Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Charles face taxing questions
Senior British royals faced questions over their financial affairs on Tuesday after an influential parliamentary committee asked the government why their estates benefit from major tax exemptions.
The Duchy of Lancaster, in north-west England, is said to be worth 310 million pounds (462 million euros, 580 million dollars) and provides income for Queen Elizabeth II.
The Duchy of Cornwall, in south-west England, is the main source of income for her son and heir to the throne Prince Charles, and earnt him nearly 12 million pounds in 2004.
Both estates act as effective property companies but do not pay corporation or capital gains tax.
Now lawmaker Edward Leigh, from the main opposition -- and traditionally pro-monarchy -- Conservatives and chair of the Public Accounts Committee, has written to the finance ministry to question this.
Last year, the committee probed why the money Charles earned from the Duchy of Cornwall had jumped 300 percent in the last decade.
It also issued a report asking The Treasury to justify both estates' "favourable" tax position.
The Treasury replied and now the committee is calling for a "fuller explanation", with Leigh asking whether "there is anything about the status" of the duchies which puts them outside the tax regimes.
Both the queen and Charles pay income tax on money which they receive from the duchies.
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