Michael Randall: PhD student, University of Leeds
The need to
categorise products with regard to their VAT status has led to various high
profile and at times highly unusual situations. In recent times the issue of
VAT charges on sanitary products has been brought to public attention across
Europe. On 15 October French MPs
voted against reducing the rate of VAT on sanitary products from 20% to 5%. The
French government opposed the motion due to the loss of tax revenue by €55
Million (£40 Million). On 26 October British MPs
voted against Labour MP Paula Sherriff’s amendment to the Chancellor’s Finance
Bill to remove VAT on sanitary products. Currently in the UK a VAT rate of 5%
is charged equating to £3 of an average £60 p.a. spend on sanitary products. The charge has attracted attention in various ways including general
election manifesto pledges and online petitions. As of 27 October
in the UK the ‘Stop Period Tax. Period’ group currently has 253,287 signatures with sister campaigns in France, Italy and Germany which call on the
Chancellor to remove VAT on sanitary products. However, the ability to remove
VAT is problematic since currently the lowest permissible rate across the EU
for sanitary products is 5%.
1. The
Introduction of VAT and Regulation at EU Level
VAT was first
introduced in the UK as a fundamental condition of joining the Common Market
due to the previous existence of multi-stage cascade taxes making it impossible
to determine the real amount of tax actually included in the final price of a
particular product. Member States may have subsidised their exports by overestimating
the taxes refundable on exportation. A common system of VAT increased
transparency.
The UK has four
different categories of VAT classification:
· Standard rate
(20%)
· Reduced rate (5%)
· Zero-rate (0%)
· VAT exempt
The UK government of
1975 entered into a once and for all negotiation process to determine essential
items to be zero-rated, such as food meaning VAT is charged, but at a rate of
0%. A zero-rated item can be altered to the reduced or standard rate, but once applied
cannot return to the 0% rate. This differentiates a zero-rated item from a VAT
exempt item in which no VAT is charged at all. In addition if an item was not
included in the original negotiation it cannot be made zero-rated. Schedule 8 of the Value Added Tax Act (1994) contains a list of zero-rated goods
and services, with Schedule 9 containing VAT exempt goods and services. Sanitary products do not
appear in either of these schedules.
EU Legal Basis: Directive 2006/112/EC
The essential legal
instrument regulating VAT application across the EU includes a minimum standard
rate of 15% (at Point 29). The Directive contains three provisions relevant to
the imposition of VAT on sanitary products. Article 98 states that Member
States may apply a discretionary reduced rate to goods and services including
sanitary products within Annex III. Article 99 provides the reduced rates may
not be less than 5%. The UK’s zero-rated items status is preserved by Article
110. Sanitary products were charged at the standard rate in the UK until the
2000 Budget at which point the VAT rate on sanitary products was reduced to 5%.
2. Why
Remove VAT on Sanitary Products?
Although the end
result would be a reduction in cost for the consumer, the rate of VAT being
charged on sanitary products is symbolic of a form of gender discrimination
based on a biological process with campaigners highlighting exotic meats (such
as Kangaroo steaks) and alcoholic dessert jellies are zero-rated and in terms of VAT classification that these items are deemed to be
more essential than sanitary products.
Sanitary products
as a consequence are classed in the UK as non-essential luxury items. It is
this classification that is the flashpoint for the Stop Period Tax campaign
group. When announcing UKIP's intention to remove the tax Suzanne Evans explained
the scenario in which the activity of swimming is VAT exempt, whereas a tampon
which many would regard as a necessity in order to swim is charged at 5%. Consequently
VAT on sanitary products is seen to be an illogical tax on gender as a fallout
from a primarily male government from 40 years ago. To reinforce the gender
equality aspect of this issue in the House of Commons debate in October on the
amendment Stella Creasy MP reinforced the gender inequality aspect of the tax
by stating that male shaving razors are zero-rated, however HMRC lists them as ‘standard’ rated, meaning VAT is charged at 20% on these
items.
3. Election
Pledges and Political Party Support
The Chancellor has
not yet included a commitment to examine the issue in either the pre-Election
or Summer 2015 Budgets. UKIP may have garnered headlines when revealing the
policy in their election manifesto, however it was not the sole political party
including pledges to remove VAT from sanitary products in its General Election
Manifesto. Plaid Cymru also included an intention to repeal the tax but the two
parties took very different approaches; UKIP stated “Outside the EU, we will…be
able to…zero-rate certain goods and services that have previously had VAT
charged on them. This means we can – and will - remove VAT completely from
repairs to listed buildings and sanitary products.” However Plaid Cymru’s Manifesto favoured a collaborative
approach with the European Union, pledging to “remove VAT from women’s sanitary protection
products, making the argument for this in Westminster and in Europe.”
Furthermore each of the UK political party leaders was asked a common
question on the Radio 4 programme Woman’s
Hour about the issue. Ed
Miliband stated “I’d like to go further. I can’t promise I will go further
because there are these rules in place, but I will keep trying, because it
seems to me a ridiculous that you have VAT at all on this.” Nicola
Sturgeon replied “it should go…I am in support of that…it’s a simple case of
right and wrong.”
Previously David
Cameron was asked a direct question by a female student from the University of East
Anglia which in November 2014 elected to sell sanitary products at cost price (however
VAT was still technically charged). Cameron indicated support but acknowledged
the difficulties:
"I have had a look at it in the past. It's quite difficult. Some
VAT things you can change. Other VAT things, if they're linked to other
products, it's quite difficult to do it within the framework of European laws
and I can't remember the answer.”
4. Conclusions
and Options for Future Action
The crux of the
argument surrounding the application of VAT to sanitary products is centred on
the symbolism of VAT as a punishment on gender as opposed to the cost and
financial aspects of paying the tax. It therefore means that campaigners are
searching for a long-term solution. However campaigners want to use the EU
effectively and go beyond aiding only women in the UK by negotiating with the
European Commission to create an EU wide initiative, for example in Hungary the VAT rate is 27%. Laura Coryton of Stop Period Tax was critical of UKIP’s approach in withdrawing from the Union to gain
VAT autonomy:
"The political party have announced their support for the
campaign's ends but not its means. Our campaign has been engineered as a
European-wide initiative. UKIP have supported a UK-specific methodology."
[emphasis added]
The current government
is in an extremely difficult position in terms of ability to removing the rate
of VAT without EU consent based on the negotiations of a government which took
place 40 years ago. Following the House of Commons vote the Financial Chief
Secretary to the Treasury, David Gauke stated "I will raise this issue
with the European Commission and other member states setting out our views that
it should be possible for member states to apply a zero-rate to sanitary
products." On the one hand government negotiation at EU level needs to be
encouraged, however there would need to be unanimity across Member States to
amend the Directive. However the language used in pushing for “zero-rating” may
be flawed.
In order to achieve
the campaigners’ vision of a positive European-wide result campaigners and
politicians should instead attempt to mandate the European Commission to
propose an amendment to the VAT Directive to make sanitary products to be
classified as VAT exempt for the whole of the EU, not zero rated for the UK
only. This would benefit all EU citizens whilst avoiding the controversial
issue of granting the UK extension to the zero-rated discussions which cannot
be applied to other states such as France which does not have a zero-rating
classification system.
However an
amendment of the Directive would require unanimity since this would be a fiscal
matter (114(2) TFEU). Therefore in order to achieve uniform consensus as the
recent example of French MPs voting not to apply the reduced rate illustrates this
power should remain discretionary on the part of the Member States in the same
way that currently it is a discretionary power to charge a reduced rate. VAT
exemption goes further than zero-rating because of the symbolic significance of
charging VAT at all (even if at 0%) is removed in addition to any financial
rationale for removing the tax. For example France, which does not have
zero-rated products, the reduced rate is 5.5% for products deemed to be every
day requirements, however the full standard rate of 20% is applied to sanitary
products.
Further support for
reclassification as VAT exempt is provided for in Article 132 of the VAT
Directive which permits VAT exemptions that are in the ‘public interest’,
including for example ‘medical care’. In addition the Articles 2 and 3(3) of
the TEU Union make reference to ensuring equality between men and women. Making
sanitary products VAT exempt would be a symbolic step by the Union to uphold
these values.
In the absence of a
direct request from Member States the European Citizens’ Initiative (ECI) may
mandate the Commission to act. Introduced following the Lisbon Treaty (Article
11(4) TEU) in areas of Union competence. The petition must have at least one
million signatures across seven EU Member States comprising of a minimum number
of signatures in each Member State determined by population size as outlined in
Annex I of Regulation 211/2011/EU. The minimum number of signatures required
for the UK is 54,000 – at present the Stop Period Tax petition has well in
excess of this number. The existence of sister campaigns with a significant
number of petition signatures indicates that this process may be successful.
However the process is not a cast iron guarantee for an amendment to the
Directive of the classification of sanitary products that many would hope for.
Therefore it is possible to conclude that a long-term solution is tangible
without pulling out of the EU for the benefit of all EU citizens.
In the short term
campaign groups may be inclined to exert pressure on retailers to follow the
examples of the University of East Anglia and sell sanitary products profit
free. For major retailers committing to this approach may benefit in the long
run, attracting new customers who may purchase other products for profit,
however this would be voluntary and fails to address the underlying issue of
the symbolic existence of VAT. In addition any money raised under the current
5% system could be allocated by the Chancellor for specified good causes in a
similar manner to redistribution of LIBOR fines in order to signify that at
least from a revenue raising perspective the government has no qualms about
foregoing income. This would mean that one gender would fund good causes disproportionately, however it may make the best of a bad situation in the
short term.
Photo credit: www.crabmommy.blogspot.com
Stumbled on this, searching for a dispassionate account of the issue in the run-up to the EU referendum. Very surprised no-one else has commented here to thank you for laying out the facts so clearly - brilliant.
ReplyDeleteThanks. All praise to the author, Michael Randall.
Deletehi - also stumbled on this for the same reasons as the first reply - excellent piece and thanks
DeleteAdding my thanks to those above.
ReplyDeleteI live in New York where tampons are not subjected to the dreaded sales tax of some 8.5% hey are not taxed at all. I have a girl cat and she loves to play with catnip mice which are taxed at about 8.5%. I buy loose catnip (taxed) and place it in a large zip lock bag (taxed) and place tampons (Untaxed) in the bag with the catnip and then shake the contents together.
ReplyDeleteIt’s much cheaper than premade catnip mice and she looks so cute in the videos playing with the tampons, flipping them about and chewing on the rip cords. I sent a video to my mother for Christmas and I got an immediate call back wishing me a Merry Christmas, among other things.
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete