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High cost of serving as a Jewish charity trustee

The risks to trustees are not theoretical but real

July 12, 2018 08:50
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ByTalia Greenbaum, Talia Greenbaum

2 min read

Our community is justifiably proud of its diverse and far-reaching phil-anthropy. The lifeblood of this thriving industry is the tireless input by the trustees at the helm of each charity. Unfortunately the complex and often-misunderstood charity tax rules can mean these trustees may be saddled with a lot more than they bargained for. This is particularly true for trustees of UK charities that make donations overseas to Israeli or other causes.

In order for payments overseas to qualify as charitable expenditure (and therefore not result in a tax charge), the law states trustees must be able to show they have done what is reasonable in the circumstances to ensure the payment will be applied for charitable purposes. Critically, the legislation states that HMRC can decide what is reasonable in the circumstances.

Getting it wrong can be incredibly costly. Failure to satisfy HMRC that appropriate governance is undertaken can result in a significant tax charge. This may be imposed, in the very worst-case scenario, on the trustees themselves.

Unfortunately, given the subjectivity introduced into the legislation by allowing HMRC to decide what is reasonable, the question worried trustees are asking is “how do we know what to do?”