Today’s 2014 budget announcement included some
good news for the UK’s national heritage: the combined annual budget for the
Cultural Gifts Scheme (CGS) and the Acceptance in Lieu scheme (AIL) is to be
increased from £30 million to £40 million.
Head of a Peasant Woman, Vincent Van Gogh c. 1884. Credit: The National Gallery. Donated under the CGS scheme in 2013 |
Under
the well-established AIL scheme, a person who is liable for inheritance tax can
offer pay that tax liability by means of giving “national heritage property”
(broadly, art works and other objects which are deemed to be pre-eminent for their
national, scientific, historic or artistic interest) in full or part payment of
tax, instead of paying cash.
The
newer CGS complements the AIL scheme by allowing UK taxpayers
to make lifetime gifts of important works of art to the nation in return for
reductions in their tax liabilities.
The two schemes currently share a budget of £30
million so that, in any given tax year, the reduction in tax effected under
both schemes cannot exceed £30 million. If an artwork for was offered under
either scheme whose value would cause the annual limit to be exceeded, it could
not be accepted. That budget was raised from £20 million for the AIL scheme
alone to £30 million when the CGS was launched, following criticism that the CGS
would eat into the AIL scheme’s budget.
Today’s increase means that the potential amount of
tax allocated to increasing the UK’s national heritage collection in public
hands has doubled since the days since before the CGS was introduced.
Recent donations under the CGS include an early Van
Gogh entitled Head of a Peasant Woman
(reported on Art and Artifice here), now on display in the National Gallery.
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