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Payday super part 2: not quite ‘all systems go’
Privacy Compliance Sweep 2026: Is Your Business Ready?
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8 tips to improve your online sales
ATO cracking down on tax dodgers trying to leave the country
Digital Assets You Forgot You Own (and Why They Still Matter at Tax Time)
‘Not insurmountable’: What accountants need to know ahead of Payday Super
Heading overseas? Centrelink and the ATO might need to know
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Which country produces the most electricity annually?
Restructuring Family Businesses: From Partnership to Limited Company
Choose the right business structure step-by-step guide
ATO’s holiday home owner tax changes spur taxpayers to be ‘wary and proactive’
Payday Super part 1: understanding the new law
A refresher on Medicare levy and Medicare levy surcharge.
Protecting yourself from misinformation
Super gender gap slowly narrows
Countries with the largest collection or eucalyptus trees
Benchmarks for small business
Right to Disconnect
There’s $18.9 billion in lost and unclaimed super - some may belong to you
Small businesses remain optimistic despite high stress, report reveals
Tax and your child’s money: what parents need to know including TFNs
How to declare minor children’s income
Net cash flow tax: What is it and what will it mean for SMEs?
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Articles
When to put tax schemes to the test
Scrutiny on Takings
Benchmarking and Australian Taxation Office (ATO) Aggressive Approach
SMSF Member Verification System Made Easier
Federal Budget 2011-12.    At a Glance
Federal Budget 2011-12.   Overview
Outstanding Tax returns - Some Years?
Tax advice privilege for Accountants a possibility
Egg on Face? - Benchmark by Australian Taxation Office (ATO) Withdrawn
Benchmarking and Australian Taxation Office (ATO) Aggressive Approach

The ATO have conducted aggressive action against many small businesses.


Over 100,000 letters have been sent to taxpayers whose profitability does not meet ATO industry benchmarks.  The presumption is if gross profit is less than others in the industry, then that will be as a result of cash income that has not been disclosed.

The only apparent defence is demonstrably good records.  It would not seem to matter whether you are different to others in your designated industry and if the business is struggling for profitability and therefore its administrative effort is not as good as another, it could pay a double penalty.  The ATO can determine the likely assessable income and issue an amended assessment.

There are already some very angry and very disillusioned taxpayers who feel aggrieved that they have been arbitrarily penalised.  It will be some years before the courts make decisions on the legalities of the ATO approach, but neither the courts or the government are likely to have too much sympathy for a struggling business.

It is a relatively easy exercise for the Tax Office to accept the declared purchases and in turn the cost of sales and thereafter predict a normal turnover.  A fundamental flaw in this philosophy is that is impossible for everybody to be the average, but those are below will be targeted.

Profitability varies for a vast number of reasons between businesses and year by year.  Reviewing your classification and then examining your own benchmark, is an important first step.

Demonstrably good records are highly subjective terms, which will be difficult for a junior tax office auditor who has never know the tough world of small business, to even begin to understand.  Businesses that deal in cash are going to be subject to some very difficult times.

Has the presumption of innocent has been abandoned?  Future relationships with the Tax Office may be quite confrontational!

 



7th-June-2011