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'Robotax' is a symptom of a gap in Australia's tax laws. Here's how to fix it

2024-02-23T10:50:00+11:00

A stock photo of the Australian Tax forms.
Ann Kayis-Kumar
Ann Kayis-Kumar,

The Tax Office has been writing off hard-to-collect debts for years, but it hasn鈥檛 had the power to do it. Unless we give it that power, it鈥檒l be forced to push vulnerable Australians into debt.

鈥楻obotax鈥 is a symptom of a gap in Australia鈥檚 tax laws. Here鈥檚 how to fix聽it

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Imagine believing you owed nothing to the Australian Tax Office, and then suddenly finding out decades later that you did, and that the Tax Office had been accruing interest and penalties on it for decades.

You might think it was like , the disgraced scheme under which the government tried to extract money from welfare recipients that was eventually found to be unlawful by a .

You might even call the scheme 鈥溾. This is how it is being referred to in reporting. It is eventually expected to collect debts on hold worth .

On Wednesday Tax Commissioner Chris Jordan said he hadn鈥檛 wanted to pursue these old (and in some cases very small) debts but had been forced to after the Australian National Audit Office told the Tax Office it had not to chase them.

鈥淎s a regulator, we can鈥檛 purposely not conform with the law,鈥 he told the National Press Club. 鈥淲e have to, so we鈥檙e working our way through.鈥

Small debts climb to tens of thousands

Here鈥檚 an example, from our Tax and Business Advisory Clinic at the University of NSW.

One of our clients had previously been involved in a small business with her husband. When he tragically died she was left to look after their children on her own and told she didn鈥檛 owe the Tax Office any money.

But when she recently returned to work and lodged her tax return, a long-absent tax debt reappeared. It turns out that although she had been told it was 鈥渨ritten off鈥 at the time, it had only been classified as 鈥渘on-pursuit鈥.

Non-pursuit meant it hadn鈥檛 appeared in her or her husband鈥檚 tax statements.

By the time it reappeared, she owed $37,000. The clinic was able to establish that most of this 鈥 about $29,000 鈥 was interest and penalties.

We asked the Tax Office to waive the interest and penalties, which, to its credit, it did. It鈥檚 an option many financially vulnerable taxpayers won鈥檛 know they have and won鈥檛 know how to get without professional advice (which they can鈥檛 afford).

It gives government-funded tax clinics a valuable role.

How it happened

The Tax Office has for many years been classifying debts as 鈥渨ritten off鈥 or 鈥渘ot economical to pursue鈥, usually where the debts are small or it has lost contact with the taxpayer.

Commissioner Jordan told the Press Club his view had been it was 鈥溾 to spend money chasing debts as low as $2.

But a taxpayer might not realise this has happened, or might not have realised that 鈥渨ritten off鈥 doesn鈥檛 have its standard English meaning. Debts written off continue to exist. Without a statute of limitations on them, they cannot expire.

The Tax Office merely decided not to pursue them. On their statements, these taxpayers saw no acknowledgement of these debts and often saw a balance of 鈥渘il鈥 on their accounts.

New advice from the Australian Government Solicitor has forced the Tax Office to collect these debts where would have preferred not to, even where the clients are old or on .

Temporary halt

On Wednesday, the Tax Office said it had 鈥渉eard the concerns raised by the community鈥 and all recovery action on debts placed on hold prior to 2017, a temporary solution whose legal basis is unclear.

In Australia, there is no statute of limitations on tax debts placed on hold, even though has found tax debts not collected within two years of assessment are unlikely to be collected at all.

Although Australia鈥檚 Finance Minister has the power to waive individual debts, it is unclear whether this could be used to waive an entire class of debts.

And there is one class of debts the minister has no power to waive, even in cases of extreme hardship 鈥 those from businesses that have collected the .

The Tax Office was warned

The Commonwealth Ombudsman warned the Tax Office of a problem back in 2009 in a report entitled Re-raising Written-off Debts.

It said the Tax Office used the term 鈥渨rite-off鈥 in a way that differed from the commonly understood commercial meaning.

It made a number of recommendations, one of which was that the Tax Office:

notify taxpayers about the decision to write off their debt, indicating that there is an amount owing which the Tax Office has decided not to pursue at that time but may seek to do so later.

Another was that the Tax Office:

provide further information to taxpayers when a debt is re-raised. This information should include the source of the debt (including how much interest has been charged), the circumstances which caused the debt to be re-raised and how to obtain further information.

Something else that would help is a requirement to inform those affected that the Tax Office is able to remit interest and penalties 鈥 and to offer guidance about how to request this.

Ultimately, it might require legislation

Legislating to give the Tax Office permission to waive debts in certain circumstances would be the best fix, and could probably be done quickly if government ministers are willing.

As he prepared to step down after a decade as Tax Commissioner this month, Jordan pointed with pride to the Tax Office鈥檚 status as the arm of the Australian public service.

Unless the Tax Office is given the discretion to behave with compassion towards vulnerable Australians, it risks losing that status and perpetuating cycles of debt.

We need a legislative fix. The Tax Office needs in its armoury the ability to help 鈥 rather than hinder 鈥 people in serious financial hardship. The last thing it should want to do, and want to be seen to want to do, is to squeeze blood from stones.The Conversation

, Associate Professor,

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