Sign Up
..... Connect Australia with the world.
Categories

Posted: 2024-03-25 13:07:46

Two federal ombudsmen have joined forces to launch a scathing review of the tax office and call on government agencies to act more fairly when they chase people for debts.

The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) is owed tens of billions of dollars' worth of income tax debts it once dismissed as being "uneconomical to pursue". 

It is owed more than $15 billion from 1.8 million entities, largely consisting of individuals, but has said the figure could be higher once interest is applied to those debts.

It has come as a shock to many taxpayers to have their debts resurrected, in some cases after more than a decade.

These debts had effectively been written off. They disappeared and then reappeared many years later, along with hefty interest charges.

In a report released on Tuesday, the Commonwealth Ombudsman and Taxation Ombudsman singled out the ATO's approach to re-activating very old debts, as well as the way it treated people in financial hardship.

"While the law may require agencies to take certain action, agencies are responsible for determining how they take that action in a way that minimises distress to affected and impacted people," the joint report said.

Tax Ombudsman Karen Payne said there had been an uptick in complaints to her office about the ATO, including about historical debts and debts that had been overstated.

Karen Payne in Sydney sitting at a park bench looking into the distance.

Tax Ombudsman Karen Payne says there has been an uptick in complaints about the ATO.

She said while the law stated that the ATO must collect tax debts, it did not tell it how to do it and what the best practice for collecting those debts was.

She said her office had also received complaints related to $34 billion worth of small business debt that was put on hold during the pandemic but the ATO was now chasing from small businesses and the self-employed. 

"It's always worrying and distressing to be told that you owe the Commonwealth debts," Ms Payne said.

"And obviously in these economic times, people are worried about the continuity of their business.

So, yes, it can be a factor that tips people over the edge."

"You can't have a one-size-fits-all [approach]. You can't have a tick-the-box approach. You need to actually recognise individual circumstances and particularly when people are experiencing financial trauma and stress."

Ombudsman urges ATO to learn from past failures

Commonwealth Ombudsman Iain Anderson said in 2009 his agency made specific detailed recommendations on how the ATO should improve its communication with taxpayers about decisions to write off or re-activate old debts but that this advice was not heeded.

The ATO's practice of not offsetting very small tax debts was found to be incorrect following an Australian National Audit Office audit in 2023.

View More
  • 0 Comment(s)
Captcha Challenge
Reload Image
Type in the verification code above