Carousel fraud costs UK £3bn
HMRC figures it out
Posted in IT Channel, 7th December 2006 15:30 GMT
Free whitepaper – Managing desktop software for fun and profit
Missing trader or carousel fraud cost Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs £3bn in the last financial year.
Figures from the Treasury reveal the size of the problem, although HMRC believes it is getting on top of the problem - helped by the closure of the First Bank of Curacao earlier this year.
Customs estimates that attempted MTIC fraud was between £3.5bn and £4.75bn. But many of these are stopped so Customs believes the true cost is more likely to be between £2bn and £3bn.
A major victory was achieved in September with the closure of the First Curacao International Bank (FCIB). Every single UK convicted missing trader fraudster had an account at the bank.
Computer chips and mobile phones are often targetted in the fraud because of their high price and small size.
Carousel fraud involves importing, or claiming to import, goods from another EU country without paying VAT, then selling them on and pocketing the tax. The same goods will often go from country to country earning fraudulent tax at every stage.
Increasingly, the goods don't even physically move.
The European Commission has agreed to change the way VAT is paid on certain goods.®
Free whitepaper – Straight Talk with Dell: Sending out an SaaS
Analyst Keynote: The Register Agile Data Center Summit
The business value of SIP VoIP and trunking
Seven ways to optimize VMware server virtualization

Sign up, sign up for The Register IT security newsletter
Microsoft's Windows 7 price gamble - and why it's flawed
Managing Desktop Software for fun and profit
Intel's flash new SSDs hit by bugs