ATO to be provided with more super guarantee information
The Government has announced a package of
reforms to give the ATO near real-time visibility
over superannuation guarantee (SG) compliance
by employers.
The Government will also provide the ATO with
additional funding for a SG Taskforce to crackdown
on employer non-compliance.
The package includes measures to:
- require superannuation funds to report contributions received more frequently (at least monthly) to the ATO, enabling the ATO to identify non-compliance and take prompt action;
- require employers with 19 or fewer employees to transition to single touch payroll (‘STP’) reporting from 1 July 2019;
- improve the effectiveness of the ATO’s recovery powers, including strengthening director penalty notices and use of security bonds for high-risk employers, to ensure that unpaid superannuation is better collected by the ATO and paid to employees’ super accounts; and
- give the ATO the ability to seek courtordered penalties in the most egregious cases of non-payment, including employers who are repeatedly caught but fail to pay SG liabilities.
Editor: Following extensive consultation when
STP was originally announced, it was decided that
employers with 19 or fewer employees would not
be required to comply.
Given the backflip here, the business community
will be hoping the Government does not introduce
compulsory real time payments of SG and PAYG
withholding, as well as real-time reporting..
ATO: Combatting the cash economy
The ATO has reminded taxpayers that it uses a
range of tools to identify and take action against
people and businesses that may not be correctly
meeting their obligations. Through 'data matching',
it can identify businesses that do not have electronic
payment facilities.
These businesses often advertise as 'cash only' or
mainly deal in cash transactions. When businesses
do this, they are more likely to make mistakes or
do not keep thorough records.
The ATO’s ability to match and use data is very
sophisticated. It collects information from a number
of sources (including banks, other government
agencies and industry suppliers), and also obtains
information about purchases of major items, such
as cars and real property, and then compares
this information against income and expenditure
reported by businesses and individuals to the ATO.
Example: Unrealistic personal income leads
to unreported millions
The income reported on their personal income
tax returns indicated that a couple operating a
property development company didn’t seem to have
sufficient income to cover their living expenses.
The ATO found their company had failed to report
millions of dollars from the sale of properties over
a number of years.
They had to pay the correct amount of tax (of more
than $4.5 million) based on their income and all
their related companies, and also incurred a variety
of penalties.
Example: Failing to report online sales
A Nowra court convicted the owner of a computer
sales and repair business on eight charges of
understating the business’s GST and income tax
liabilities.
The ATO investigated discrepancies between
income reported by the business and amounts
deposited in the business owner’s bank accounts,
and found that the business had failed to report
income from online sales.
The business owner was ordered to pay over
$36,000 in unreported tax and more than $18,400
in penalties, and also fined $4,000 (and now has
a criminal conviction).
Get it in writing and get a receipt
The ATO also notes that requesting a written
contract or tax invoice and getting a receipt for
payment may protect a consumer's rights and
obligations relating to insurance, warranties,
consumer rights and government regulations.
Consumers who support the cash economy, by
paying cash and not getting a receipt, risk having
no evidence to claim a refund if the goods or
services purchased are faulty, or prove who was
responsible in case of poor work quality
Higher risk trust arrangements targeted
The ATO’s 'Tax Avoidance Taskforce – Trusts'
continues the work of the Trusts Taskforce, by
targeting higher risk trust arrangements in privately
owned and wealthy groups.
The Taskforce will focus on the lodgment of trust
tax returns, accurate completion of return labels,
present entitlement of exempt entities, distributions
to superannuation funds, and inappropriate
claiming of CGT concessions by trusts.
Arrangements that attract the attention of the
Taskforce include those where:
- trusts or their beneficiaries who have received substantial income are not registered, or have not lodged tax returns or activity statements;
- there are offshore dealings involving secrecy or low tax jurisdictions;
- there are agreements with no apparent commercial basis that direct income entitlements to a low-tax beneficiary while the benefits are enjoyed by others;
- changes have been made to trust deeds or other constituent documents to achieve a tax planning benefit, with such changes not credibly explicable for other reasons;
- there are artificial adjustments to trust income, so that tax outcomes do not reflect the economic substance (e.g., where someone receives substantial benefits from a trust but the tax liability on those benefits is attributed elsewhere, or where the full tax liability is passed to entities with no capacity/intention to pay);
- transactions have excessively complex features or sham characteristics (e.g., round robin circulation of income among trusts);
- revenue activities are mischaracterised to achieve concessional CGT treatment (e.g., by using special purpose trusts in an attempt to re-characterise mining or property development income as discountable capital gains); and
- new trust arrangements have materialised that involve taxpayers or promoters linked to previous non-compliance (e.g., people connected to liquidated entities that had unpaid tax debts).
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.