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Recommendation 3 |
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3.73 |
The Government introduce legislation to require: n the reporting of compliance with the Best Practice Regulation Handbook in all explanatory material accompanying a regulatory proposal n a summary of the requirements of the Best Practice Regulation Handbook in all explanatory material accompanying a regulatory proposal n the relevant minister to table an explanation with the relevant Bill or Legislative Instrument in either House of Parliament if this reporting of compliance does not occur. |
3.74 As Professor Krever noted, Parliament is ultimately responsible for the tax law, and by implication the law overall. In the view of the Committee, the individual Houses of Parliament can improve their own processes in examining legislation. When Bills are referred for committee review, the standard terms of reference are broad. That is, that the provisions of the bill are referred and any other relevant matters. Therefore, regulatory impacts often do not get considered.
3.75 Some Parliamentary review of regulatory proposals already exists, such as the Senate Standing Committee on Regulations and Ordinances. However, this tends to focus more on the status of the provisions as delegated legislation, rather than the Parliament being a gate-keeper.[48] The Committee would like to see Bills and other regulatory proposals being subject to regulatory impact analysis by the Parliament, even if in the early stages it covers more basic topics, such as the consultation process, compliance with the Best Practice Regulation Handbook and the robustness of any cost-benefit analysis.
3.76 Therefore, without limiting the right of the two chambers to set terms of reference for Bill inquiries as they determine, the Committee makes the following recommendation.
Recommendation 4 |
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3.77 |
The Senate and House of Representatives Procedure Committees examine whether to incorporate regulatory impacts as part of the standard terms of reference for bills inquiries. The Procedure Committees can consider whether to develop a checklist to assist Parliamentary Committees in assessing regulatory impacts. |
3.78 The Committee also wishes to ensure that agencies respond to regulatory assessment requirements by improving their processes at an early stage in policy and legislative development. The earlier agencies enhance their processes, the more likely they are to deliver results.
3.79 The Committee would like to confirm that agencies make these changes to their internal processes, preferably through reporting by an external scrutineer. It appears that the best agency to make such assessments would need direct access to agency records. The agency that has both expertise in relation to public sector processes and can access agency records is the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO). The ANAO may wish to consider whether this would be a suitable topic for a performance audit in future.
3.80 A large part of the tax debate has revolved around whether drafting styles can improve tax laws. In 1990, the then Government investigated whether the tax laws could be simplified through drafting alone. A joint ATO and Treasury taskforce concluded that this would not be effective without first simplifying tax policy. The Government deferred the matter.[49]
3.81 In 1993, the JCPA’s report, An Assessment of Tax, recommended redrafting the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936. This led to the Tax Law Improvement Project (TLIP), commencing in 1993, which developed a radically new way of drafting tax legislation. The Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 features plain English, diagrams, flow charts, cross references, and examples. The Taxation Administration Act 1953 also now includes some of these features.[50]
3.82 However, there have been a number of issues in relation to this rewrite. Firstly, a number of parties have argued that, where tax policy is complex, plain English legislation does not reduce this complexity. Rather, it tends to show more clearly the complexity of the tax system. [51] Sir Anthony Mason, a previous Chief Justice of the High Court, has stated, ‘plain language on its own is a passport to nowhere.’[52]
3.83 In response, Treasury argued as follows:
When you say that plain English has not helped, the Tax Law Improvement Project, which resulted in the 1997 act, I think is universally—even by the practitioners—regarded as clearer law to understand than its predecessor in the 1936 act.
When I was a law student it was often said that certain paragraphs of the 1936 act were incomprehensible. They may have been shorter in the sense that they were of fewer pages in length, but it is very difficult when you have paragraphs that go without a comma for half a page or a page.[53]
3.84 Perhaps the best way to resolve this debate is to recognise that plain language drafting is a necessary, but not sufficient step in tax law simplification. Deleting inoperative provisions made tax laws clearer but still left much work to be done. The Committee views plain language drafting the same way.
3.85 The second issue is that in 1993 the JCPA did not support a plain English rewrite. Rather, the JCPA supported a tax policy review, which would result in simpler tax policy and then be reflected in legislation. The report states:
The Committee is of the view, that any attempt to redraft the Act must necessarily look at broader, structural issues within the total taxation system. Simplification, in this context, should concentrate on achieving a tax system which is fair, equitable and economical. The objective must be to reduce the total cost of the taxation system. Consequently a redraft of the Act, while crucial, cannot be successfully achieved in the absence of a fundamental review of the administrative, political and social implications of changes in the Act.
The Committee received evidence concerning a proposal to redraft a particular Division of the Act in a plain English style. The Committee noted the merits of such an attempt but was also cognisant of the significant difficulties raised by such an exercise. In particular, evidence from the Commonwealth's First Parliamentary Counsel highlighted the difficulties of major redrafting, particularly the importance of establishing the underlying policy of the Act and the need to maintain, where necessary, precision.
Consequently, in performing a redraft, the Committee believes the fundamental assumptions underlying the Act, including the basis on which the Act is to be administered and the policy decisions inherent in the Act, should be evaluated, discussed and clarified.[54]
3.86 Earlier in the chapter, the Committee noted the high level of concern in submissions and in evidence about the complexity of tax laws. It is not surprising that the plain language rewrite of the tax laws, occurring under successive governments, has not addressed the bulk of the problem. In a comparative analysis of tax reform in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand, Margaret McKerchar from Atax stated:
In terms of drafting legislation, the experiences of the US, Australia and the UK… clearly demonstrate that improving the readability of the tax laws per se is largely ineffective or at best superficial where the underlying policies are not also reviewed. That is, complex policy, or policy where the objectives are not well articulated, impede the drafting of simple and less voluminous legislation.[55]
3.87 Sir Anthony Mason has taken the view that a number of factors are necessary for tax simplification. He argued that, in New Zealand, successful tax legislation is developed through the following:
…coherent and consistent policy formulation, transparent consultation, drafting by a drafting unit within the Policy and Advice Division of the Tax Office (not by Parliamentary Counsel or Treasury), purposive clauses and extra-statutory references, general rules to overarch more specific rules and a commitment to modern drafting techniques and to plain language.[56]
3.88 The Committee accepts that principles-based (or purposive) drafting will have a role to play in simplifying tax laws. However, a number of factors are also required. Perhaps the most important of these is consultation on tax policy.
3.89 In An Assessment of Tax, the JCPA expressed a strong desire that any legislative rewrite should be done in a spirit of consensus:
During the Inquiry the Committee noted proposals for the establishment of a specialist committee to oversee a redraft of the Act. The Committee considered such a committee to be too limited given the fundamental significance of the proposal for a redraft. The Committee has concluded that a broadly based task force drawing upon a wide cross-section of skills, experience and the professions, would represent a suitable vehicle for the performance of this significant duty…
Such a rewrite however, would only be possible with the absolute commitment of all political parties, the bureaucracy, the taxation industry, business and taxpayers generally.[57]
3.90 The current Committee agrees with these sentiments. The best way for government to develop a consensus is to engage with stakeholders and the community. In other words, governments should consult on tax proposals.
3.91 In 2002, the Board of Taxation finalised a report on consultation, which included some recommended principles. These included government:
n committing to consult on developing all substantive tax legislation, unless exceptional circumstances apply
n obtaining early external input in identifying and assessing overall policy and implementation options (before publicly announcing the policy)
n obtaining input from external stakeholders in developing policy and legislative detail
n clearly articulating the policy intent of each new measure at the initial announcement
n releasing a consultation plan for each new tax measure.[58]
3.92 In the Rethinking Regulation report, the Taskforce noted that the previous Government adopted the Board’s recommendations and this had led to significant improvements in consultation. However, the Taskforce also noted that more needed to be done:
Nevertheless, based on industry feedback, the Taskforce believes that there is scope to further improve the tax consultation process and to apply more rigorously the Board of Taxation’s recommendations.
For example, business has advised that some tax legislation is still being introduced into Parliament with little effective consultation. Any amendments subsequently required can be costly for business to implement and costly for government in terms of the resource-intensive parliamentary processes.
Other amendments are often made ‘just in time’, which creates difficulties for businesses developing information technology systems and for business planning and advice.[59]
3.93 Consistent with the Taskforce’s findings, the Committee received mixed reports on how Treasury was consulting on new tax measures. The National Institute of Accountants wished to, ‘publicly acknowledge the good work the Treasury is doing.’[60] CPA Australia stated in evidence:
With some exceptions we have written to the board of tax on separately as part of their review of consultation, generally speaking we have quite a healthy consultative environment on a suite of things…[61]
3.94 The Taxation Institute of Australia and ICAA put a different view. In particular, they were concerned that the Government’s announcements were too detailed at an early stage. They argued that the Government’s initial statement should be more general and that consultation should be used to fill in the policy details. The ICAA stated in evidence:
One of the problems is maybe even a bit earlier in the piece. We do not get consulted at the pre-policy setting stage, so by the time we get involved the policy has already been set… I think that probably the most important one is that pre-policy setting stage, because once the policy is set your hands are a bit tied. For example, one of the things that were introduced last year … was the loss recoupment measure and the introduction of a $100 million ceiling on whether you can pass the same business test. We do not believe that that measure was properly thought through. The policy behind it is not clear. A review was then ordered of how they can improve the same business test. As I say, sometimes you almost need to go a couple of steps back to the policy setting stage to make sure that what follows is appropriate.[62]
3.95 The Taxation Institute agreed:
At an earlier stage ministers often come out and make a statement about a change to the tax law and then give a whole lot of detail in relation to it, rather than saying, ‘Hang on. The principle or the response to a problem that we are trying to achieve is X. Let us then announce that and go away.’[63]
3.96 The Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry also supported improved consultation.[64]
3.97 Another practice the Committee noted during the inquiry was confidential negotiations between professional associations and Treasury. This occurred in relation to the new legislation regulating tax agents. The Committee understands that Treasury has been conducting confidential negotiations with these groups for two years.[65] Confidential consultations can only represent the views of the individuals that work for the associations and not the views of the members that the associations are meant to represent.
3.98 In evidence, Treasury argued that the particular nature of tax laws means there cannot always be as much consultation as some stakeholders may wish for. In particular:
Consultation cannot be mandated for every change to the tax system, particularly in cases where there is commercial or market sensitivity, or revenue risk due to tax avoidance. Also, the flexibility government requires in managing the timing of policy change will at times determine the extent and form of consultation that can be undertaken.[66]
3.99 The Committee is concerned that this view might remove an important discipline on Treasury and the Government when developing tax legislation. One of the by-products of consultation is that Treasury is obliged to defend the Government’s proposals. The Committee would much prefer this occurred before a Bill enters Parliament. Addressing errors and making adjustments is much easier to achieve during initial development, rather than after a proposal becomes law.
3.100 During the inquiry, the Board of Taxation released a further report on consultation, Improving Australia’s Tax Consultation System. This report originated in recommendation 7.1 in the Report of Aspects of Income Tax Assessment (RoSA). The recommendation was that the Board, in conjunction with Treasury, review international practices with a view to suggesting improvements to the Australian system.[67]
3.101 The Board’s 2007 report is different to the 2002 report because it represents an agreed position between Treasury and the Board. The 2002 report stated the Board’s views alone. The new report places less emphasis on consultation before announcing the policy intent. The 2002 report stated that government should consult generally unless there are compelling reasons not to do so and that one component of this would be to consult before announcing the policy intent. In contrast, the 2007 report states that government should consult on the detail of tax policy unless there are compelling reasons not to do so. It then adds that government should ‘consider whether consultation may be appropriate’ prior to announcing the policy intent.[68] In light of the evidence to the inquiry, the Committee prefers the Board’s 2002 report on this issue.
3.102 The 2007 report gives some data on confidential consultations. Given the inherently public nature of the tax system, the Committee expects a significant level of public consultation to occur on tax measures. However, of the 58 measures legislated in 2005 on which consultation took place, the Board of Taxation reports there was:
n targeted confidential consultation for 33 measures
n a combination of both open public consultation and targeted confidential consultation or targeted public consultation for 18 measures
n targeted public consultation for five measures
n open public consultation for two measures.[69]
3.103 In other words, 57% of tax consultations in Australia are confidential. The Committee regards this figure as too high. The report itself makes a cogent argument for reducing the number of confidential consultations:
In recent years a significant proportion of consultations have been conducted as targeted confidential consultations, as distinct from public consultations. While this is appropriate in some cases, there are substantial advantages in public consultations wherever possible. Public consultation ensures that everyone in the community has the maximum opportunity to provide information for government consideration. This potentially improves the quality of the information available to government.[70]
3.104 The Committee agrees with these sentiments. The recommendation in the 2007 report, that consultations be public ‘wherever appropriate,’ is not sufficient.[71] Treasury and the Government need to take positive steps to conduct tax consultations in public more regularly.
3.105 The Government is aware of these concerns. On 8 February 2008, it announced the appointment of a tax design review panel to investigate these issues, in particular:
n reducing the delay between policy announcement and introducing legislation
n increasing consultation, in particular during the earlier policy development phase
n increasing consultation in prioritising changes.[72]
3.106 The panel is chaired by Mr Neil Wilson of PriceWaterhouseCoopers. It was scheduled to report to government on 30 April 2008.
3.107 This Committee also has its own views of the consultation process for tax laws from the perspective of its members’ roles as Senators and MPs. Parliamentarians, including ministers, are not professionally trained in tax law and need help in assessing these laws. Therefore, in addition to devices like Explanatory Memoranda and Bills Digests, the Parliament's committee review system is very important in exposing potential problems with proposed law. However, it appears to the Committee that once Cabinet approves tax proposals, governments expect they will be implemented by all parties, without Parliamentary change. Indeed, much tax law is rushed or waved through. The Committee believes that a more considered and measured approach in Parliament is necessary, including the use of exposure drafts where appropriate.
3.108 In order to improve the consultation process throughout the full development phase of tax laws, and to increase the longevity and stability of legislation, the Committee makes the following recommendation.
Recommendation 5 |
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3.109 |
The Government and Treasury improve consultation on tax measures by: n increasing the number of public consultations compared with confidential consultations n increasing the number of consultations conducted prior to the announcement of the policy intent n increasing the use of exposure drafts of legislation, where practicable. |
3.110 On 11 May 2008, the Government announced a wide ranging review into the tax system. It will be chaired by the Secretary to the Treasury, Dr Ken Henry and other external members. The terms of reference for the review cover topics relevant to this inquiry, in particular ‘simplifying the tax system’ (3.5) and ‘reducing tax system complexity and compliance costs’ (4.4).[73]
3.111 In An Assessment of Tax, the JCPA argued that a wide-ranging debate on tax policy fundamentals was a necessary foundation to addressing tax complexity.[74] Australia’s Future Tax System has the potential to provide this sort of debate and give effect to the JCPA’s recommendations from 15 years ago.
3.112 During the inquiry, a number of topics were raised which had a bearing on tax complexity and administration but were not directly within the terms of reference. Given that the Committee received limited evidence on them, the best way forward would be further consultation. The new review is an ideal vehicle for this.
3.113 As Professor Krever has noted, much tax legislation has established differing tax consequences based on legal distinctions. Tax lawyers and accountants have often been able to change the legal form of transactions to generate a tax benefit. Professor Krever argues that insufficient policy development leads to a reliance on legal forms over economic substance, which leads to avoidance opportunities.[75] On the other hand, Treasury has stated that commercially sensitive and avoidance measures should not be subject to public consultation.[76] It appears that, in some cases at least, Treasury is concerned that an earlier release of a policy may facilitate avoidance opportunities.
3.114 In the view of the Committee, a more robust policy underlying a tax proposal is less likely to present such avoidance opportunities. In other words, Treasury in the past may have been seeking to protect the revenue from insufficiently developed policy.
3.115 The Committee notes that Treasury has recognised the problems caused by basing the tax law on legal forms rather than economic effect.[77] Further, the previous Government made a concerted effort to introduce this type of reform through the tax value method after the Ralph Review. Professor Krever notes that the drawbacks of the tax value method were that some of its internal definitions were not consistent, it retained all existing concessions, and the scale of change was too large to be achieved in a single round of reform.[78]
3.116 The reduction in compliance costs from successfully introducing this type of reform will be billions of dollars annually. Given these potential benefits, the Committee is of the view that it should be canvassed in the discussion paper. If all parties draw on the experience of the tax value method, then the chances of successful reform on this occasion will be increased.
Recommendation 6 |
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3.117 |
In the discussion paper for the review, Australia’s Future Tax System, Treasury and the review panel include the topic of basing the tax system on financial relationships and economic outcomes, ahead of legal forms. |
3.118 In Australia, almost 100% of individual taxpayers lodge tax returns. This is high by international standards. For example, in the United Kingdom, the rate is 37%. In New Zealand it is 31%.[79] In approximately half of OECD countries, the vast majority of taxpayers are not required to lodge returns.[80]
3.119 Because lodging tax returns occurs across the economy, reducing the number of taxpayers who do this is likely to generate large reductions in compliance costs. There is scope for Australia’s Future Tax System, to inform and stimulate debate on reducing the number of taxpayers who need to lodge tax returns.
3.120 The OECD reports that a number of revenue bodies are assisting taxpayers by pre-populating tax returns so that much of the information is already filled in.[81] The ATO has also commenced this practice. The tax system is not necessarily simpler, but it masks complexity from the taxpayer’s perspective. Although it is addressing the symptoms of complexity, rather than the causes, this is the most the ATO can do as the implementer of tax legislation.
3.121 In order to remove the need for taxpayers to lodge returns, the key requirement is that there should be no end of year ‘squaring-up.’ In other words, the amounts withheld throughout the year should equal the amount that the revenue authority would issue as a tax assessment following the lodgement of a return.
3.122 Professor Chris Evans at Atax has listed the four main requirements to achieve this result:
n a simple rate structure, such as a low number of tax rates
n a comprehensive and accurate withholding regime
n no work-related deductions or, as the OECD, the Australian Financial Review and others have suggested, a standard amount for this[82]
n a limited interaction between the tax and social security systems.[83]
3.123 The Committee received a number of submissions that supported reducing the number of taxpayers who needed to lodge returns.[84] In evidence, Taxpayers Australia and the National Institute of Accountants gave in principle support to reducing the requirement to lodge.[85] In the past, CPA Australia has also supported this view.[86]
3.124 The first of the four requirements is an extension of what traditionally occurs at most Budgets, namely an adjustment of income tax rates. Professor Evans at Atax has conducted research that demonstrates it is possible to generate community support for these changes by setting the rates at the appropriate level and having a low income tax offset.[87] Adjusting rates will also be relevant to the workforce participation goals of Australia ’s Future Tax System.[88] For example, the Committee for Economic Development of Australia (CEDA) has commissioned research showing that increasing the tax free threshold raises workforce participation across the economy.[89]
3.125 Changing the withholding regime is administrative in nature. Simplifying tax rates (while maintaining a progressive system) and improving the withholding regime appear to be matters of implementation.
3.126 The remaining two requirements, however, have more difficulties. For example, work-related deductions are very popular because taxpayers see them as delivering a sizeable tax refund each year. In 2000, the ATO commissioned research on this topic. The researchers concluded:
Refunds are what the personal tax system is all about for most taxpayers. Maximizing one’s deductions is the only thing that makes the system ‘work’ for ordinary PAYEs because this is the only way to maximize their refund. Certainly, a personal income tax system without refunds would be unpopular. Individual taxpayers are keen to preserve access to refunds because it helps them to preserve a sense of control and a feeling that they have at least a chance to get their ‘fair share back’ in the form of a refund.[90]
3.127 This view was confirmed in evidence. Taxpayers Australia stated:
Studies have been done. As far as taking that away from the public is concerned, I think you will get a lot of objections, because it brings closure to the year. They find out how much tax they have actually paid and there is the opportunity to claim work deductions.[91]
3.128 On the other hand, there is a number of significant, valid reasons to discontinue them. Firstly, it will reduce compliance costs through fewer taxpayers lodging returns.
3.129 Secondly, they present a risk to the revenue in the longer term. These deductions have been growing faster than incomes for a considerable period.[92] For example, taxpayers now claim over $10 billion in work related deductions annually. Recent annual increases have been of the order of 9%.[93] If unabated, governments may need to change the rules to support the integrity of the tax system.
3.130 Thirdly, they are the largest deduction claim for individuals and cost the ATO significant resources in the compliance work needed to monitor them.[94]
3.131 Finally, if any such measure is revenue neutral, taxpayers will be better off because they will have a wider choice of items on which to spend the extra amounts of after tax income, rather than being limited to work expenses. Although there is community support for work-related deductions at present, the advantages of removing them should be debated. Australia’s Future Tax System, is an ideal place to do this.
3.132 The final requirement to reduce the number of taxpayers who lodge tax returns is to limit the interactions between the tax system and government benefits, including social support payments. In Australia, the interactions happen in two ways. Firstly, family tax benefits and other similar payments use the tax system to check each recipient’s income estimate so that the Government may apply a means test. The Committee received evidence from Taxpayers Australia that this income test pulls a large number of low income people into the tax system:
One problem that I see is that the interaction between Centrelink and the tax system complicates everything. People are required to lodge returns because of their Centrelink benefits yet they are well below the tax threshold.[95]
Every time that we get something like a childcare tax offset it increases the complexity of returns and it means that those people under $20,000 are firmly entrenched, because the only way that they can recover it is to lodge a tax return.[96]
3.133 The other way in which government payments complicate the tax system is through tax offsets and credits. In 2005-06, these amounted to $16 billion for individual taxpayers, out of total net tax payable for this group of $108.7 billion.[97] Examples of the policy areas are private health insurance, seniors, low income, spouses, and medical expenses. Non-personal taxpayers are also entitled to tax offsets and credits. One example is the research and development tax offset.
3.134 Professor Evans has stated that Australia has a large number of tax offsets and credits, particularly in comparison with New Zealand, which has low rates of mandatory lodgement of tax returns:
… modern tax systems are often used, not merely as the revenue collecting vehicles for which they were primarily designed, but also as agencies for the achievement of the social and political goals for which they were not designed. This inevitably causes greater complexity than would otherwise be the case. New Zealand has not escaped this ‘modern’ trend, but it is less prevalent than is the case with Australia … there is less evidence of the tax offsets, rebates and all manner of other tax expenditures designed to deliver political or social advantage to particular groups that characterise the Australian tax system.[98]
3.135 In its submission, CPA Australia noted the complexity these arrangements impose on taxpayers. It suggested that the Government review its strategy of using the tax system as a delivery vehicle for these payments and benefits.[99]
3.136 In its Rethinking Regulation report, the Regulation Taskforce listed a number of design principles for tax legislation. One of these was that direct expenditure, rather than adjusting tax rates, should be used to achieve policy objectives. The Taskforce explained its reasoning as follows:
Tax is a relatively blunt instrument and is often less efficient in achieving equity objectives than direct expenditures and grants. For example, individual taxable income can be a crude method of identifying taxpayer need, as there are many low-income taxpayers in high-income households. On the other hand, the social security system and payment of grants can use broader eligibility criteria than taxable income, such as family income and assets, to better target those in need.
The tax system is only likely to be preferable when seeking to achieve relatively broad equity outcomes (for example, the use of progressive marginal income tax rates).[100]
3.137 The Committee supports these arguments. Another reason put forward for these changes is that most of these benefits are effectively payments. If they are payments, they should be paid under an appropriation Act. The Committee accepts that there are transparency measures in place for revenue measures such as the budget papers and the ATO’s taxation statistics. Revenue measures also usually have a legislative base. However, if an arrangement is essentially a payment made under certain circumstances, then it may be preferable for it to be managed as a special appropriation.
3.138 The final reason why the Committee supports extracting benefits and offsets from the tax system is that, for many of these items, Centrelink already has this role. Using the tax system to deliver them raises questions of duplication.
3.139 The Committee accepts that there are a number of reasons why governments have used the tax system to deliver these benefits and offsets. Firstly, the ATO holds reasonably accurate information about taxpayers’ incomes. It is administratively efficient to use this information when verifying income amounts for applying a means test. Further, the Government can administer many different benefits and offsets from one location. In other words, the ATO has become a ‘one stop shop’ for government benefits.
3.140 The price of these efficiencies, however, has been to shift considerable costs on to tax agents. The Committee is concerned that governments have taken these decisions with reference only to their own costs and benefits, without considering the impact on tax agents. The Committee reiterates the earlier point that successive governments and parliaments have not taken responsibility for the tax system overall. Rather, they have made decisions on what best suits them and allowed the compliance burden in the community to grow. The profession of tax agent has become less attractive and is attracting fewer entrants. Australia’s Future Tax System needs to take these issues into account.
3.141 A matter incidental to reducing the number of taxpayers who need to lodge returns is the future of the tax agent industry. During the inquiry, the National Institute of Accountants supported reducing the number of taxpayers required to lodge returns. However, the Institute also suggested that, if this occurred, there should be a structural adjustment package to compensate tax agents for the reduced business.[101]
3.142 The Committee recognises this argument. Successive governments have created the tax agent industry by making their services tax deductible and creating a tax system that requires them. The other view is that tax agents would be well placed to adapt to such a change due to their education and commercial experience.
3.143 On balance, any such structural adjustment would depend on how demand changes for tax agent services, and this depends on how many taxpayers are no longer required to lodge returns. At this stage, it would be sufficient for Australia’s Future Tax System to recognise this issue.
Recommendation 7 |
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3.144 |
In the discussion paper for the review, Australia’s Future Tax System, Treasury and the review panel include the topic of reducing the number of taxpayers who need to lodge a return, and simplifying the experience for those who need to lodge, in particular: n the costs and benefits of making work related expenses deductible n whether tax offsets, rebates and benefits should be delivered as direct payments, rather than tax measures n examining the number of tax rates and the tax free threshold n improving the coverage and accuracy of the withholding system n whether, if large numbers of taxpayers were no longer required to lodge returns, it would be appropriate to provide structural adjustment assistance to tax agents. |
3.145 In evidence, the Taxation Institute of Australia advised the Committee of the different rationales behind the Australian and New Zealand fringe benefits tax systems. In New Zealand, the tax is aimed at the areas likely to generate the most revenue. These include motor vehicles, low interest loans, free or subsidised goods and services, and employer contributions to sickness funds, insurance and superannuation schemes. The Australian approach is to have a global tax and then to make a number of exemptions or ‘carve-outs’ from this. In practice, the Australian approach is more complicated and imposes more compliance costs.[102]
3.146 A similar outcome occurred with the GST. Australia based its legislation on the New Zealand model but included a much greater number of exceptions. In 2001, the relevant New Zealand legislation totalled 200 pages, but its Australian equivalent ran to 800. This increased volume of legislation increased complexity.[103]
3.147 Data on compliance costs suggests that New Zealand has more success than Australia in managing tax complexity. In an OECD comparison of tax systems, the New Zealand authorities overall spent $0.81 to collect $100 of revenue. In Australia, the cost was $1.05.[104] PricewaterhouseCoopers and the World Bank published some compliance indices for national tax systems (a lower score indicating reduced compliance costs). It gave Australia an index of 107 and New Zealand an index of 70 for hours per year compliance time. New Zealand performed significantly better in relation to GST and company tax.[105]
3.148 The Committee believes that there are a number of benefits to examining whether to harmonise aspects of Australia’s tax system with New Zealand’s. Firstly, there is the potential to reduce compliance costs. Secondly, it will help foster trade between the two countries. Thirdly, it may encourage the development of uniform business taxes in the South Pacific more generally. Although the GST has been excluded from Australia’s Future Tax System, other taxes could be harmonised with New Zealand’s. These points should be raised in the review’s discussion paper.
Recommendation 8 |
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3.149 |
The discussion paper for the review, Australia’s Future Tax System, consider the benefits of harmonising with New Zealand’s tax system, even if just for particular taxes like fringe benefits tax, or for particular classes of tax. |
3.150 At the very minimum, it should be possible for the Australian and New Zealand Governments to arrange for their Treasuries and tax authorities to exchange staff so that both countries may benefit from each others’ experiences in tax law and administration.
3.151 Among developed economies, Australia’s tax system is one of the most complex. This has occurred because each set of interest groups have approached the tax system from their own particular perspective, instead of viewing it as a way of efficiently collecting revenue. Tax advisors have sought to minimise their clients’ liabilities and the judiciary have applied established legal definitions from other parts of the law to it. Parliaments have sought to implement spending programs through the tax system and introduced stop-gap approaches as remedial measures.
3.152 While political expediency affects policy decisions, a global perspective would have been more appropriate. The need to take a global view is why many tasks are placed with the public sector. The ATO has responsibility for tax measures that operate in a similar way to the social spending programs that Centrelink is specifically designed to administer. This raises questions of duplication and inefficiency. It has also transferred much of the compliance work to tax agents and taxpayers.
3.153 Another problem with this approach is that Australia has a system of self assessment. Taxpayers accept a certain amount of risk that the ATO may amend their assessments and apply interest and penalties at a later point. A complex system increases the chance of taxpayer error and increases taxpayer risk. The tax system’s complexity undermines its own integrity.
3.154 In An Assessment of Tax, the JCPA recommended a wide ranging tax review to develop widely agreed policies on tax, which would then form the foundation for tax simplification. Without articulating clear policies, tax simplification is very difficult. The Government’s review, Australia’s Future Tax System, could be the type of review that the JCPA called for in 1993. It could be the most important development in tax simplification.
3.155 Regardless of the outcome of Australia’s Future Tax System, the tax system will be subject to change in the years ahead. Therefore, the Committee has made a number of recommendations to improve the development of tax policy and legislation. Again following An Assessment of Tax, perhaps the most important of these is to improve consultations on specific measures. This includes government consulting before the announcement of the policy intent and increasing the proportion of consultations that are conducted publicly. These changes should help reduce the amount of stop gap measures and help stop the vicious circle of amendment and taxpayer reaction.