The closures will be complete by 2027, according to HM Revenue and
Customs (HMRC), but the new centres will be open in the next five years.
Towns and cities hosting the new offices include Cardiff, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Bristol and Croydon.
The plan comes as HMRC faces criticism of its call centres.
Its
record of answering calls was accused of being "staggeringly bad" at
the Commons Treasury committee earlier in the week. Only half of calls
were answered successfully between April and June, although performance
has improved since.
Regional plan
Much of the criticism of HMRC's performance has been based on its ability to answer complex tax inquiries.
The
authority is planning to improve the skills of staff while moving them
to regional centres. Staff numbers in HMRC's 170 offices range from
6,000 to fewer than 10. Overall, there is the equivalent of 58,000
full-time staff working for HMRC.
The new centres will be in:
- North East of England - North Tyneside
- North West of England - Manchester and Liverpool
- Yorkshire and the Humber - Leeds
- East Midlands - Nottingham
- West Midlands - Birmingham
- Wales - Cardiff
- Northern Ireland - Belfast
- Scotland - Glasgow and Edinburgh
- South West of England - Bristol
- London, South East and East of England - Stratford and Croydon
Four specialist offices will also operate at Telford, Worthing, Dover and at the Scottish Crime Campus in Gartcosh.
"HMRC
has too many expensive, isolated and outdated offices. This makes it
difficult for us to collaborate, modernise our ways of working, and make
the changes we need to transform our service to customers and clamp
down further on the minority who try to cheat the system," said Lin
Homer, HMRC's chief executive.
"The new regional centres will bring our staff together in more modern and cost-effective buildings in areas with lower rents."
The plan will save £100m by 2025, HMRC said.
'Significant threat'
All
281 drop-in centres for face-to-face advice have already been closed,
but staff will be given at least a year's notice of the latest round of
office closures.
HMRC said the majority of its staff would be working in regional centres in 10 years' time.
The
PCS union said that 11,000 full-time equivalent staff posts had been
cut from HMRC since 2010 and any further cuts would be "absolutely
devastating".
"Closing this many offices would pose a significant
threat to the operation of HMRC, its service to the public and the
working lives of staff, and the need for parliamentary scrutiny of the
plans is undeniable and urgent," said PCS general secretary Mark
Serwotka.
HMRC said it would have fewer staff in the future but the phased approach to the move would "minimise redundancies".
'Distraction'
Frank
Haskew, of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales,
said there was likely to be more short-term pain for taxpayers trying
to access HMRC services, but the long-term ambition was correct.
"We
shouldn't underestimate the disruption that this restructuring will
have on HMRC and the distraction it will cause to its leadership as they
seek to implement it," he said.
"Given the challenge of improving
service standards and closing the tax gap, we are concerned that this
is the wrong time to be reorganising, closing offices and cutting
staff."
Chas Roy-Chowdhury, head of taxation at the ACCA
accountancy body, said he was keen for no reduction in the headcount at
HMRC, but any improvement in skills to deal with more complex tax
inquiries would be welcome.
Plaid Cymru leader Leanne Wood said the plans were "really bad news" in Wales. There are also significant changes in Scotland.
However, the restructuring has been welcomed by business bosses.
"We
should welcome the fact that our tax collectors have recognised how to
get more bang for their buck by embracing the technology available to
them," said Stephen Herring, head of taxation at the Institute of
Directors.
"HMRC is not immune from the need to reduce
government spending. It is encouraging to see a focus on adopting new
techniques so they can raise revenues without, we hope, hitting service
levels."
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