Cameron
releases tax returns information amid row
David
Cameron paid almost £76,000 in tax on an income of more than £200,000 in
2014-15, figures released by the prime minister have shown.
He earned
£46,899 from his 50% share of rent on the London family home in Notting Hill,
the first such papers released by a prime minister reveal.
The
disclosure comes after Mr Cameron admitted he could have better handled the row
over his financial affairs.
He also
announced a new task force to investigate tax-dodging allegations.
'Not a great week'
This comes
at the end of a week of questions and successive statements over whether Mr
Cameron had owned and sold units in an offshore fund run by his late father,
Ian Cameron.
Details of
the Blairmore Holdings fund had been contained in a leak of 11 million
documents, known as the Panama Papers.
The figures
released by the prime minister show:
He and his
wife Samantha made a £19,000 profit from the sale in 2010 of their shares in
the Blairmore Holdings fund
Mr Cameron
declared a £9,501 share of that profit, below the then £10,100 capital gains
tax threshold
Mr Cameron
inherited £300,000 when his father died in 2010
He was later
given two payments of £100,000 by his mother in May and July 2011 in an attempt
to balance out the legacy between Mr Cameron and his siblings
In 2014-15,
David Cameron paid £75,898 in tax on £200,307 earnings
On top of
his prime ministerial income, and the London rent, he last year received £9,834
in taxable expenses from the Tory party and £3,052 in interest on savings at a
High Street bank
He earned
enough to benefit from the 2013 cut in the top rate of tax from 50p to 45p (for
people earning more than £150,000)
In 2010 when
he first entered Downing Street, he took the prime ministerial expenses
deduction - a £20,000 tax-free allowance - as part of his £142,500 salary
But he
voluntarily cancelled out the allowance by declaring the equivalent amount as
taxable income from 2011-12, 2012-13 and 2013-14, before waiving it from
2014-15
The PM said
he was publishing the information to be "completely open and
transparent" about his financial affairs.
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