the pricing is wildly uncommercial: if Copp paid \u00a3287,500 for 15% of YouGov then somebody providing \u201cstartup capital\u201d of \u00a37,000 would receive less than 1%; not 42.5%.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

    Hence I concluded that either I had made a mistake, there had been a long-running mistake in YouGov\u2019s filings and accounts, or Zahawi was lying. I invited Zahawi to comment. He did not. But, after I published my findings, Zahawi provided a different explanation (which I\u2019ll refer to below). He did not suggest I had made a mistake, or that YouGov\u2019s accounts and filings were wrong.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

    I therefore used the word \u201clie\u201d to describe his first explanation because I drew a blank as to how else to describe someone saying something that was clearly untrue, and he surely could not have believed was true.  Of course, I don\u2019t know what was in his mind. But my question for Zahawi would be: if you really thought this was a true explanation \u2013 why? You surely know \u00a37k isn\u2019t startup capital (and if you don\u2019t, then you should probably take another job). And what changed two days later that altered your belief?<\/p>\n\n\n\n

    Absent an explanation from Zahawi I will continue to describe his original, false explanation as a \u201clie\u201d. I do not do so lightly. I have never before publicly described something as a \u201clie\u201d, and I only did so after much consideration, and speaking with a variety of legal, tax, accounting experts. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

    My question for Mr Zahawi is: you presumably object to me saying that you lied. In which case: can you provide a credible explanation for why you said something that was provably false?<\/em> If you can, I will of course withdraw my accusation. Otherwise, I will not.<\/p>\n\n\n

    2. Why did Zahawi subsequently give a second, different, explanation? And why is it so contrary to common-sense, usual practice, and the evidence?<\/h2>\n\n\n

    Following publication of my refutation of his original explanation, Zahawi\u2019s spokespeople started to brief journalists with a new and startling different explanation \u2013 that Zahawi had no experience of running a business at the time and so relied heavily on the support and guidance of his father, who was an experienced entrepreneur. His father had also provided Zahawi with financial support, as he had given up his job. It was for these reasons that Balshore received the shares. Startup capital was no longer mentioned as a rationale.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

    It’s naturally very plausible that Zahawi\u2019s father provided him with advice, assistance, and financial support \u2013 what father wouldn\u2019t? That, however, is very different in nature from the claim being made. The normal kind of parental advice and support would in no way justify receiving *all* the founder shares.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

    This second explanation seems unconvincing for a number of reasons.<\/p>\n\n\n\n