LONDON: Prince Charles has become embroiled in the parliamentary crusade against tax avoidance after the public accounts committee demanded that the government justify tax exemptions enjoyed by his GBP728m hereditary estate.

Margaret Hodge, who chairs the House of Commons committee that last year investigated tax avoidance by Google and Amazon and accused Starbucks of “immoral” behaviour, has asked ministers if they can still defend an arrangement that allows the Duchy of Cornwall not to pay corporation tax or capital gains tax on trading that last year provided Prince Charles with an GBP18.3m private income.

The public accounts committee (PAC) said it made the move after more than 30 MPs and members of the public complained about the duchy’s arrangements. A full inquiry is likely to be launched into the matter, a committee source said.

The PAC is also likely to investigate the wider royal finances including public spending on the Queen and Prince Charles’s travel and official homes.

Hodge said she has written to Greg Clark, the financial secretary to the Treasury, stating that “in view of the committee’s and the public’s concern on this matter” he should clarify “why the tax treatment of the duchy remains defensible”.

“A lot of the work we are doing is around tax collection and this is another element the taxpayer has an interest in,” said Hodge. “Taxpayers are concerned that everyone pays their fair share.”

Any change to the duchy’s tax status threatens to reduce the annual surplus paid to the prince for his private and official spending. The duchy asserts that the estate is “not a separate legal entity for tax purposes” allowing Charles to use its gross profits to fund his private and official spending including 26 valets, gardeners and farm staff. In the past five years he has received more than GBP86m from the arrangement. Clarence House strongly denies any suggestion of tax avoidance.The duchy owns 53,000 hectares of land in 23 counties, including Prince Charles’s Gloucestershire home of Highgrove. It is a major business with interests in commercial and residential property and farmland. The PAC also wants the Treasury to explain “the impact of this favourable tax position on the duchy’s competitive position in markets in which it operates”.

A Clarence House spokesperson said, “The duchy is not a company and is not therefore liable to pay corporation tax. The prince voluntarily pays income tax on income generated by the duchy. Should the prince pay corporation tax as well, this would result in double taxation.”

It also said the duchy is exempt from capital gains tax, saying Charles is not entitled to capital gains and therefore it would not be appropriate for him to pay.

Charles paid tax of GBP5m on his GBP18m income from the duchy last year, which Clarence House said was at the full 50 per cent rate after deductions for expenses.

Republic, the campaign for an elected head of state, said it welcomed the public accounts committee’s scrutiny of the duchy’s tax arrangement.

The duchy’s insistence that it should not pay corporation tax because it is indivisible from the Duke of Cornwall — currently Prince Charles — appears to have been challenged by a court ruling. In late 2011 John Angel, principal judge at the information rights tribunal, who was tasked with deciding if the duchy should publish information about its environmental impact, ruled it must be considered a separate legal body from the prince because of “the differentiation of the duchy and duke in commercial and tax matters as well as under legislation and the contractual behaviour of the duchy”. The ruling is being appealed by the palace.

“There is no justification for the duchy to be avoiding this tax,” said Graham Smith, Republic’s chief executive. “The duchy is a trading body and major land owner. Like all other trading bodies it should pay its fair share of tax. Instead it keeps ducking and diving, changing its excuses each time in a desperate bid to justify its position.”

Parliamentary scrutiny over tax — which this week returned to the political centre stage with redistributive “Robin Hood” plans from Ed Miliband, the leader of the opposition Labour party — could prove embarrassing for the palace. Starbucks faced protests outside its coffee shops following cross-examination by the PAC and was forced to volunteer to pay HM Revenue & Customs GBP10m extra in tax.

The committee’s report into tax avoidance concluded, “The UK government needs to get a grip on large corporations which generate significant income in the UK but pay little or no tax.”

In December anti-monarchy campaigners asked HMRC to investigate what they alleged was “a well-entrenched tax avoidance scheme” being run by the Duchy.

By arrangement with the Guardian

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