Saturday 23 Nov 2024
Latest Accounting News
Hot Issues
Businesses ghosting the ATO targeted in debt collection blitz
Claiming the tax-free threshold: getting it right
Aussies tired of ‘dodgy tax criminals’, warns ATO
Protect your small business by following these essential steps.
Super guarantee a focus area for ATO business debt collection
Controversial ‘Airbnb tax’ set to become law
Withholding for foreign residents: an ATO focus area
1 in 3 crypto owners confused about tax, study reveals
20 Years of Silicon Valley Trends: 2004 - 2024 Insights
ATO reveals common rental property errors from data-matching program
New SMSF expense rules: what you need to know
Government releases details on luxury car tax changes
Treasurer unveils design details for payday super
6 steps to create a mentally healthy and vibrant workplace
What are the government’s intentions with negative gearing?
Small business decries ‘unfair’ payday super changes
The Leaders Who Refused to Step Down 1939 - 2024
Time for a superannuation check-up?
Scam alert: fake ASIC branding on social media
Millions of landlords the target of expanded ATO crackdown
Government urged to exempt small firms from TPB reforms
ATO warns businesses on looming TPAR deadline
How to read a Balance Sheet
Unregistered or Registered Trade Marks?
Most Popular Operating Systems 1999 - 2022
7 Steps to Dealing With a Legal Issue or Dispute
How Do I Resolve a Dispute With My Supplier?
Articles archive
Quarter 3 July - September 2024
Quarter 2 April - June 2024
Quarter 1 January - March 2024
Quarter 4 October - December 2023
Quarter 3 July - September 2023
Quarter 2 April - June 2023
Quarter 1 January - March 2023
Quarter 4 October - December 2022
Quarter 3 July - September 2022
Quarter 2 April - June 2022
Quarter 1 January - March 2022
Quarter 4 October - December 2021
Quarter 3 July - September 2021
Quarter 2 April - June 2021
Quarter 1 January - March 2021
Quarter 4 October - December 2020
Quarter 3 July - September 2020
Quarter 2 April - June 2020
Quarter 1 January - March 2020
Quarter 4 October - December 2019
Quarter 3 July - September 2019
Quarter 2 April - June 2019
Quarter 1 January - March 2019
Quarter 4 October - December 2018
Quarter 3 July - September 2018
Quarter 2 April - June 2018
Quarter 1 January - March 2018
Quarter 4 October - December 2017
Quarter 3 July - September 2017
Quarter 2 April - June 2017
Quarter 1 January - March 2017
Quarter 4 October - December 2016
Quarter 3 July - September 2016
Quarter 2 April - June 2016
Quarter 1 January - March 2016
Quarter 4 October - December 2015
Quarter 3 July - September 2015
Quarter 2 April - June 2015
Quarter 1 January - March 2015
Quarter 4 October - December 2014
Quarter 3 July - September 2014
Quarter 2 April - June 2014
Quarter 1 January - March 2014
Quarter 4 October - December 2013
Quarter 3 July - September 2013
Quarter 2 April - June 2013
Quarter 1 January - March 2013
Quarter 4 October - December 2012
Quarter 3 July - September 2012
Quarter 2 April - June 2012
Quarter 1 January - March 2012
Quarter 4 October - December 2011
Quarter 3 July - September 2011
Quarter 2 April - June 2011
Quarter 1 January - March 2011
Quarter 4 October - December 2010
Quarter 3 July - September 2010
Quarter 2 April - June 2010
Quarter 1 January - March 2010
Quarter 4 October - December 2009
Quarter 3 July - September 2009
Quarter 2 April - June 2009
Quarter 1 January - March 2009
Quarter 4 October - December 2008
Quarter 3 July - September 2008
Quarter 2 April - June 2008
Quarter 1 January - March 2008
Quarter 2 April - June 2007
Quarter 2 April - June 2006
Quarter 2 April - June 2004
Quarter 1 January - March 2004
Quarter 4 of 2021
Articles
Our 2021 Advent Calendar.
ATO flags focus areas for combating $33.5bn ‘tax gap’
Business Resources - Grants, Assistance, Resources and more.
Employee Christmas Parties and Gifts – Any FBT?
FBT – Christmas Parties and Taxi Fares
How the best firms are supporting the mental health of their employees
Asian Economies (1960 - 2020)
Making the festive season less taxing
Why more Millennials are turning to SMSFs
Hardship priority processing of tax refunds
Business valuations: Tips, tricks and traps
Government moves to scrap SG $450 threshold
World's most productive countries
Superannuation changes - Superannuation guarantee (SG)
Unused Super Contributions
Main residence exemption myths and misconceptions
ATO extends COVID-19 relief for SMSFs
Treasury consults on increase to charities financial reporting threshold
Greenhouse gas emission by country since 1880
ATO announces STP Phase 2 blanket deferral
Reminder: super changes for the 2021 financial year
Recontributions of COVID-19 early released super
Working from home during a COVID-19 lockdown: Can you claim a tax deduction for rent?
ATO flags focus areas for combating $33.5bn ‘tax gap’

The ATO says it will be focusing on accessing new third-party data, automating audit processes, increasing its access to high-quality data and preventative strategies in order to drive down the overall tax gap.



ATO second commissioner Jeremy Hirschhorn explained that in order to reduce the tax gap, estimated to be $33.5 billion or 7.3 per cent of the tax that should have been reported for the 2018-2019 income year, the ATO is shifting its focus to prevention and reducing errors through increased digitisation.


Under its tax gap program, Mr Hirschhorn said the ATO is looking to maximise its use of preventative and deterrent strategies such as web material, practical compliance guidelines and taxpayer alerts as well as private rulings and guidance products aimed at advisers and intermediaries.


“If we are to sustainably improve the health of the system, first we must focus on maintaining voluntary compliance,” said Mr Hirschhorn in an address at the International ATAX Tax Administration Conference.


“There is little point, in a world of constrained resources, in simply ‘harvesting’ year one non-compliance, only to have that non-compliance grow back the next year.”


For individuals not in business, work-related deductions and rental-related deductions continue to be large contributors to the $8.4 billion tax gap for individuals, he explained.


With strategies based on audit activity unlikely to make a dramatic impact on those contributors without significant increases in resources, Mr Hirschhorn said the ATO is exploring different strategies in this area.


“This might include productivity measures such as automating routine aspects of an audit process, such as collection and collation of substantiation materials, but also accessing and utilising new ‘large-scale’ third party data such as rental income data or mortgage data,” he explained.


“It might also involve measures which increase perceived detection risk for the small group inclined not to fully comply, but also a focus on education for those who wish to comply but simply make mistakes due to the complexity of the system.”


For small businesses and individuals in business, Mr Hirschhorn said one of the drivers of the small-business gap continues to be the omission of income. 


While shadow economy behaviours are the largest driver of omitted income, Mr Hirschhorn said the ATO is also seeing inadvertent under-reporting of income driven by errors and poor record-keeping. 


“In fact, these behaviours account for around 90 per cent of incidence of error,” he stated.


The ATO’s ongoing focus he said will be on increased digitisation and access to high-quality data in order to reduce the possibility for taxpayers to make inadvertent errors.


The ATO, he said, is now in a data driving phase where its systems are primarily designed around verifiable data, rather than relying on data being brought to the system.


“This saves time and minimises the risk of inadvertent errors that have to be addressed later on bringing data to the system,” he stated.


“At the ATO, we are now starting to think about data on a curve: from ‘not verified’ data, through increasing levels of confidence in the data to ‘fully data-driven policy and system design.”


 


 


Miranda Brownlee


30 November 2021


 


accountantsdaily.com.au




21st-December-2021