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Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Budget 2022-2023 James Chalmers

“ A $1.1 billion additional investment into the ATO's Tax Avoidance Taskforce, mainly targeting large multinationals, is expected to yield $2.8 billion over the next four years, while a three-year extension to the Shadow Economy Program has an even better expected return of $2.1 billion for a $685 million investment.“

Treasury Budget 2022-23


Budget 2022: ATO resources beefed up to tackle shadow economy and tax avoidance


We can’t escape’ global pressures: Chalmers

Updated 

Budget at Glance


Large multinational companies

There will be a crackdown on multinationals, which will be forced to publicly release certain tax information from 1 July 2023.

They will also be prevented from claiming certain tax deductions with links to low or no-tax jurisdictions.

Penalties for breaches of competition and consumer law will be increased from $10 million to $50 million per breach, and from 10 per cent of annual turnover to 30 per cent of annual turnover (whichever is greater) during the period the breach took place.

Tax dodgers

Tax practitioners who provide poor and unlawful tax advice will be targeted thanks to funding of $30 million for the Tax Practitioners Board to be put towards investigations and to improve tax compliance.

The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) will also get $80 million to continue its program into tackling the overclaiming of deductions.

Federal budget: Who are the winners and losers?




The federal government will increase funding to the Australian Taxation Office to the tune of millions of dollars to beef up the tax office’s compliance programs, including those directed at the shadow economy and income tax deductions. 

The additional funding, included in Tuesday’s federal budget, comes at a time when the tax office is already resuming its pre-COVID enforcement activities, including collecting small business debts and issuing director penalty notices.

The ATO will see funding for its Tax Avoidance Taskforce increased by approximately $200 million per year over four years, effective July 1, 2022, while the taskforce itself will also be extended by another 12 months through to July 2025. 

Both the extension and increased funding will allow the taskforce to “support the ATO to pursue new priority areas of observed business tax risks, complementing the ongoing focus on multinational enterprises and large public and private businesses”, according to the budget papers. 


The government expects the measure to increase receipts by $2.8 billion and increase payments by $1.1 billion over the forward estimates. 

At the same time, the ATO will also be given additional resources to extend its Personal Income Taxation Compliance Program for another two years, from July 1, 2023. 

The $80.3 million extension is expected to deliver $674.4 million in increased receipts to the government, as well as increased payments of $80.3 million, over four years. 

This compliance program focuses on taxpayers who overclaim deductions and incorrectly report income. 

The government says the new funding will allow the ATO to “modernise its guidance products, engage earlier with taxpayers and tax agents and target its compliance activity”. 

Business operators that engage in shadow economy activities are also being put on notice that the ATO’s Shadow Economy Program will continue for another three years, from July 2023. 

The extension of the program will allow the ATO to “continue a strong and co-ordinated response to target shadow economy activity, protect revenue and level the playing field for those businesses that are following the rules”, the government said in the budget papers. 

While the budget papers don’t indicate what the extension will cost, the government is expecting it to deliver increase receipts of $2.1 billion and increase payments by $685.2 million over the next four years. This includes increased GST payments to the states and territories of $442.3 million. 

Finally, the Tax Practitioners Board (TPB) will also receive $30.4 million over four years to “increase compliance investigations into high-risk practitioners and unregistered preparers”. 

According to the budget papers, the TPB will “use new risk engines to better identify tax practitioners who engage in poor and unlawful tax advice, to improve tax compliance and raise industry standards”. 

This is expected to increase receipts to the government’s coffers by $81.9 million, and increase payments by $30.8 million over the four-year period. 

Modernising business registers program gets funding boost

With Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones foreshadowing a $1 billion blow out in the cost of the ongoing Modernising Business Registers program in the lead up to the budget, the government has increased funding to the program by $166.2 million over four years. 

Of that figure, $80 million will be allocated for the ATO and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) to continue designing and delivering the program, which will bring together more than 30 business registers in a bid to reduce red tape for small businesses. 

Another $86.2 million in funding over four years will go towards the ATO’s and ASIC’s work on the Director Identification Numbers (Director IDs) scheme and to maintain ASIC’s registry systems. 

Other tax measures in the federal budget include:

  • A plan to introduce legislation to clarify that digital currencies, including Bitcoin, will continue to be excluded from the Australian income tax treatment of foreign currency;
  • Cuts to taxes on electric vehicles (read more here);
  • Aligning the tax treatment of off-market share buy-backs undertaken by listed public companies with the treatment of on-market share buy-backs (effective 7.30pm, October 25, 2022);
  • Making select state and territory COVID-19 business payments and grants non-assessable, non-exempt for income tax purposes; and
  • The government’s previous announced measures to tackle multinational tax avoidance.

Budget 2022: ATO resources beefed up to tackle shadow economy and tax avoidance


Fusion Fraud Taskforce: Government to crack down on NDIS provider fraud amid warning scheme will soon cost $50bn annually


CPSU looks forward to Budget restoring APS capacity


In The Black Winners and Losers


Corrupt pollies

Politicians at the highest level of government who use their influence for personal gain could find themselves in the centre of a media storm following the establishment of a National Anti-Corruption Commission.

Tonight’s budget allocates $262.6 million to establish and run the commission, which has been tasked with “restoring public trust in government”. Good luck.

NACC


There are no longer four horsemen of the Apocalypse. There are five stubborn donkeys of debt and deficit, and their names are interest, aged care, health, defence and the NDIS.

The 2022-23 redo budget from Jim Chalmers and Katy Gallagher reveals clearly just how the new crew are wreaking havoc through the nation’s finances.


Beware the five donkeys of the budget apocalypse


How bad are your bills looking? Across the country, we are dealing with a cost-of-living crisis leaving many Australians worse off. Even paying for the basics such as fuel and groceries is painful. 

Fuel prices have been rising for months and months while fruit and vegetables are up 7.3 per cent with meat, seafood and dairy cost increases not far behind.  

Prices on everything are going up but our wages have failed to match those increases. The budget is one opportunity for the government to turn that trend around. 

live: Federal budget 2022 live updates: Labor unveils plan to ease housing crisis in budget spruiked as 'good for women'


Chalmers says ‘while we intend to avoid the worst of the turbulence from overseas, we cannot escape it completely’.