Parliamentary update
Editor: The ongoing citizenship saga in Parliament
has resulted in the Government losing its one-seat
majority in the House of Representatives, thanks
to the resignations of Barnaby Joyce and John
Alexander.
By-elections have been scheduled in the relevant
electorates and, in the meantime, some of the
cross-benchers have guaranteed the Government's
(current) survival by committing to vote with it on motions of no-confidence and supply.
Tax legislation passed
In other news, the Government has passed
changes to the tax legislation that will limit, or deny,
deductions for travel expenses and depreciation
claims for certain residential premises.
Legislation to impose vacancy fees on foreign
acquisitions of residential land has also been
passed.
ATO's annual closure
This year, the ATO's annual office closure is between noon Friday 22 December and 8.00am Tuesday 2 January 2018. Also, the ATO may have systems maintenance on some weekends, so they recommend that lodgments be made as early as possible, as even returns or activity statements lodged in early December may not be finalised until after 2 January 2018
Truck drivers' reasonable amounts for travel updated
Following detailed consultation with the transport
industry, the ATO has amended their determination
for travel expenses for truck drivers to provide
separate reasonable travel allowance expense
amounts for breakfast, lunch and dinner for
employee truck drivers for the 2017/18 income year.
The reasonable amount for travel expenses
(excluding accommodation) of employee truck
drivers who have received a travel allowance and
who are required to sleep away from home was
originally reduced for 2017/18 to a total of $55.30
per day, but this daily rate has now been replaced
with the following amounts for all domestic travel
destinations for the 2017/18 income year:
- Breakfast $24.25
- Lunch $27.65
- Dinner $47.70
The amounts for each of these meal breaks are
separate and cannot be aggregated into a single
daily amount, and amounts cannot be moved
from one meal to another (e.g., if the full amount
for breakfast is not expended, it cannot be carried
over to lunch or dinner).
A driver's work diary (as maintained for fatigue
management purposes) can be used to demonstrate
when meal breaks were taken.
Tool for applying the margin scheme to a property sale
The ATO is recommending that taxpayers use
their recently updated GST property decision tool
to work out if GST applies to their property sales.
The tool can be used to determine GST on the
sale, lease or purchase of real property, and was
recently updated for easier use on mobile devices.
In particular, after providing the relevant information,
the tool will generate a GST decision that:
- advises whether GST is payable on a sale;
- estimates the amount of GST payable when applying the margin scheme; and
- advises whether the taxpayer is eligible to claim input tax credits.
Note that the ATO does not record any personal information and users will remain anonymous.
Other GST News
The Government has released draft legislation
on "improving the integrity of GST on property
transactions", as announced in the 2017/18 Federal
Budget.
They intend to amend the GST law so that, from 1
July 2018, purchasers will withhold the GST on
the purchase price of new residential premises and
new residential subdivisions, and remit the GST
directly to the ATO as part of settlement.
This is to address tax evasion through "phoenixing
arrangements", where developers collect GST
from their customers but dissolve their company
to avoid paying it to the ATO.
To provide certainty for contracts that have already
been entered into, the draft legislation provides
a two-year transitional arrangement – contracts
entered into before 1 July 2018 will not be affected
as long as the transaction settles before 1 July 2020.
Editor: In addition, the GST Act has been amended
to ensure that supplies of digital currency receive
equivalent GST treatment to supplies of money
(particularly foreign currency).
Numerous work-related expense claims disallowed
The AAT has denied a taxpayer’s deductions
for work-related travel, clothing, self-education
and rental property expenses (totalling $116,068
and $140,581 for the 2013 and 2014 income
year respectively), and upheld the ATO’s 50%
administrative penalty on the tax shortfall for
recklessness.
Apart from being unable to prove (or 'substantiate')
some claims due to lack of receipts, and documents
being in the wrong name, the AAT also criticised
the taxpayer for:
- claiming work-related travel expenses on the basis of the 'gap' between travel expenses reimbursed by her employer and the ATO’s reasonable rates (which "was clearly not permissible under any taxation law"); and
- claiming clothing expenses for "formal clothes of high class”, despite her clothing not being distinctive or unique to her employment at the Department of Finance, and was instead rather conventional in nature (and so was not deductible).
Please Note: Many of the comments in this publication are general in nature and anyone intending to apply the information to practical circumstances should seek professional advice to independently verify their interpretation and the information’s applicability to their particular circumstances.