Chapter 5 Compliance
Promoting compliance
The ATO’s compliance model
5.1
One of the key roles of the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) is to manage taxpayer compliance. If taxpayers are more willing to pay the tax that is
lawfully due, and if taxpayers dispute their assessments less, the ATO’s task will be much easier, and it will be a more efficient agency able to collect each dollar
of tax using fewer resources. Self-evidently, the higher the compliance the
lower the cost of collection and the lower the cost of the tax burden, since at
present tax-compliers have to carry the burden of non-compliers.
5.2
While giving evidence at the initial biannual meeting on 20 April 2007, the Commissioner of Taxation advised the Committee that the most important
factor in securing revenue is maintaining a culture of voluntary compliance:
I think the greatest risk to revenue is if we ultimately do
not maintain and enhance the high levels of voluntary compliance that we have
in this country. The trick to good tax administration is to focus on how you
maintain that culture of good compliance, both within your own country and with
people who interact with the country. To do that you need high levels of
confidence. Those high levels of confidence are reflected by a very
well-rounded program that has not just focus on active compliance or
enforcement activities but also on providing support, assistance and education.
It also focuses on trying to make it easy for taxpayers to comply. It does
have, at the end of it, a very important role in trying to ensure that we
support honest taxpayers by having effective deterrent strategies.[1]
5.3
The Ombudsman agreed with the Commissioner:
In a self-assessment environment, voluntary compliance is a
vital component. While this depends in part on the taxpaying community having
confidence in the ATO, it also rests in large measure upon the taxpayer
community being aware of its obligations, and deciding to engage in lawful,
ethical and compliant behaviour. In my view, education and deterrence by the
ATO have significant roles in facilitating such outcomes.[2]
5.4
The ATO manages these interactions through its compliance model,
reproduced in figure 5.1:
Figure 5.1 ATO’s compliance model
Source ATO,
‘Compliance model’ viewed at http://www.ato.gov.au/corporate/content.asp?doc=/content/5704.htm
on 15 August 2007.
5.5
The compliance model has a number of components. Firstly, it recognises
that taxpayers’ conduct is influenced by a number of factors, including their
financial situation and the views of their peers. Further, taxpayers’ attitudes
lie on a continuum between wanting to do the right thing and deciding not to
comply. In effect, the ATO assesses a taxpayer’s particular attitude and uses
this to develop a compliance strategy for that taxpayer. For compliant
taxpayers, the ATO advised that it takes a cooperative, educational approach.
For non-compliant taxpayers, the ATO uses legal action and investigation.[3]
5.6
An assumption in the model is that the ATO can influence taxpayer
behaviour through its actions. One example of this occurring is Project
Wickenby, where the ATO and other agencies are investigating the transfer of
funds out of Australia to illegally evade tax. Media reports suggest that
Australians are less likely to shift money offshore now that Wickenby is well
established.[4] The Commissioner has
reported that two offshore structures involving nearly $100 million have been
abandoned.[5]
5.7
The two sides of the compliance model, assistance and deterrence,
complement each other. The ATO helps compliant taxpayers and these taxpayers
draw comfort that non-compliant taxpayers are subject to investigation and
legal action. Compliance action also deters compliant taxpayers from reducing
their compliance standards. The Commissioner stated in evidence:
We use a lot of resources for what might sound like a big
dollar return [with non-compliant taxpayers], but the big dollar return comes
from taxpayers doing the right thing and paying their tax and that revenue
coming into the system. A role for us which is just as important is to protect
those taxpayers by saying, ‘For those people who try to put you at a
disadvantage, there is some level of accountability through some sensible
programs that can be done.’ The other side of it is acknowledging that you have
so many people who do want to do the right thing. That means that we need to
ensure we invest very heavily in making it as easy as possible for people to
comply.[6]
5.8
In its submission, the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) stated that all but $4.2 billion of $214.9 billion received in 2004-05 was voluntarily paid.[7]
In other words, 98% of tax receipts are paid voluntarily. This statistic
confirms the Commissioner’s evidence that, not only is voluntary compliance
important, but it exists at high levels and needs to be maintained. Having said
that, the Committee is aware that it would be very resource intensive and
intrusive on compliant taxpayers to develop a robust estimate of how much uncollected
tax is legally due, particularly in the cash economy.[8]
5.9
The Committee regards the compliance model as a key instrument in the
ATO’s management of the tax system. Further, the model appears fair because the
ATO adjusts its response to a taxpayer’s conduct. For most taxpayers, it
directs the ATO to assist and educate them. As the Ombudsman stated:
This approach appears fair and effective, and balances the
needs of the individual against those of the community as a whole.[9]
5.10
Comments about the model concerned whether the ATO was fully
implementing it, rather than about the model itself.[10]
The Committee supports the model and believes it will continue to play a major
role in the ATO’s work in future.
The role of tax agents
5.11
Tax agents play a number of important roles in the tax system. Firstly,
as the Inspector-General of Taxation stated, they help taxpayers comply with a
complex tax system and act as an initial check on tax returns. This makes the
ATO’s task much easier:
The self-assessment system relies heavily on tax agents. Tax
agents are in a sense an unofficial but professional replacement for the
pre-assessment processes that the ATO undertook under the old system as
previously mentioned. Taxpayers confronted with complex laws in a
self-assessment system have, in practical terms, nowhere else to go for help in
meeting their obligations.[11]
5.12
Secondly, a professional, educated tax agent is likely to advise
taxpayers to comply with the law. This boosts compliance, once again making the
ATO’s task easier. The Commissioner stated in evidence:
I start from the proposition that tax agents have been a very
positive influence on tax compliance. I think that the tax office helping tax
agents and supporting them does allow us to touch many more taxpayers than we
could otherwise do on an individual basis.[12]
5.13
To some extent, this compliance role places tax agents under commercial
pressure. The Committee received evidence that some taxpayers expect their tax
agent to reduce their tax bill regardless of the legality. They also compare
the performance of each other’s agent in this respect. One tax agent, Ian McKenzie, advised the Committee:
Taxpayers talk to each other out on the street and could
think: ‘If Joe Bloggs can do this, how come I can’t do that?’ I quite often
explain to the taxpayer that you are comparing apples with oranges. But there
are taxpayers who deliberately seek out tax agents who will deliberately put
some so-called illegal entries into the tax return, and they are comfortable
with taking that risk. What I am saying is that there are taxpayers out there
who deliberately take risks to get a bigger refund or a larger deduction in their
tax return.[13]
5.14
This agent gave an example of two taxpayers who requested him to make
illegal deductions:
They were receiving WorkCover income, which is income not
from personal exertion. The prior tax agent had been claiming travel for them
for going to the doctor and all of that. That travel was already reimbursed by
the WorkCover Authority. I checked with the ATO and the relevant legislation
and it is just not deductible. As a result, I lost those clients.[14]
5.15
In this type of situation, a tax agent needs to balance long term and
short term risks. If they agree to the taxpayer’s request, they make extra
income in the short term, but face the long term risk of audit by the ATO and
losing their livelihood. Generally, the Committee expects that the
accreditation processes for tax agents would ensure that tax agents are of
sufficient calibre to resist such temptations. Professional associations expect
the same of their members.[15] The ATO takes a similar view:
We recognise that tax agents have a commercial relationship
with their clients; however we expect them to act in a professional manner,
competently having regard to the law and to comply with their personal tax
obligations.
In terms of their role as agents for their clients we risk
assess tax agent client bases to identify situations where there is a high
potential for making common mistakes or inaccurate claims that are outside
occupational or industry norms.[16]
5.16
Mr McKenzie suggested to the Committee that both tax agents and their
clients are responsible for the accuracy of a tax return.[17]
The Committee agrees with this view. If an agent prepares a return that they
know to be wrong, they need to bear some responsibility for this.
Alternatively, tax agents should not be responsible if a client is not truthful
with them, despite reasonable inquiries by the tax agent.
Litigation
Essenbourne – the facts
5.17
The key litigation issue during the inquiry has concerned the ATO’s
response to the December 2002 decision of the Federal Court (single judge) in Essenbourne
v Commissioner of Taxation.[18] This case involved an
employee benefit arrangement where a family business (Essenbourne) transferred
$252,000 to an employee incentive trust. The three brothers who worked for the
business each received 84,000 units (value $1) in the trust. The amount was
calculated with reference to the superannuation regulations and the business’s
profits. The brothers could receive payments from the trust at request and they
had control over how the trust would invest the funds.[19]
5.18
The business claimed the $252,000 as a tax deduction. The ATO responded
by disallowing the deduction and levying fringe benefits tax on Essenbourne as
well.[20]
5.19
Justice Kiefel[21] agreed with the ATO on
the deduction. She concluded it was made from the business’s surplus profits,
rather than being part of its income producing activities.[22]
However, Justice Kiefel decided the payment was not subject to fringe benefits
tax. Her reasoning was that the legislation requires that the payment be connected
to a particular employee in relation to the benefit in question. Due the
structure of the trust, the ATO could not make such a connection at the time of
the payment.[23]
5.20
In practice, the ATO did not follow Essenbourne. In its media
release of 14 March 2003, the ATO stated:
… the Tax Office will look to testing its views on fringe
benefits tax and the application of the anti-avoidance provisions to these
types of arrangements in future court cases.[24]
5.21
If the ATO was not satisfied with the result in a particular case, one
approach would be to appeal it to a higher court. In the media release, the ATO
said that it did not appeal Essenbourne because it won the case on the
point of the income tax deduction.
5.22
The ATO sought to challenge Essenbourne in future cases. In Walstern
v Commissioner of Taxation, Hill J stated that Justice Kiefel was ‘clearly
right.’ He also raised the principle of judicial comity, in which judges follow
the decisions of judges at the same level unless the original decision is
clearly wrong.[25] The reason behind this
is it increases certainty in the law and, in effect, is a ‘weak’ system of
precedent.
5.23
A number of other cases concerning similar facts also raised the
principle of judicial comity and the ATO lost these on the point of fringe benefits
tax. What characterised these cases was the ATO did not take them beyond a
single judge in the Federal Court. The ATO’s reasons for this are that it was:
… not able to appeal from the observations in Essenbourne in view of the finding on the
facts on the income tax case. In Walstern the relevant observations were obiter and there was no order against
which the Commissioner could appeal. In Caelli the Court determined the FBT appeal in the Commissioner’s favour ‘on the assumption’ of the correctness of Essenbourne and there
was no order against which the Commissioner could appeal. The Commissioner has
appealed the Essenbourne construction in each of the three cases in
which he has been able, being Spotlight Stores (where the Full Court did
not determine the issue), Cameron Brae (the appeal is yet to be heard)
and this case [Indooroopilly].[26]
5.24
One case that the ATO did take to the Full Federal
Court was Pridecraft v Commissioner of Taxation in December 2004. The
ATO did raise the fringe benefits tax question in that case, but did so only on
the condition that the taxpayer in question did not receive a deduction for the
payment to the trust. In other words, it only raised fringe benefits tax if it
lost on the income tax question. The judge stated:
The Commissioner’s submissions indicated that
it was only necessary to decide its appeal from the primary Judge’s holding
that Spotlight was not liable to pay fringe benefits tax on the contribution of
$15 million to the Incentive Trust if the contribution was held to be an
allowable deduction. It is therefore not necessary to deal with this appeal.
A further reason for not dealing with the
fringe benefits tax question is that the Commissioner challenged the
correctness of the decision of Kiefel J in Essenbourne … and the
reasoning of Hill J in Walstern … It is undesirable to consider whether
those cases were correctly decided when it is not necessary to do so.[27]
5.25
The ATO obtained a decision on fringe benefits tax from
the Full Federal Court (three judges) in February 2007. In Commissioner of
Taxation v Indooroopilly Childrens Services,[28] the Court found in favour of the taxpayer on the fringe benefits tax
issue.[29] The Court also expressed concern about how the ATO managed the
litigation in the case. Instead of selecting other test cases, they viewed the
ATO’s options as:
n appealing
Essenbourne (in 2002)
n following
Essenbourne
n seeking
legislative change
n seeking
a declaration (an administrative law remedy) from the Full Federal Court as to
the proper construction of the legislation.[30]
5.26
Further, the Court stated that the ATO’s conduct
raised constitutional issues:
From the material that was put to the Full
Court, it was open to conclude that the appellant was administering the
relevant revenue statute in a way known to be contrary to how this Court had
declared the meaning of that statute. Thus, taxpayers appeared to be in the
position of seeing a superior court of record in the exercise of federal
jurisdiction declaring the meaning and proper content of a law of the Parliament,
but the executive branch of the government, in the form of the Australian
Taxation Office, administering the statute in a manner contrary to the meaning
and content as declared by the Court; that is, seeing the executive branch of
government ignoring the views of the judicial branch of government in the
administration of a law of the Parliament by the former. This should not have
occurred.[31]
5.27
Following Indooroopilly, the ATO expressed interest in pursuing
court declarations.[32] Aronson, Dyer and Groves define a court declaration as:
… a declaratory order or judgement is simply a court’s
declaration or statement resolving a dispute over the law applicable to a
situation in which the applicant has a sufficient interest. The order or
judgement has almost no mandatory or restraining effect at all.[33]
5.28
Declarations, therefore, appear to be of most use when there is a
dispute, but the party instigating the court action does not need a remedy that
involves enforcement. It is of no use to an applicant which is trying to enforce
the law against someone or an agency that is refusing to act legally. Further,
courts generally refrain from issuing advisory opinions, so there must be an
element of dispute involved. The value of a declaration is its procedural
flexibility and scope.[34]
5.29
The ATO advised the Committee that it had received advice from the
Solicitor-General that court declarations will not be suitable. The argument is
that the ATO needs to issue a private ruling to initiate court proceedings in
relation to a taxpayer. However, once the ATO has issued the ruling, the
Commissioner is bound by it. The ATO cannot change its view of the law in
relation to the taxpayer’s affairs even if it wished to. Hence, a court would
be reluctant to issue a declaration when the ATO is legally barred from
changing its actions in relation to that taxpayer. Making a declaration before
the ATO issues a ruling would also fail because there would be no dispute.[35]
Essenbourne – analysis
5.30
There are two main ways by which to analyse the ATO’s conduct in Essenbourne.
The first is to use the advice from the Solicitor-General that the ATO received
in December 2005 and January 2006. Although the ATO did not have access to this
advice until well after Essenbourne, it helps assess the ATO’s conduct,
if only from the advantage of hindsight. The Solicitor-General’s principles for
litigating against precedent were that an agency should:
n put on notice all
parties likely to be affected by the litigation
n only litigate against
precedent where it has legal advice that a decision is wrong
n ensure the seniority,
robustness and credibility of the legal advice matches the issue and the seniority
of the court that made the decision in question
n fund a test case
n make any challenge ‘as
soon as possible’ after the decision.[36]
5.31
The ATO complied with the first of these points and the fourth to some
extent. It put out a press release stating its views in relation to Essenbourne.
It funded Indooroopilly as a test case, but not some of the earlier
cases after Essenbourne.[37] Further, the Committee
assumes that the ATO obtained suitable legal advice. The remaining question is
whether the ATO made its challenge as soon as possible after Essenbourne.
5.32
At first glance, this does not appear to be the case. The Full Federal
Court decided Indooroopilly over four years after Essenbourne. In
the view of the Committee, this is ample time in which the ATO could have
brought a suitable test case.
5.33
A closer examination of the decisions also raises questions about
whether the ATO placed sufficient priority on resolving this matter as soon as
possible. As noted earlier, the ATO publicly stated that it did not appeal Essenbourne
because the Court affirmed the ATO’s decision to render the scheme
ineffective by disallowing the deduction. In Pridecraft, its submission
to the Court stated that it did not wish to pursue the fringe benefits tax
question if it won in relation to the tax deduction. These cases suggest that
the ATO was placing a greater emphasis on securing a favourable outcome on
fringe benefits tax, rather than resolving the matter in a timely way. The
Solicitor-General’s advice is clear that any challenge should occur ‘as soon as
possible.’
5.34
Therefore, with hindsight, it appears that the ATO did not meet the
standards in this advice. As the Solicitor-General stated in subsequent advice
in June 2007, ‘a quicker test of the issue should probably have occurred.’[38]
The ATO suggested to the Committee in April 2007 that its actions were
consistent with the Solicitor-General’s advice.[39]
However, the later document from the Solicitor-General indicates this was not
the case.
5.35
The second benchmark for the ATO’s conduct is the list of options
provided by the Full Federal Court in Indooroopilly. They suggested the
ATO should have appealed Essenbourne, or followed Essenbourne, referred
the issue to Treasury for legislation, or sought a court declaration on the
matter (an administrative law remedy where a court declares the legal position
on an issue). The ATO did not carry out any of these options. From the
perspective of many taxpayers, the value in these suggested courses of action
is that they would have led to a prompt resolution of the dispute. Once again
there is an element of hindsight in comparing the ATO’s conduct against these
tests. However, they demonstrate that the ATO appears to have been trading off
timeliness in administration against securing a favourable outcome on fringe
benefits tax.
5.36
In explaining the principles of judicial comity, the judiciary has made
it clear that they believe the benefits of certainty in the law outweigh the
opportunity to reconsider a matter, unless they believe a previous decision was
clearly wrong. One Federal Court judge has stated:
The injunction to judicial comity does not
merely advance mutual politeness as between judges of the same or co-ordinate
jurisdictions. It tends also to uphold the authority of the courts and
confidence in the law by the value it places upon consistency in judicial
decision-making and mutual respect between judges.[40]
5.37
In implementing the tax laws, the Committee believes that ATO needs to
balance a number of priorities, including certainty, perceptions of fairness,
and securing the revenue. Similar to the mass marketed investment schemes, the
Committee is of the view that the ATO in Essenbourne and related cases
has pursued the revenue above other considerations. This has damaged the
reputation of the ATO.[41]
5.38
One consequence of the mass marketed investment schemes was Treasury’s Report
on aspects of income tax self assessment (RoSA), which led to a reduction
in the Commissioner’s discretion, in favour of taxpayers. The David Jones
Finance case in 1990 (chapter three) led to rulings becoming legally
binding on the Commissioner, which also reduced the ATO’s discretion in favour
of taxpayers. Similarly, Essenbourne has demonstrated another area in
which the ATO could itself limit its discretion.
Essenbourne – conclusion
5.39
In 2006, the Inspector-General of Taxation finalised a report on how the
ATO managed its litigation program. One consequence of the review is that the
ATO now publishes decision impact statements after court decisions. Included in
these statements is the ATO’s decision, where appropriate, of whether it is
likely to appeal the case or not.[42] The Committee welcomes
this improvement in public administration, which will go some way to reducing
taxpayer uncertainty from court cases.
5.40
During this review, the ATO obtained advice from the Solicitor-General
on better practice in litigation. One item in the ATO’s request was whether it
needed to comply with the stricter views on precedent expressed by Justice McHugh in 2002 (when he was on the High Court). He stated:
No doubt an Executive agency is entitled to disregard a
decision where it is truly in conflict with another decision that it thinks is
correct. It may sometimes also be justifiable to refuse to follow a decision
that is the subject of appeal. But that has problems. Judicial decisions are
not provisional rulings until confirmed by the ultimate appellate court in the
system. Until set aside, they represent the law and should be followed.
Moreover, the Executive can run into serious legal problems where it continues
to enforce legislation that a court has ruled invalid. Even more difficult to justify
is the refusal to follow a [court] ruling that is not the subject of appeal
merely because the agency regards it as wrong and will test it at the next
opportunity.[43]
5.41
Without commenting directly on this quotation, the Solicitor-General
suggested that the ATO could litigate against a decision it regards as wrong
provided it met the various tests listed earlier. In other words, the
Solicitor-General did not take as strict a view as Justice McHugh. The Court in
Indooroopilly adopted the stricter line.
5.42
The courts use principles of precedent and judicial comity to increase
certainty in the law at the cost of their individual discretion. Similarly, the
Committee believes that the ATO should reduce the exercise of its discretion in
administering its litigation program in the interests of certainty.
5.43
As Justice McHugh stated, a court decision represents the law and should
be followed. The alternatives are those expressed by the Court in Indooroopilly.
The ATO’s role ends with administering the law. If a court makes a decision
that the ATO regards as incorrect and it has exhausted all appeals, it is
enough for the ATO to state its position publicly and refer the matter to
Treasury. This way, the Courts and the Parliament are responsible for the law.
This is consistent with constitutional and democratic principles.
Recommendation 11
|
5.44
|
Where the ATO has concerns about a judicial decision, it
should publicly announce these concerns in the decision impact statement and
commit to resolving the issue within 12 months through one or a combination of
the following public actions:
n abiding
by the initial decision
n appealing
the decision and abiding by any subsequent decision
n referring
the issue to Treasury as a policy matter.
|
Changes in ATO interpretations of the law
5.45
Similar to judicial changes in interpretation, the ATO may itself decide
that its interpretation of the law is incorrect or may update its advice on how
to comply with the law. An example of the former is agribusiness investment
schemes. At the biannual meeting with the Commissioner on 20 April 2007, the ATO advised the Committee how it came to develop its new position on the law:
What we have actually had is indications from the court—one
by the Supreme Court in Environ and another one by the Federal Court in Puzey—to
say that our view of the law was wrong…
…it has taken some time. We then referred the matter to
government because it was really a government issue of how it wanted these
areas taxed. The government made its decision in relation to afforestation and
decided that we should just test the law—it said it would not do anything in
relation to agriculture or agribusiness. That left the tax office with views
expressed by the judiciary that our previous view was not right. We have gone
through an extensive process of trying to review our position. We think a
better view now is that we were wrong. Therefore, we are trying now to have a
test case to clarify that over the next 12 months.
Last week we issued a draft ruling reflecting that change of
view.[44]
5.46
On 6 February 2007, the then Government announced that it would not
extend the agribusiness tax concession to non-forestry schemes. The ATO’s
initial position was that the new legal position would apply from 1 July
that year.[45] This led to significant
movements in the share prices of some agribusiness firms.[46]
After significant community concern, the ATO announced on 27 March 2007 that it would not apply its new view of the law until 1 July 2008.[47]
In effect, it granted a 12 month transition period.
5.47
An example of the ATO updating its advice to taxpayers in relation to
compliance is service entities. In the 1978 case of Commissioner of Taxation
v Phillips,[48] the Full Federal Court
dealt with a situation where a business set up a separate entity to provide
administrative services to it. The service entity was owned by the business
owner’s family and, by directing profits from the business to the entity, was a
form of income splitting. The Court permitted the arrangement because the
entity provided the services at commercial rates.[49]
5.48
In that case, the service entity used a mark up of 50% on the direct
costs of the employees providing the administrative services. The ATO released
a short ruling (IT 276) after Phillips where it accepted the
result, but did not make reference to specific mark ups. The Inspector-General
of Taxation has reported that the ATO’s internal assessing manuals, publicly
released in 1985, accepted the 50% benchmark on staff costs.[50]
5.49
In 2002, the ATO formally decided to address compliance issues related
to service entities. It released draft guidance in 2005 and finalised it in
2006. In addition to other measures, the guidance limited the mark up on direct
staff costs to 30%. The ATO announced that taxpayers had a 12-month period of
grace in which to change their existing arrangements to meet the new standards.
5.50
In his report, the Inspector-General concluded that the ATO had changed
its administrative practice. The ATO disagreed with this conclusion. The
Committee does not wish to consider such matters of interpretation. What is
important to note is the ATO gave taxpayers 12 months in which to comply with
the new standards. The Committee believes that such periods of grace, when used
appropriately, are fair on taxpayers.
5.51
The Committee accepts that the ATO may change its opinion of the law or
may establish new benchmarks for complying with the law to accommodate changes
in business practices. The Committee also believes that, once it has come to
such a conclusion, the ATO needs to act promptly to satisfy taxpayers that it
is enforcing the law. Firstly, this involves making a public announcement of
its change of view. Secondly, the ATO may need to give taxpayers a period of
time in which to change their affairs. Unless there are exceptional
circumstances, such a period should be no longer than 12 months. This will be
long enough for any adjustment, but any longer period would lead to doubts that
the ATO is committed to enforcing the law. The length of the adjustment period
will depend on the circumstances in each case and may need to be varied to take
into account timing issues such as the end of the financial year.
5.52
Such a decision involves considerable discretion. The Committee is of
the view that the ATO should develop a policy to ensure that these decisions
are robust.
Recommendation 12
|
5.53
|
The ATO develop a policy to support decisions involving
periods of grace where it changes its view of the law. Unless there are
exceptional circumstances, no period of grace should exceed 12 months.
|
Managing non-compliance
Introduction
5.54
The management of non-compliance, such as through investigations and
audits, is a sensitive area in tax administration. The Ombudsman advised the
Committee that a large number of complaints involve compliance activities:
The ATO’s compliance activities are an area about which the
Ombudsman’s office receives a substantial number of complaints — generally over
five hundred complaints each year (or about a third of all tax complaints).
Most complaints relate to assessment, audit and recovery action.[51]
5.55
In examining the ATO’s compliance activities, the Committee found that
the most suitable benchmark is fairness. In some respects, this is not
surprising. The ATO investigates and audits taxpayers, amends their assessments
and takes some taxpayers to court. This is similar to police action and
prosecution. Therefore, it is natural to apply principles of legal fairness to
the ATO’s compliance activities.
5.56
Earlier in the chapter, the Committee noted evidence that the main
benefit of compliance work is it ensures that the proportion of compliant
taxpayers remains high. Its secondary purpose is to raise revenue. The ATO
advised the Committee that the return on compliance overall is $15 in revenue
raised for every dollar spent on compliance work.[52]
Audit strategies
5.57
The ATO stated that it takes a risk-based approach to audit and
investigation:
… the way we select for audit activity is on the highest
risk. The whole approach is to try and focus on outliers as a way of protecting
the voluntary compliance of those who are doing the right thing.[53]
5.58
A large component of this work involves data collection and analysis.
The ATO’s submission stated:
We verify compliance by reviewing high-risk cases and
businesses with more complex arrangements. Our interactions with businesses range
from checking claims by telephone and written requests through to intensive
audits. Identifying high-risk cases involves matching large volumes of data to
identify omitted transactions and businesses operating outside industry or
economic norms.
We use the same techniques to identify businesses that
represent little or no risk to the revenue system so that we avoid intruding on
their affairs unnecessarily.[54]
5.59
The Committee supports the ATO reducing its compliance focus on law
abiding taxpayers. The Commissioner gave an example of a conversation he had
with a newsagent that shows there are costs involved in exposing compliant
taxpayers to investigations:
I was in charge of the area that was looking at it at the
time. He said to me: ‘Your people audited me. They did a good job, they were
very professional and I did not have a problem, but I am really dark on the tax
office and I will remain dark forever on them.’ When I asked why, he said,
‘Because you audited me and I have been trying to do the right thing, but you
did not audit the person across the street, who is a crook.’ So there is a
perception there that, if you just do randoms and you pick the wrong people, it
actually reduces community confidence rather than increases it.[55]
5.60
The Committee supports the ATO’s risk-based approach to compliance. It
directs the ATO’s resources to the areas of greatest need and does not burden
compliant taxpayers.
Amended assessments
5.61
In chapter one, the Committee discussed the various reasons why taxpayers
in the mass marketed investment schemes felt the ATO had unfairly treated them.
One of the main reasons was the ATO’s delayed reaction to the schemes. If
taxpayers were not picked up by the ATO within 12 months of them lodging a
return, it tended to create a precedent for the future. In its report on the
schemes, the Senate Committee stated:
Although the ATO advised that it acted within 12 to 18 months
to deny deductions claimed in up to 90 per cent of cases, in some instances the
time lag was approximately two to three years, and in others the delay reached
up to six years.[56]
5.62
Around this time, the ATO had significant powers to amend a taxpayer’s
assessment. The standard period was four years. For taxpayers with a shorter
period of review, the time was two years. These taxpayers needed to be
individuals with simpler affairs, such as only deriving withholding income,
using a limited range of deductions and incurring no capital gain or loss. In
2004, the ATO estimated there were 1.5 million taxpayers in this group. The standard
period extended to six years where the ATO invoked Part IVA of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 (the general anti-avoidance provision).[57]
5.63
As part of RoSA in 2004, Treasury recommended that these time limits be
reduced. In particular, businesses that elect to participate in the Simplified
Tax System and individuals should have an amendment period of two years.
Treasury recommended that partners of partnerships and beneficiaries of trusts
that have not elected to participate in the Simplified Tax System should be
excluded. Taxpayers subject to Part IVA (the general anti-avoidance provisions)
had their amendment period reduced from six years to the standard four years.
5.64
The Parliament amended the tax laws in the Tax Laws Amendment
(Improvements to Self Assessment) Act (No. 2) 2005 to give effect to these
proposals. Under section 170 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, the
ATO has an unlimited period in which to amend an assessment if the Commissioner
is of the opinion there has been fraud or evasion. This power is unchanged.
5.65
One of Treasury’s recommendations in RoSA was that it should further
investigate the specific legislative instances where the ATO has an unlimited
period to amend an assessment. There are over 100 of these. Treasury has released
a discussion paper on this, proposing to group the provisions into four
categories:
n converting to the standard
two and four year assessment periods
n having a longer,
finite period such as eight years
n where the provision
relies on a contingent event, changing to two years after the event
n remaining an
unlimited period.[58]
5.66
In RoSA, Treasury noted most individual taxpayers have very simple
affairs. For them, the main compliance activity that the ATO conducts is processes such as income matching.[59] It is straightforward
for the ATO to complete this within two years, especially now that data
matching has reached a sophisticated and comprehensive stage.[60]
Hence, the RoSA recommendations sensibly balance the requirements of ATO systems and the needs of taxpayers.
5.67
The Committee also supports the principles behind the recent Treasury
Discussion Paper, which states:
Improving taxpayer certainty is a key goal for tax
administration. The length of time that elapses before assessments can no
longer be amended represents an aspect of risk and uncertainty for taxpayers.
Unlimited amendment periods represent an extreme case of uncertainty, as the
time to amend extends indefinitely. If that time can be limited without
prejudicing the integrity and function of the system overall, the ‘costs’ of risk
and uncertainty would be reduced.[61]
5.68
Tax stakeholders supported the announcement of this review.[62]
It is still ongoing, so the Committee sees no need to make a recommendation.
Commencing audits
5.69
The date at which an audit starts is important because it affects the
value to a taxpayer of making a voluntary disclosure to the ATO.
5.70
Where a taxpayer incurs a tax shortfall amount, their conduct may
warrant the imposition of an administrative penalty. The ATO decreases the base
penalty if the taxpayer tells the ATO about the shortfall. The reduction
depends on when the taxpayer makes the disclosure. If the taxpayer does so
before an audit commences, then the reduction is 100% for a shortfall of less
than $1,000 or 80% for a shortfall of $1,000 or more. If the taxpayer tells the
ATO after an audit starts, the reduction is 20% if the disclosure saves the ATO
significant time or resources.[63]
5.71
In 2005, the Inspector-General of Taxation released two reports that
referred to taxpayer confusion over whether certain ATO compliance activities
were audits and their commencement date. For instance, the report into audit
timeframes stated:
A review of sample cases revealed that an audit commencement
letter or phone call had not been sent or made in 11 out of 203 (5.42 per cent)
audit case files reviewed where it was appropriate to notify taxpayers of the
commencement of audits and where the case file was adequately maintained.[64]
5.72
The audit timeframe report noted that the ATO was resolving this issue
in consultation with tax professionals through the Accountants Tax
Practitioners’ Forum Audit Working Group. It recommended that the ATO ensure it
complied with its procedures on notification of audits.[65]
The penalties and interest report recommended that the ATO provide clearer
guidance on when an audit starts and give taxpayers an opportunity to make
voluntary disclosures prior to an audit formally commencing.[66]
5.73
In submissions, the ICAA[67] and the Taxation
Institute of Australia expressed concern about how to ascertain when some
audits start. The latter stated there was:
… considerable confusion at present about whether an ATO
compliance activity constitutes an audit or not, with ramifications for whether
a taxpayer can make a voluntary disclosure and seek to minimise the impact of
any penalties. The ATO needs to put in place protocols for advising taxpayers about
whether or not a particular compliance activity is an audit, and if so, when
the audit commences. Although work has progressed in the ATO, resolution has
stalled …[68]
5.74
The Committee appreciates that not all taxpayers should be told when an
audit into their affairs commences. However, the Committee believes that
taxpayers should be advised as often as possible, including borderline cases. This
is consistent with legal principles of fairness. The Committee also notes that
the ATO has commenced rectifying this problem but has not finalised the task.
This should be completed as soon as possible.
Recommendation 13
|
5.75
|
The ATO establish and monitor compliance of protocols for
determining when an investigation is an audit, when the audit commences, and
when the ATO should inform the taxpayer of the audit.
|
Conditional assessments
5.76
A feature of the ATO’s response to employee benefit arrangements was
that it issued assessments for the transactions which were conditional on each
other. In its press release for Essenbourne, the ATO stated that it did
not pursue the fringe benefits tax assessment because it rendered the scheme
ineffective by disallowing the income tax deduction.[69]
In Pridecraft in the first instance, the ATO’s submission stated it
would not follow up the fringe benefits tax assessment if it was successful in
relation to the income tax deduction.[70]
5.77
The use of conditional (or multiple) assessments provoked a strong response
from some taxpayers during the inquiry.[71] For instance:
The issuing of multiple assessments had participants amassing
levels due to the ATO up to ten times the level of the actual participating
sums. What a disgrace that any creditor let alone the ATO can take such a scatter
gun approach. Every company and every participant has their ‘breaking point’
and the ATO did their best to find it.[72]
5.78
In evidence, the ATO stated that its goal was to ultimately pursue one
assessment:
… our ongoing position is that we will settle on one point.
If a case is in the court and the person has decided not to settle, we still
put before the court the full range of options. But our position has been all
along that we only collect on one taxing point and we only settle on one taxing
point.[73]
5.79
The ATO also advised the Committee in 2006 that it would be reducing the
fringe benefits tax assessments to nil:
Now that the courts in Essenbourne, Kajewski and Spotlight/Pridecraft
P/L have clearly found the arrangements not to be effective for income tax
purposes there is minimal risk to the revenue in amending to nil the FBT
assessments for cases with similar facts. We expect about 400 cases will be
affected with 200 already having been amended to nil.[74]
5.80
The Committee has significant concerns about the ATO’s practice of
issuing conditional assessments. The quotation above demonstrates that the ATO issued the assessment based on revenue calculations.
5.81
In the case of employee benefit arrangements, the ATO did have other
approaches available. For example, the Full Court in Indooroopilly noted
that the ATO would be able to tax the payment of funds from the investment
trust (in that case, a Carers’ Share Plan) to the recipients as taxable income.[75]
In other words, the ATO was taxing the flow of funds one transaction too early.
Given the precedent set in Essenbourne, it would have been defensible
for the ATO to argue that it would wait until individual taxpayers received
funds from the investment trusts. It could then assess these as income tax and
litigate test cases if necessary.
5.82
If the ATO had concerns about issues of fairness in relation to taxing
the same transaction twice, it would have had at least two ways of not pursuing
the debt. Firstly, in some cases the imposition of fringe benefits tax may have
caused hardship on a taxpayer. In Division 340 in Schedule 1 to the Taxation
Administration Act 1953, the Commissioner has a general power to release a
taxpayer from fringe benefits tax where it would cause serious hardship.
5.83
Secondly, section 34 of the Financial Management and Accountability
Act 1997 gives the Minister for Finance and Administration a general power
to waive debts due to the Commonwealth.[76] The Committee has
previously argued that the ATO should publicly transfer to Treasury responsibility
for tax policy questions arising out of litigation. Similarly, transferring a
debt collection issue to this Minister is appropriate where there are
significant policy and fairness issues about pursuing a tax debt.
5.84
In its submission, Resolution Group made the following recommendation:
The ATO should be prohibited from issuing multiple
assessments, either original or amended and whether primary or alternative. The
ATO should be required by law to determine the appropriate assessment and only
issue and, if necessary, contest that one.[77]
5.85
The Committee would prefer the ATO implemented the spirit of this
proposal. Firstly, the Committee wishes to preserve the Commissioner’s
discretion where possible. Secondly, when there are many complex transactions,
it is difficult to determine which assessment copies another. Rather, the issue
with the ATO’s conduct in employee benefit arrangements was that some
assessments that were contingent on its success with other assessments. As an
implementer of the tax laws, the ATO should determine what the law requires it
to assess as income and then pursue these amounts.[78]
Recommendation 14
|
5.86
|
The ATO amend its policies to limit the practice of issuing
assessments that are contingent on each other, and specify in what
circumstances such assessments may be validly issued. In the absence of
administrative change, the Government introduce legislation to this effect.
|
A pro-revenue bias?
5.87
Over the years, a number of stakeholders have alleged that the ATO is biased towards collecting revenue, rather than collecting tax in accordance with the law. This
perception is in the eye of the beholder. The Committee is alert to the fact
that such criticisms can be self-serving when made by those caught out as
having failed on tax compliance. In its performance audit on rulings in 2001,
the ANAO reported allegations by taxpayers that the ATO was biased.[79]
The Inspector-General of Taxation has reported that 72% of large corporate
taxpayers consider the ATO to be biased in relation to private rulings.[80]
5.88
Sometimes this view is expressed as a perception of bias amongst the
community. For example, in RoSA Treasury noted a widespread perception of bias
in relation to private rulings. RoSA recommended that the Inspector-General of
Taxation investigate this matter.[81] In his recent review,
the Inspector-General examined the ATO’s systems and files and found no
evidence of bias in the ATO’s private rulings. The Inspector-General confirmed
that the perceptions of bias were widespread, but these were due to the way the
ATO dealt with applicants. This included requesting taxpayers to withdraw
applications, making requests for additional information that did not always
appear warranted, and discussing issues with Treasury without advising
taxpayers. By not being open with taxpayers about these delay-causing
behaviours, taxpayers concluded from the information available to them that the
ATO was exercising the sort of bias that would be expected from a revenue
agency.[82]
5.89
In its performance audit on rulings, the ANAO was not able to conclude
about whether the ATO’s private rulings showed a pro-revenue bias. Rather, the
report focussed on whether the ATO’s processes supported robust
decision-making:
The ATO rejects this view and it is difficult to determine
whether this view is valid…
The ATO disagrees and it is difficult to conclude one way or
the other about user/stakeholder perceptions…
We note that some rulings are contentious and we appreciate
that views may differ on matters of legal interpretation (sometimes very important
matters of legal interpretation) because that is the nature of the
interpretative process. However, in view of our discussion and conclusions
relating to the public rulings production processes … we conclude that the
processes are in place to assure reasonably the legal quality of the ATO’s
public rulings.[83]
5.90
The ATO’s third external scrutineer is the Ombudsman. The Committee
asked the Ombudsman of the culture of ATO staff and whether they adopted a
pro-revenue bias:
If we see the Taxation Office through the prism only of the
individual complaints that we receive and the contact we otherwise have, the
evidence from that contact does not substantiate the general criticisms that
are made. But I think what we do see is that every issue has two sides to it …
There are complaints and difficulties if the Taxation Office
has labels that are pejorative such as ‘aggressive tax planning promoter’ or
whatever. On the other hand, it says it is failing in its response to calls
from the public if it does not do that to differentiate between those who are innocent
and genuine, committed and acting in good faith and those who are not. I think
that is the general experience that we find. One can point to an issue or an
example to substantiate a general point, but it is quickly counterbalanced by
experience of a different kind or by imagining what the alternative is going to
be if you take the other line.[84]
5.91
The Ombudsman’s point about two sides to every story is very relevant.
If a taxpayer disagrees with or engages in a dispute with the ATO and is
unsuccessful, they are likely to be dissatisfied. With the support of
democratic processes, they are also entitled to complain. Every case where a
taxpayer is dissatisfied has the potential to be a public, high profile criticism
of the ATO.
5.92
The other side of the story is where a taxpayer disagrees with or
engages in a dispute with the ATO and is successful. Any such taxpayer is
likely to be satisfied but will have little incentive to announce this outcome.
The public is unlikely to hear about these cases. The ATO has publicly stated
that it ultimately accepts taxpayers’ arguments in many cases.[85]
5.93
In the view of the Committee, proving systemic bias in the ATO will be
methodologically difficult undertaking. The sort of process that would be
required would be to take a statistical sample of the ATO’s decisions and then
assess whether each one demonstrated a revenue bias, a taxpayer bias, or was
neutral. Arguably, for an allegation of revenue bias to be valid, the examples
of a revenue bias would need to outweigh the examples of taxpayer bias.
5.94
In An Assessment of Tax, the JCPA argued that, whenever there was
doubt over an interpretation of the law, the ATO should give the taxpayer the
benefit of the doubt.[86] Under this approach, one
decision by the ATO with a revenue bias would arguably be sufficient to
demonstrate a revenue bias overall. Clearly, this is not practical. The
analysis then becomes an exercise in determining what proportion of the ATO’s
decisions is permitted to demonstrate a revenue bias.
5.95
The ATO has already implemented processes to achieve much of this analysis
through its technical quality reviews. In these reviews, the ATO selects a
statistical sample twice a year of its different types of decisions and then
conducts internal peer review. Generally, the ATO’s benchmark for a pass rating
is 95%. The ATO achieved a performance of 97.0% for August 2006 to January 2007,
up from 95.8% from February 2006 to July 2006.[87]
5.96
If the Committee were to cite the examples of where there may be
evidence of a pro-revenue bias, it would raise the following:
n the ATO issuing conditional
assessments in employee benefit arrangements
n prior legislative
arrangements where the ATO could automatically apply penalties to taxpayers who
did not follow private rulings (chapter three)
n the ATO’s conduct in Essenbourne
n the ATO arguing in Walstern
that private opinions were not relevant authorities to support a taxpayer’s
claim for a reasonably arguable position (chapter three)
n the combination of
the ATO’s delays and compliance response in the mass marketed investment
schemes.
5.97
The common thread in these examples is fairness. Simply put, the ATO engaged in conduct in these instances that most observers would describe as unfair. However,
this does not necessarily demonstrate a pro-revenue bias or a general
unfairness on the part of the ATO. This agency makes hundreds of complex
decisions daily. To cite five occasions over 10 or more years does not
demonstrate bias.
5.98
What these decisions demonstrate is the importance of fairness in
dealing with taxpayers and the seemingly disproportionate effect that an unfair
decision can have. Each decision has the potential to reduce the reputation of
the ATO. This could then affect the number of taxpayers who decide to be
compliant and, in turn, could affect the security of the revenue. The ATO
itself noted this in its submission where it stated:
Procedural fairness, courtesy and integrity underpin a world
class tax administration.[88]
5.99
In the view of the Committee, what would assist the ATO is a mechanism
whereby there would be a fairness check on all significant decisions dealing
with taxpayers. To some extent, the mechanisms for this are already in place.
The ATO has the Taxpayers’ Charter, which requires the ATO to act fairly
and reasonably with taxpayers.[89] The ATO also has
technical quality reviews. In its 2004 performance audit on the Taxpayers’
Charter, the ANAO recommended that the ATO implement systematic,
supplementary quality assurance processes. These processes would include
compliance with Charter principles.[90]
5.100
In June 2008, the ANAO finalised a follow-up audit on the Taxpayers’
Charter. The ANAO found that the ATO had met the intent of this
recommendation by implementing an integrated quality framework based on
recognised standards. The ATO conducted internal consultations to ensure that
the framework complies with Charter principles. In time, the framework will
replace technical quality reviews.[91]
5.101
While the Committee regards all of the principles in the Taxpayers’
Charter as important, perhaps the most important of them is the ATO’s commitment to act fairly. The Committee trusts that the integrated quality framework will further
raise the visibility of this Charter principle in ATO decision-making.
Conclusion
5.102
Compliance work is the most sensitive area of the ATO’s administration
of the tax system. The Committee is satisfied that the ATO’s compliance model
is a suitable foundation for this because it assists compliant taxpayers and
encourages taxpayers in general to comply with the tax laws.
5.103
Much of this chapter has concentrated on how the ATO managed employee
benefit arrangements, including the Essenbourne case. Out of all the
issues raised with the Committee during the inquiry, the Committee is the most
concerned about Essenbourne. It took the ATO four years to accept the
Federal Court’s decision in that case. The Committee agrees with Justice McHugh and the Full Federal Court in Indooroopilly that a court decision is the
law and should be followed. Either appealing the decision or accepting it and
referring the issue to Treasury as a policy matter is consistent with the ATO’s
role as an independent administrator of the tax laws.
5.104
The Committee accepts that many of the taxpayers in employee benefit
arrangements took a conscious decision to push the boundaries of legal conduct
to pay less tax but still enjoy the many public facilities that tax revenue
provides. But in Essenbourne, the ATO has allowed its critics to argue
that it pushes the boundaries of the law as well. This endangered much of the ATO’s good work in establishing, promoting and being guided by the compliance model.