HMRC failing on responsiveness, says Charter report
HMRC is failing on the key metrics of  responsiveness, ease and accuracy, according to the annual HMRC Charter report.
The report reviewed HMRC's performance against  its Charter from April 2023 to March 2024.
The survey received over 1,600 responses, with  complaints about service levels a recurring theme.
    - 'Being  responsive' scored the lowest of the Charter standards, with an average score  of just 2.4 out of 10.
- 'Making  things easy' and 'getting things right' also scored poorly, at 2.8 and 3.5  respectively.
- The remaining  standards – 'being aware of your personal situation', 'treating you fairly',  “recognising that someone can represent you', 'mutual respect' and 'keeping  your data secure' – scored higher at 4.1, 5.0, 5.7, 5.6 and 6.8 respectively.
Richard Wild, the Chartered Institute of  Taxation's (CIOT) Head of Tax Technical, said:
'Significant  time is lost every day for members, their clients, and indeed HMRC themselves,  due to delays and inefficiencies in dealing with HMRC.
'The  three standards on responsiveness, ease and accuracy were by far the lowest  scoring, which is disappointing as between them they represent the health of  the tax system.
'Businesses  are prevented from operating effectively due to the inability to obtain timely  registrations or responses. Taxpayers' legitimate refunds are withheld or  delayed. Guidance and correspondence from HMRC is misleading or incorrect. All  these things are inhibitors on growth and investment.'
Internet  link: GOV.UK CIOT