Chapter 4 Rulings
The history of rulings
Binding by choice
4.1
The rulings system has developed over time to become more formal and
have greater coverage. It had its origins in the 1930s, when the Commissioner
for Taxation released Income Tax Orders, which published the Commissioner’s
interpretation of the tax laws.[1] The Australian Taxation
Office (ATO) issued other guidance as well, including public information
bulletins and ATO memoranda.[2]
4.2
The first proposal for a formal system was made in the 1975 Asprey Review,
which recommended creating a system of private binding rulings on a fee for
service basis.
4.3
Although the then Government did not adopt this recommendation, the
advent of freedom of information (FOI) legislation in 1982 required a more systematic
approach to rulings. At that time, the ATO was using a range of internal
guidance to ensure that decisions were accurate and consistent. Under FOI,
taxpayers would have a claim to these documents, so it made sense to publicly
release them and avoid processing many FOI requests. These published guidelines
(income tax rulings and miscellaneous tax rulings) were the precursors to
public rulings.
4.4
In 1986, the Government introduced self assessment for individual
taxpayers. Because taxpayers were subject to financial loss, through penalties
and interest, if their returns led to a tax shortfall, they were given a
mechanism for clarifying their position with the ATO. Section 169A of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 stated that a taxpayer could bring an aspect of
their tax affairs to the attention of the Commissioner at the time of lodging
the return. The Commissioner would be required to ‘give attention to that
question.’
4.5
The ATO normally considered itself bound by an opinion formed in
response to a section 169A request. If the Commissioner later wished to amend
the assessment under section 170 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936,
the taxpayer would still be liable for primary tax. Liability for penalties
would depend on the taxpayer’s conduct overall, as would remission of interest.
The Commissioner would not permit section 169A to be used as a means of
taxpayers indefinitely delaying their tax liabilities.[3]
4.6
In 1988, the ATO clarified its advisory system. It announced it would
issue two types of rulings. The first was taxation rulings, which were similar
to public rulings. The second was advance opinions, which were responses to
taxpayer queries about proposed transactions.[4] The latter were similar
to private rulings. Both types of decisions were administratively binding on
the Commissioner. They had no force of law, but the Commissioner adhered to
them unless there were exceptional circumstances, such as new legislation or a
new court decision.[5]
Binding by law
4.7
In 1990, the Federal Court handed down its decision in David Jones Finance v Commissioner of Taxation.[6]
There, the ATO departed from its practice of the previous 30 years of allowing
taxpayers who were not registered shareholders to claim a benefit available to ‘shareholders.’
The ATO relied on the 1976 High Court case of Commissioner of Taxation v
Patcorp Investments[7] and won. The David
Jones Finance case reminded taxpayers of the limits of ‘administratively
binding.’[8]
4.8
Following this, the then Government commenced a review of the self
assessment system, which culminated in the Taxation Laws Amendment (Self
Assessment) Act 1992. The major changes to the rulings system were that:
n rulings now became
legally binding on the Commissioner
n if a taxpayer disagreed
with a private ruling, they could appeal the ATO’s decision to the
Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) and the Federal Court
n the Commissioner’s
power to issue rulings was expanded from income tax to cover the Medicare levy,
withholding taxes, franking deficit tax and fringe benefits tax.
4.9
Previously, ATO advice was not binding on the Commissioner. For example,
if a taxpayer obtained an advance opinion about a transaction and followed that
advice, there was the risk that the ATO could apply a different interpretation
of the law. There was no legal protection. These changes, however, gave the
taxpayer legal protection if they complied with the private ruling.
4.10
Section 169A was amended so that taxpayers only had the option of making
such a request if they were precluded from applying for a private ruling on the
matter. These changes effectively discontinued the option of a section 169A
request, as private rulings were available for both completed and proposed
transactions. The ATO has stated that, until this time, it was receiving
approximately 50,000 requests annually under section 169A.[9]
An Assessment of Tax
4.11
In 1993, the Joint Committee on Public Accounts (JCPA) released its
report on tax administration, An Assessment of Tax. The report covered a
number of themes in relation to rulings.[10] The first theme was that
rulings should be freely available and well known amongst the relevant
stakeholders. The ATO supported these recommendations. They included:
n a requirement to publish
public rulings in the Commonwealth Gazette and table them in Parliament
n access to the ATO’s
public rulings database
n access to the ATO’s
private rulings database, with identifying features on each ruling deleted.
4.12
The JCPA also wished to ensure that rulings maintained the distinction
between the law and the Commissioner’s interpretation of the law, the latter of
which was represented in the ruling. The relevant recommendations, which the
ATO supported, were to detail alternative views in public rulings and to
refrain from making contentious rulings where the law needs clarification.
4.13
Another major theme in the report was that taxpayers should not
automatically incur penalties for not following a private ruling or a
determination (a more specific public ruling). The Committee argued that, if
the taxpayer made it clear in their tax return that they had diverged from the
ATO’s advice, then such penalties were unnecessary. The ATO did not support
these recommendations.
4.14
The JCPA noted that private rulings could be seen as free legal advice
to taxpayers and argued that this could mean that the ATO would not have sufficient
resources to meet demand. The Committee recommended that the Commissioner be
given the discretion to charge a fee for private rulings for proposed
transactions. The ATO declined this recommendation as well.[11]
Product rulings
4.15
In 1998, the ATO introduced product rulings. These are a type of public
ruling that apply only to a specific investment product. Previously, investors
relied on private legal opinions sought by the investments’ promoters. However,
the experience of mass marketed investment schemes and employee benefit
arrangements demonstrated there were risks in this approach.
4.16
Investment promoters, rather than investors, apply for product rulings.
Chapter one noted that it is difficult now to market an investment without a
product ruling. These rulings do not advise on the commercial viability of an
investment. They are limited to an investment’s tax implications.
Review of business taxation
4.17
In 1999, the review of business taxation (the Ralph review) finalised
its report, A tax system redesigned. The review was wide ranging and did
not go to the details of the rulings system. However, it did make some
significant recommendations:
n the scope of public
and private rulings be expanded to allow the Commissioner to be legally bound
on matters of administration, procedure, collection, conclusions of fact, and
the operation of Pt IVA of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (the
general anti-avoidance rule)
n the Commissioner to
be taken to have issued an adverse private ruling if the Commissioner fails to
make a ruling within a specified period
n rules for penalties
be changed so that a taxpayer who declines to follow a private ruling is
subject to the same penalties as a taxpayer who does not follow a public ruling
n the ATO charge fees
for rulings, in particular where there are significant amounts of revenue at
stake, significant ATO resources are involved, and where the taxpayer is able
to pay.[12]
4.18
Some of these recommendations were raised by the JCPA in 1993. The previous
Government did not implement these recommendations. Its actions focussed
instead on issues such as tax rates and calculations.
ANAO’s performance audit
4.19
In 2001, the ANAO finalised a comprehensive performance audit on
rulings. The ANAO found that the ATO managed public rulings much better than
private rulings:
The processes for the production of public rulings of
high technical quality operate effectively overall but the collection, analysis
and use of performance information could be enhanced in some areas. The
administrative processes for private rulings have operated poorly in
many respects. Our assessment for private rulings confirmed the findings
of administrative inefficiencies noted in reports prepared for the ATO over a
number of years…
The quality (and reliability) of the systems that operate for
public and private rulings bear directly on the systems’ capacity to deliver
fair treatment to taxpayers and maintain consistency over time, and across ATO
regions. So too, do the legal and institutional frameworks that shape them. We
conclude, overall, that the mechanisms in place for public rulings
substantially provide for consistent and fair treatment for taxpayers. This
positive assessment for public rulings contrasts with the situation for private
rulings where, at the time of the audit, the lack of integration of systems and
inadequate systems controls undermine certainty, fairness and consistency of
treatment for taxpayers.[13]
4.20
The ANAO made 12 recommendations including improvements to performance
information, monitoring by management, data security, and prioritising public
rulings.
4.21
In 2004, the ANAO completed a follow up audit. The ANAO reported that
the ATO had implemented all 12 recommendations.[14]
Class rulings
4.22
Also in 2001, the ATO introduced class rulings. These are a subset of
public rulings and operate in cases where an individual entity applies for a
ruling seeking advice about the operation of an arrangement for a group of
persons. They reduce the need for multiple taxpayers to request private rulings
where their circumstances are largely the same.[15]
4.23
Class rulings bear a number of similarities to product rulings, as they
are both public rulings, requested by the members of the community involved in
a particular arrangement, that reduce the need for multiple private rulings.
The main difference between the two is that product rulings have an element of
marketing or promotion.
A ‘reasonably arguable’ position
4.24
Section 284-90 of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 provides
that a penalty of 25% of the shortfall amount will apply if a taxpayer does not
apply a reasonably arguable treatment, and if the shortfall amount is more than
the greater of $10,000 or 1% of the taxpayer’s income tax liability.
4.25
Section 284-15 defines a position as reasonably arguable when, having
regard to the relevant authorities, it is ‘about as likely to be correct as
incorrect.’ Without limitation, the relevant authorities are tax laws,
statutory interpretation materials, court and AAT decisions, and public
rulings. Some commentators have expressed concern that independent legal
opinions are not relevant authorities. If the area is grey because there are no
court decisions, then the concern is that a court will only examine the public
ruling in determining whether a taxpayer has taken a reasonable position.[16]
4.26
The Federal Court examined this issue in Walstern v FCT.[17]
The Court considered the previous section 222C of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1936, which is very similar to the new section under discussion.[18]
There, the ATO argued that legal opinions could not constitute relevant
authorities. However, Justice Hill stated:
It is true that opinions of counsel are not referred to in
the definition of ‘authority’. On the other hand it may be said that the
definition is inclusory so that recourse to the opinions of counsel is not necessarily
ruled out by the definition. It is unnecessary in the present case to decide
this question, although I am inclined to think that the opinion of eminent
counsel practising in the field,… if directed at the actual facts of a case,
might well fall within the definition.[19]
4.27
In other words, the list of authorities relevant to determining whether
a taxpayer has taken a reasonably arguable position can include legal opinions.
This is a fair approach. The ATO does not have a monopoly on legal tax advice.
Taxpayers are entitled to approach private sector advisors as a means of
demonstrating that they have acted reasonably. If they could not, this would be
an unreasonable restriction on taxpayers’ personal liberties. It would also potentially
breach competition policy.
4.28
If a court were to subsequently rule that such opinions are not relevant
authorities, then the Committee’s view is that this matter should be corrected
through legislation. The Committee also expects there would need to be
exceptional circumstances for the ATO to challenge Justice Hill’s comments.
Review of self assessment
4.29
The next major investigation of the rulings system was Treasury’s Review
of Aspects of Income Tax Self Assessment (RoSA), completed in 2004. RoSA made 54 recommendations, 25 of which applied to rulings and other ATO advice. The previous
Government accepted all of RoSA’s legislative recommendations and the ATO
agreed to implement all of the administrative recommendations.[20]
4.30
RoSA addressed many of the issues that had been outstanding in relation
to rulings. One important recommendation was to clarify the extent to which
taxpayers can rely on ATO advice. For example, taxpayers are protected from interest,
and not just penalties, where they follow:
n long standing ATO
administrative practice
n oral advice from
formal inquiry centres
n all written advice,
unless it is labelled non-binding.[21]
4.31
Other key recommendations included:
n expanding the
category of public and private rulings to cover administration, procedure,
collection, and ultimate conclusions of fact
n where the ATO changes
long standing practice to the detriment of taxpayers, the change should be
prospective and, where necessary, from a future date to allow taxpayers to
adjust their affairs
n where taxpayers rely
on draft public rulings, they should be exempt from penalties and interest
where the final ruling is to their detriment
n in private rulings,
the ATO should state whether it has considered Part IVA (the avoidance
provisions) and, if there has been full disclosure, the ATO be prevented from
reopening an assessment
n for private ruling
applications older than 60 days, taxpayers be able to request that the ruling
be finalised within 30 days. If no ruling is given, the ATO is taken to have
made a negative response, triggering appeal rights
n abolishing the
penalty for a tax shortfall resulting from a failure to follow a private ruling.[22]
4.32
RoSA considered whether the ATO should be able to charge for private
rulings, but decided against making such a recommendation. This conclusion was
based on:
n the general
opposition to such an arrangement
n taxpayers have a
right to understand how the tax laws apply to them
n concerns about
whether paying for a ruling increases the taxpayer’s chance of success.[23]
4.33
The Tax Laws Amendment (Improvements to Self Assessment) Act (No 2)
2005 implemented the RoSA legislative recommendations in relation to
rulings. The legislation completely re-wrote the provisions in relation to
rulings.
Inspector-General of Taxation’s review
4.34
RoSA noted the perception in the tax community that the ATO’s private
rulings were biased in favour of the revenue. The data was not necessarily
consistent with this perception. In 2002-03, the ATO 54% were wholly favourable
to the applicant, 16% were partially favourable and 29% were unfavourable.[24]
However, due to the strength of the perception, RoSA recommended that the
Inspector-General conduct a review of possible bias in private rulings.[25]
4.35
The Inspector-General’s report in February 2008 confirmed that there
were significant perceptions of ATO bias in the tax community. Most
stakeholders did not consider this bias to be undue. Rather, they thought it
was the sort of approach to be expected of a revenue agency. The few examples
given of undue bias occurred when the ATO was applying a legal interpretation that
it thought best represented the policy intent of a law.
4.36
Similar to the ANAO performance audit, the review examined the ATO’s
processes, rather than examining the legal correctness of particular rulings.
The Inspector-General found no evidence of bias. Rather, what the review found
was that the ATO neither communicated effectively nor was sufficiently
transparent in its dealings with taxpayers. Where the ATO did something unusual
without explanation, such as delaying a ruling while it confidentially conferred
with Treasury, taxpayers concluded that this was evidence of bias.[26]
4.37
The Inspector-General made a number of recommendations designed to
improve ATO transparency and communication in relation to private rulings. The
ATO accepted all recommendations, either wholly or in part. In the response to
the recommendations, the ATO agreed to:
n advise taxpayers when
it is consulting with Treasury
n keeping taxpayers up
to date of the progress of their applications
n including the ATO’s
understanding of the policy intent of legislation in the private ruling where
this is relevant to the ATO’s decision
n issuing private
rulings regardless of whether the technical issue is or may be the subject of a
future public ruling.[27]
Committee comment
4.38
Australia’s arrangements in relation to rulings are similar to those in
other countries. For example, the OECD’s comparison of tax systems amongst its
member countries shows that the tax administrations in all but one of the 30
OECD countries issue public rulings and of these, the rulings are binding in
23 countries. The tax administrations in 28 OECD countries issue private
rulings and of these, the rulings are binding in 24 countries.[28]
As RoSA noted, ‘The Australian system is unexceptional on most points of
comparison.’[29]
4.39
Simply, it appears that taxpayers have a basic need to obtain advice
from their tax authorities and it is only fair that the tax authorities stand
by this advice. Rulings are one way of meeting this need. Given the risks that
taxpayers potentially face under self assessment, a formal system of rulings is
fundamental to the tax system. As the Inspector-General of Taxation stated, ‘The
ability to obtain a private ruling is a key feature of the self assessment
system.’[30]
The quality of rulings
Public rulings
4.40
In 2006-07, the ATO finalised 369 public rulings. This comprised 132
class rulings, 119 product rulings and 118 public rulings and tax
determinations (84 final and 34 draft).[31]
4.41
The evidence to the Committee during the inquiry about public rulings
was largely positive. For example, the Institute of Chartered Accountants in
Australia (ICAA) advised the Committee that the public rulings panels, which
include external experts, have improved the standard of public rulings:
…the establishment of a Public Rulings Panel and an International
Public Rulings Panel, which include external tax experts, to supplement a
public consultation process, in which professional bodies participate, has gone
some way to ensure the quality of public rulings and, more particularly, public
confidence in these rulings.[32]
4.42
CPA Australia agreed that public rulings have a reasonable standard of
technical accuracy:
…while the Commissioner can withdraw a ruling or change it
should his interpretation of the law change, this is not a frequent event, and
in general where it has occurred the changes have not been in dispute.
The tax, accounting and legal professional bodies, amongst
others, are also involved in the ongoing review of draft rulings and
determinations. It is not the norm for there to be significant disagreement
with the Commissioner’s/ATO’s interpretation of the law.[33]
4.43
Further, the system used for prioritising public rulings has industry
support[34].
Private rulings
4.44
Year by year, the ATO has been issuing fewer private rulings. In
2006-07, the ATO issued 12,398 private rulings, down from 13,888 in 2005-06 and
14,387 in 2004-05. The Annual Report 2006-07 showed that just under half
of these (5,055) related to individuals. The next largest category was for GST
(2,411).[35] This appears to be a low
level of usage, given the complexity of the tax system and that there are 12
million taxpayers.[36]
4.45
Consistent with the Inspector-General’s findings in the review of
private rulings, the Committee received evidence of perceptions of bias from
organisations such as CPA Australia.[37] The ICAA also took this
view and argued that the statistics in relation to private rulings did not tell
the whole story. Firstly, only 2% of private rulings involved a precedent.
These were the key rulings because the ATO had to come to a considered decision,
whereas with the other 98% it only had to follow previous decisions.[38]
4.46
Further, applying for a private ruling tended to bring the applicant to the
ATO’s attention. If the ATO issued an unfavourable private ruling, then the
taxpayer would almost certainly be subject to litigation if they did not comply
with the ruling. On the other hand, if the taxpayer was confident in their
legal advice and could take the risk of losing any possible litigation, then it
made more sense to apply the preferred tax treatment and not advise the ATO.[39]
One implication from this is that any sample of private rulings will be biased
because many taxpayers will only make a private ruling application where they
expect a favourable outcome.
4.47
However, despite these strong perceptions of bias, the ICAA acknowledged
that it did not have evidence from its members of actual bias in private
rulings.[40]
Conclusion
4.48
In his submission, the Tax Ombudsman stated that he has ‘not discerned
any issues of systemic concern’ in relation to rulings.[41]
This is consistent with the evidence during the inquiry and reviews by the ANAO
and the Inspector-General. Therefore, the Committee decided to focus on the
managerial aspects of rulings, in particular delays in issuing private rulings.
Timeliness of private rulings
The extent of delays
4.49
In some respects, private rulings represent a return to the pre-self
assessment period. Under administrative assessment, taxpayers gave the ATO the
circumstances of their case in the tax return. The ATO spent resources assessing
it and gave the taxpayer their view in the notice of assessment. With private
rulings, taxpayers give the ATO their circumstances in an application form and
the ATO gives its view in the private ruling.
4.50
Both administrative assessment and private rulings present resource
problems for the ATO. In each case, the taxpayer is obtaining something from
the ATO without payment. In the case of administrative assessment, the ATO’s
response was to apply a token level of resources to each taxpayer, resulting in
1-minute assessments for individuals. For private rulings, one approach the ATO
uses is for tax agents to do as much preliminary work as possible and then
provide that information to the ATO. CPA Australia stated:
My understanding is that the tax office might have a habit of
asking for that type of information and encouraging taxpayers to submit that in
an effort to ensure that they meet their targets, and it helps facilitate
arriving at the answer and getting the private binding ruling back to the
taxpayer in a timely manner. As you know, the private binding ruling system is
meant to work in a 28-day turnaround…[42]
4.51
Tax agents can sometimes expend significant resources on a private
ruling application to no ultimate benefit to their client, but at a cost to
themselves. Ruddicks Chartered Accountants advised the Committee as follows:
The ATO said that they could only rule on the matter if we
were able to say how much the dividend was going to be. We said, ‘This company
has not been formed yet; we don’t know what the dividend is going to be. That
will depend on the profits made by the company and various other things … In
the end, the ATO refused to rule, because we were not able to give information in
advance as to what the dividends might be for the next 20 years…
We spent about $8,000 worth of time on that. We billed our
client $400 for that time, because we obviously did not expect it to be so
difficult; we did not explain to the client that we were going to be stymied at
every point … this particular case was not a complex situation …[43]
4.52
Another resource management strategy that the ATO uses for private
rulings is delay. Lack of timeliness was the most common and serious comment
raised during the inquiry in relation to private rulings. The list of
participants who raised this issue included the Ombudsman, the ICAA, CPA
Australia, the Taxation Institute of Australia and the National Institute of
Accountants.[44] Treasury also reported
it in RoSA.[45]
4.53
Because of the delays, less people are using private rulings. Taxpayers Australia stated:
The evidence suggests that the number of people that seek a
private binding ruling is not very high and that, if we operate under a very
complex system, why is it that there are not a lot more private binding
rulings? I agree with some of the earlier comments in the sense that time and
costs work against the taxpayer. In essence, taxpayers do not have the luxury
of time and a lot of transactions need to be dealt with on a real-time basis,
especially with GST issues. You cannot wait 28 days for a private binding
ruling on something like GST where you need to know today to assess your tax
implications. Because of the time, the cost and what is required from the ATO,
you might put in a request for a private binding ruling and then they will come
back and ask for more information and delay the process. That all costs time
and money. At the end of the day, it works against the taxpayer. In principle,
it is good that you have got access to that system but, from a practical point
of view, not a lot of taxpayers access that avenue.[46]
4.54
These delays harm businesses because they sometimes lose opportunities.
The Taxation Institute of Australia noted that there is often a restricted
window in which to sign off on a project which can be missed through the delay
in obtaining a private ruling:
…the time taken is too long given that many business or
investment decisions which may be best served by obtaining a PBR have a
shortish lead time (eg it is uncommercial for a taxpayer acquiring an asset or
a business to have to wait two months for a ruling on the proposed
arrangement).[47]
4.55
The ICAA made a similar argument:
We also note that the Burges Report, which focused on the
largest companies in the Large Business Segment, indicated that all the
companies interviewed reported great difficulty in obtaining timely PBRs, to
the extent in many cases of rendering the private binding ruling concept
virtually useless to them.[48]
4.56
Both the Taxation Institute of Australia and the ICAA stated that the
ATO was taking remedial action, including a fast tracking system for priority
private rulings.[49]
4.57
Under Practice Statement Law Administration 2005/10, the ATO applies
case management principles to priority requests for private rulings. These
include pre-lodgement meetings with the applicant and developing a case plan.
Further, the ATO applies its various areas of expertise simultaneously to a
priority request, rather than each section handling it in turn. Priority
requests need to meet a number of criteria, including being time sensitive, prospective,
of major commercial significance, and being a board level transaction.[50]
4.58
Following RoSA, there are new delay provisions in the tax laws. Where an
application for a private ruling is older than 60 days (subject to some
extensions), the taxpayer can request the ATO to determine their application
within 30 days. If the ATO does not respond, the taxpayer can object as if they
had received a negative response. The taxpayer’s objection must include a draft
private ruling.[51] The ICAA was uncertain
whether this new arrangement would help taxpayers:
Given that the purpose of obtaining a PBR is to obtain
certainty relatively quickly, we consider that triggering formal objection and
review procedures will do little to address the lack of timeliness of PBRs.[52]
4.59
Overall, the ICAA suggested that it was too early to determine if these
measures would be effective.[53]
4.60
Given these concerns about delays, the Committee decided to examine what
objective measures existed in relation to the ATO’s performance.
Performance reporting of timeliness
4.61
Overall, the ATO’s service standard for responding to private ruling
requests is 28 days. However, there are qualifications to this:
n the ATO must receive
all necessary information
n if the ATO needs more
information, it has 14 days in which to contact the taxpayer and request the
information
n if the request is
‘particularly complex’ and will take more than 28 days, the ATO will contact
the taxpayer within 14 days to negotiate an extended deadline.[54]
4.62
In 2006-07, the ATO’s target for meeting the 28 day standard was 83% and
it exceeded this target with a performance level of 93.3%.[55]
This data suggests that the ATO is performing well. However, the situation is
more complex.
4.63
Firstly, the ATO commonly requests additional information from
taxpayers. The National Institute of Accountants stated in evidence:
The ATO states that the majority are handled within 28 days,
but we have quite a lot of feedback from members that suggests that is not
necessarily correct. The ATO may respond within 28 days and seek further
information, then the clock starts again on the 28-day test.[56]
4.64
The ATO also negotiates an extension of the deadline. The ICAA noted
that the ANAO, in its 2001 performance audit on rulings, had questioned the
value of the ATO’s performance standard:
…as noted in the…ANAO report, the ‘negotiated extended
timeframe’ is a limited target or standard by which performance can be
assessed. Stakeholders consulted at the time of the ANAO review felt that they
had little choice but to agree to the ATO’s proposed extension of time for
satisfying the PBR request. We would be surprised if taxpayers feel any
differently today.[57]
4.65
From the point of view of the ATO, the current 28 day performance
measure is fair. If a taxpayer does not sufficiently explain an application,
then the ATO should be able to extend the deadline by asking for more
information. If a taxpayer has a complex issue that has significant revenue
implications and agrees to an extension, then the ATO can also argue it is
performing appropriately.
4.66
However, the 28 day measure is much less relevant to taxpayers. The
commercial world has its own rate of progress and does not wait for the ATO. In
other words, the current service standard only tells the ATO’s side of the
story. The Committee is concerned at this arrangement because private rulings
are there to assist taxpayers. The Committee is of the view that a performance
measure of total elapsed time, in addition to the 28 day standard, is necessary
to present the whole picture.
4.67
In its 2001 performance audit on rulings, the ANAO noted that taxpayer
uncertainty increased where the ATO took longer to consider an application in
total elapsed time. The ANAO recommended that the ATO review its service
standards for both internal and external reporting, including the measurement
of total elapsed time as an internal management tool.[58]
4.68
In its 2004 follow-up audit, the ANAO reported that the ATO was using
total elapsed time as an internal reporting measure. The target for 2003-04 was
that 100 per cent of cases should be completed within 90 days of receipt. The
ANAO noted that the ATO had made significant progress:
Between February 2003 and January 2004, the total number of
cases on hand was reduced by 55 per cent and the number of over 90 days cases
was reduced by 60 per cent.[59]
4.69
Recently, the Inspector-General of Taxation completed a review of the
ATO’s private rulings. From this review, it appears that the ATO continues to
improve its elapsed time performance. For large business private ruling
applications, the average elapsed time has decreased from 92 days in 2005-06 to
74 days in 2006-07. Similarly, the proportion that met the 90 day benchmark increased
from 65% to 70% over the same period.[60]
Committee comment
4.70
The Committee recognises that the ATO is taking action to improve its
performance in relation to delays in private rulings, such as prioritising
commercially important applications. However, the Committee is also concerned
that the ATO’s high performance against the 28 day service standard bears
little resemblance to taxpayers’ reality. Given this discrepancy, the Committee
believes the ATO should also publish performance information on total elapsed
time for private rulings. It need not be presented as a service standard, but
should be compared against the service standard to more fully explain to the
community the ATO’s operations.
4.71
In the recent review of private rulings, the Inspector-General
recommended that the ATO publish elapsed time statistics. The ATO declined this
recommendation, arguing that ‘some delays can be caused by the taxpayer’. It
also noted that, with priority private rulings, much of the work is done before
the taxpayer lodges the application. Therefore, an elapsed time statistic would
be ‘an irrelevant measure’.[61]
4.72
In response, the Committee notes that the ANAO and the Department of
Finance and Administration jointly published a better practice guide on annual
performance reporting in 2004. That document noted that agencies can be
achieving shared outcomes in partnership with other agencies or ‘players
external to government’. The guide’s preferred approach is for agencies to
report performance overall and then identify their areas of influence within
those operations. In other words, the presumption is to present information provided
that, after explanation, it helps the reader.[62]
4.73
If an agency such as the ATO is not prepared to report performance
information where it has shared responsibility for an activity, the result
would be that no-one would take responsibility for joint projects. Therefore, it
is preferable that agencies involved in joint projects report on the
performance of these projects and explain how they and other participants
contributed to the final result.
4.74
The Committee understands that an elapsed time statistic, on its own,
would not be fair on the ATO. However, with suitable explanation and adjustment
for special cases such as priority applications, this extra information will
assist readers of the ATO’s annual report and present a more balanced view of
the ATO’s work.
Recommendation 9
|
4.75
|
The ATO, in its annual report, compare its performance in
relation to the 28 day service standard for private ruling requests with
information on total elapsed time for these applications.
|
The RoSA reforms of performance reporting of timeliness
4.76
During RoSA, Treasury noted widespread concerns about delays in private
rulings. Treasury made a number of recommendations, including 2.14, which
stated:
The Tax Office should enhance its published performance
reporting on PBRs to distinguish response times to individuals and very small
business from those for larger businesses, and separately report agent and
non-agent case statistics.[63]
4.77
The Committee supports this recommendation. For example, data from 1998
to 2000 shows that approximately 80% of individuals’ requests were handled
within a total elapsed time of 28 days. This figure dropped to 45% for small
business and less than 30% for large business. Approximately 25% of large
business applications took more than 232 days.
[64]
4.78
The ATO first released updated figures in response to RoSA recommendation 2.14 in its 2006-07 annual report. The percentage within the ATO’s 28 day
service standard exceeded 90% for all categories.[65]
At first glance, this is a high level of performance. However, the ATO appears
to have restructured its categories. In its 2005-06 Annual Report, the ‘Large
Business and International’ business line issued 261 private rulings and
the ‘Small Business’ business line issued 2,782 private rulings. In the ATO’s
2006-07 Annual Report, the ‘larger business’ category completed 1,069 cases and
the ‘micro enterprises’ category completed 2,174 cases.[66]
Against the general trend of reduced volume in private rulings, it appears that
rulings from medium enterprises have been transferred from ‘Small Business’ to
‘larger business.’
4.79
The effect of this potential transfer has been to group the large
business private ruling applications (approximately 250) with the more
voluminous medium business applications (approximately 750). On average, large
business applications are the most problematic. Therefore, if the ATO is still
having difficulty in managing the timeliness of these large applications, it is
less likely to be shown by the new data in the annual reports. While the
Committee acknowledges the achievement by the ATO in implementing this
recommendation from RoSA, the community and the Parliament will have greater
assurance about the ATO if its performance in relation to large business is
individually reported.
Recommendation 10
|
4.80
|
The ATO divide the ‘larger businesses’ category used for its
performance reporting of the timeliness of private rulings into ‘medium
businesses’ and ‘large businesses.’
|
Conclusion
4.81
The rulings system has been subject to review and refinement since its
introduction with self assessment in 1986. These reviews have become more
positive over time. In 2001, the ANAO found that the ATO’s processes for public
rulings were sound but expressed concern over private rulings. In 2008, the
Inspector-General of Taxation made a positive finding overall for the processes
for private rulings. Further, the Committee received evidence from stakeholders
that the public ruling system is working well overall. Therefore, the Committee
did not find it necessary to raise technical issues about rulings in the
report.
4.82
The timeliness of private rulings was the main issue raised in evidence
about rulings. A number of factors are responsible for the delays. Under self
assessment, taxpayers are expected to fully understand the tax implications of
their financial affairs. However, tax laws are so complex that taxpayers have
significant potential demand for private rulings from the ATO. Because the
rulings are free, private rulings could potentially be a similar drain on the
ATO as administrative assessment was in the early 1980s.
4.83
The delays act as a deterrent to taxpayers obtaining private rulings.
Many taxpayers, especially in business, have a narrow time frame in which to
make financial decisions. The delays in private rulings make them much less
attractive to taxpayers.
4.84
Combined with poor communication and a lack of transparency by the ATO, these delays have led to perceptions of bias about private rulings. The Committee’s
recommendations in this chapter have been aimed at improving the ATO’s performance reporting so that the debate can focus on the proven issues such as delays,
rather than perceived issues such as bias.
4.85
Although delays are an issue, the Committee notes that the ATO is responding in various ways, such as applying case management practices to priority
applications. However, the ATO is constrained by the legislative framework that
Parliament gives it. Simplifying tax laws, as discussed in chapter three, will
give taxpayers more certainty, reduce the potential demand for rulings, and
give the ATO more scope to implement a fair and efficient tax system.