Having a discussion at work....
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LSainsbury
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Duncan
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Not as simple as it seems. there was actually a lot of money spent by the manufacurers and Inland Revenue taking this issue to court. As far as I remember It went like this....
sweets attract VAT
Food does not attract VAT
Chocolate busuits are counted a sweets so are VATted
Cakes are food so not VATable
Revenue say Jaffer cakes are chocy Bickies therefor please can we have lots of money please.
Manufacurer....no you can't they're food
Judge..... asks Mr revenue if the Jaffer cake was size of diner plate would you call it a cake or buiscuit
Mr revenue ..... um ah well.... I suppose... I would call it a cake
Judge... IT'S A CAKES ...and size doesn't matter
Jaffer cakes are cakes.
sweets attract VAT
Food does not attract VAT
Chocolate busuits are counted a sweets so are VATted
Cakes are food so not VATable
Revenue say Jaffer cakes are chocy Bickies therefor please can we have lots of money please.
Manufacurer....no you can't they're food
Judge..... asks Mr revenue if the Jaffer cake was size of diner plate would you call it a cake or buiscuit
Mr revenue ..... um ah well.... I suppose... I would call it a cake
Judge... IT'S A CAKES ...and size doesn't matter
Jaffer cakes are cakes.
"all aboard the Skylark"
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Mr_AWOL
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Therefore, a biscuit is sometimes a kind of cake, but a cake is not always a biscuit! Furthermore, a jaffa cake is actually a biscuit!Biscuit = piece of usu. unleavened cake or bread of various materials, usually crisp, dry, hard and of small flat thin shape.
Cake = Sweet usu. unleavened bread with other ingredients besides flour, e.g. currants, spice, eggs, sugar; quantity of this baked in thick disc or ornamental shape.
Must confess i havent read the jaffa VAT case, so can't comment there, but remmeber something about 'connies cones' (not a porn film) having the same problem. Obviously laws are all upheld by interpretation and i would say that the oxford english is a better source of definition than case law on a VAT issue?
Apart from all this - there are only 3 votes so far so it seems that no-one cares either way whether they are biscuits, cakes or other!
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Derek
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keep it simple - jaffa cakes are cakes for VAT purposes
as duncan (can always be relied upon) said mcvities took action on this when the chancellor wanted to make them VATable as in biscuits.
a similar strange one is crisps are VATable but snacks aren't. this means that your average packet of crisps attract VAT but KP Skips and Walkers Doritos etc.. are zero VAT rated.
a similar strange one is crisps are VATable but snacks aren't. this means that your average packet of crisps attract VAT but KP Skips and Walkers Doritos etc.. are zero VAT rated.
Derek
206CC 2.0SE Owner 2001 to 2004 - 308CC GT Owner 2010 to 2011 - Now RCZ GT 200BHP Owner
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Mr_AWOL
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Derek
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- Location: West Lothian, Scotland
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Mr_AWOL
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Im not a tax expert, but then again a lot of tax experts know nothing about VAT as it is more of an accounting issue. Then again i only have reasonable knowledge of VAT too, but so have VAT inspectors. (I once had one tell me he thought a partial exemption calculation i had done for a doctor client was wrong, but he was going to need to go back to the office to tell me why! Turned out i was right after all)!