Friday, August 19, 2022

Forum on Tax Administration: Will the government make ANAO a parliamentary department?

Blog and play hard in silence.  Let your success make the noise.



15th Plenary meeting of the Forum on Tax Administration

Sydney skyline

Date: 28-30 September 2022

Location: Sydney, Australia

About:

The 15th Plenary meeting of the Forum on Tax Administration will be held in Sydney, Australia on 28-30 September 2022. Participation is by invitation only. More information on the event will be made available on this page in due course.

Watch: Bob Hamilton and Chris Jordan

View the welcome message from Bob Hamilton, FTA Chair and Chris Jordan, FTA Vice-Chair and host of the FTA Plenary 2022.



Will the government make ANAO a parliamentary department?








The Sanctification of up George Soros James Kirchuk, The Tablet. “In case you couldn’t tell”?


Meta injecting code into websites to track its users, research says

UK Guardian – “Meta, the owner of Facebook and Instagram, has been rewriting websites its users visit, letting the company follow them across the web after they click links in its apps, according to new research from an ex-Google engineer. The two apps have been taking advantage of the fact that users who click on links are taken to webpages in an “in-app browser”, controlled by Facebook or Instagram, rather than sent to the user’s web browser of choice, such as Safari or Firefox. “The Instagram app injects their tracking code into every website shown, including when clicking on ads, enabling them [to] monitor all user interactions, like every button and link tapped, text selections, screenshots, as well as any form inputs, like passwords, addresses and credit card numbers,” says Felix Krause, a privacy researcher who founded an app development tool acquired by Google in 2017. In a statement, Meta said that injecting a tracking code obeyed users’ preferences on whether or not they allowed apps to follow them, and that it was only used to aggregate data before being applied for targeted advertising or measurement purposes for those users who opted out of such tracking…” 



It’s curious how many reports from parliamentary committees have quietly been lobbed on public record while the world has been distracted by the pomp and ceremony and the new characters that have entered the federal parliament.

One of the reports, tabled on 27 July 2022, that has not seen much attention was finalised by the Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit. If acted upon, it would make the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) more independent and enable it to initiate annual performance audits of Government Business Enterprises and audits of annual performance statements without having to go cap in hand each time to the parliamentary committee for approval.



The ATO has today released its 2022-23 corporate plan to highlight its key focus areas and priorities over the next financial year. 

Included in the key focus areas are an improvement to small business tax performance, better management of cybersecurity, the delivery of innovative business registry services and an expansion to the use of Single Touch Payroll data.

In the Commissioner’s forward, Chris Jordan said the ATO has played an integral role in supporting the community through a challenging period over the past few years.

“We delivered vital stimulus to millions during the pandemic and proved we are much more than a revenue collection agency,” Jordan said.

ATO: Small business tax, cybersecurity and single-touch payroll top priorities for 2022-23


ATO needs to improve staff capability, says audit office 

REGULATION

Key concerns identified in mainly favourable performance review of tax agent engagement by the office



It is “critical” for small businesses to protect their payments with Australia’s new eInvoicing protocol, Minister for Financial Services and Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones says, after invoice fraudsters helped national scam losses grow to $2 billion last year.

“Think of it as insurance”: As business scams mount, Financial Services Minister Stephen Jones says it’s time to adopt eInvoicing


The ATO corporate plan 2022–23 includes 7 key focus areas that are strategically important this year, and a further 19 core priorities that are critical to our vision of being a leading tax, superannuation and registry administration. This will help us achieve our purpose of contributing to the economic and social wellbeing of Australians in the year ahead.

Read the ATO corporate plan 2022–23. You can also download the Portable Document Format version ATO corporate plan 2022–23 (PDF, 730KB