ATO Practice Statement Law Administration
PS LA 2006/11
SUBJECT: | ATO Receivables Policy |
---|---|
PURPOSE: | To outline the administrative policy of the Tax Office relating to payment and lodgment obligations of taxpayers and the payment of refunds and interest |
This version is no longer current. Please follow this link to view the current version. |
-
Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 2006/11 was withdrawn on 28 August 2008 and has been replaced by PS LA 2008/13.This document has changed over time. View its history.
FOI status: may be released
This practice statement is issued under the authority of the Commissioner and must be read in conjunction with Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 1998/1. It must be followed by Tax office staff unless doing so creates unintended consequences or where it is considered incorrect. Where this occurs Tax office staff must follow their business line's escalation process. |
BACKGROUND
1. The ATO Receivables Policy was first published as the Policy for Collection of Taxation Debts and was subsequently revised and republished, both externally and internally, as the ATO Receivables Policy in December 2000. Version 1 incorporated changes resulting from the introduction of the new tax system. It outlined the law and Tax Office administrative policy as at 1 July 2000. The Commissioner released version 2 in 2001 and version 3 in 2003. This current version (version 4) is issued as a Practice Statement and reflects changes in legislation, case law and Tax Office administrative policy.
STATEMENT
2. The ATO Receivables Policy (the Policy) contains the administrative policy of the Tax Office relating to the obligations imposed on taxpayers by the various taxation laws in respect of the:
- •
- lodgment of returns and other documents, and
- •
- payment of liabilities,
as well as guidelines for the remission of penalties and interest charges arising from a breach of those obligations.
It also includes chapters relating to the payment of interest and refunds by the Commissioner.
3. Tax officers must follow the administrative policies outlined in this Policy. In relation to the exercise of the Commissioner's various discretions under the relevant taxation laws, it is not possible to set out all the circumstances in which the discretion may or may not be exercised. Cases that appear similar in nature may have different outcomes based upon their particular facts. Each case has to be considered on its merits and on the basis of all the relevant facts. Tax officers must take care not to consider irrelevant considerations, and must exercise their own judgment in arriving at an appropriate decision. The decision should be made in good faith and without bias.
4. All proposed changes to this Policy should be sent by email to Policy and Practice in Operations at the following address:
OPSP&NMATOReceivablesPolicy@ato.gov.au
Currency of the Policy
5. The online version of this Policy is the only current version. Tax officers must check the online version for updates when making a decision to which the Policy relates.
6. Tax officers who require previous versions of the Policy should contact Operations Policy and Practice at the email address provided in paragraph 4 of this Law Administration Practice Statement.
7. Where there is any reason to doubt the currency, correctness or applicability of the information contained in this Policy, the matter must be escalated for review (together with documented reasons) in accordance with the escalation process of the relevant business line.
EXPLANATION
8. Complying with taxation obligations is an important community responsibility. Taxpayers are expected to lodge correct returns and statements by the due date and to pay their taxation debts as and when they fall due for payment.
9. Where taxpayers fail to meet their taxation obligations the Tax Office will differentiate in its treatment of taxpayers according to their individual circumstances and the reasons for their non-compliance.
10. In providing policies relating to the exercise of the Commissioner's various discretions, there is no intention to restrict Deputy Commissioners and authorised officers in the exercise of those discretions - it is essential that they retain the flexibility necessary to deal with each case on its merits. However, this Policy provides guidance as to the manner in which the discretions might generally be exercised, and aims to promote consistency and fairness in decision making.
11. The subject matter of each of the chapters which form part of this ATO Receivables Policy Practice Statement, and the hyperlinks to each chapter are provided below. The index (Chapter 123) is provided to expedite research on specific issues.
Part A INTRODUCTION
- 1. Principles underlying the Receivables Policy of the ATO 2. Accountability and review of decisions 3. Risk management
Part B THE COLLECTION OF TAXATION DEBTS
- 4. Introduction to Part B - the collection of taxation debts 5. Taxation debts and the due date for payment 6. Estimating a liability 7. Allocation of payments or credits 8. The collection process 9. Deferring the time for payment 10. Arrangements to pay tax-related liabilities by instalments 11. Payment agreements 12. 'Garnishee' notices 13. Departure prohibition orders 14. Personal liabilities of company directors 15. Writs/warrants of execution 16. Bankruptcy Act - Part X arrangements 17. Bankruptcy Act - Part IX debt agreements 18. Bankruptcy action - conditions and factors to consider 19. Bankruptcy Act - Division 6 of Part IV (an earlier end to Bankruptcy) 20. Corporations Act 2001 - Part 5.3A Arrangements (Voluntary Administration) 21. Liquidation action - conditions and factors to consider 22. Voidable transactions 23. Referral for prosecution action - debt recovery 24. Release from payment of some taxation liabilities 25. Waiver of taxation debts 26. Deciding not to pursue recovery of taxation debts 27. Compromise of taxation debts 28. Recovering disputed debts 29. Securities 30. Indemnities for trustees and liquidators 31. Clearances - obligations of trustees and the Commissioner 32. Deceased estates 33. Running balance accounts 34. Collection of GST - special rules 35. Collection of consolidated group liabilities 36. Mareva injunctions
Part C LODGMENT OF DOCUMENTS AND NOTIFICATION OF LIABILITIES
- 51. Introduction to Part C - lodgment of documents 52. Lodgment requirements for approved forms 53. The role of intermediaries 54. Due date for lodgment of an approved form 55. Deferral of the due date for lodgment and suspension of lodgment action 56. Actioning non-lodgment 57. Issuing a default assessment, making estimates and bringing tax related liabilities to account 70. Referral for prosecution action - lodgment of documents
Part D REFUNDS AND CREDITS
- 71. Introduction to Part D - refunds and credits 72. Offsetting of refunds and credits against taxation and other debts 73. Refunds of amounts withheld in error 74. Withholding of refunds - financial institution accounts details not provided 75. Retained refunds - activity statements or related information not provided and other restrictions on refunds
Part E INTEREST PAYABLE BY THE COMMISSIONER
- 81. Introduction to Part E - interest payable by the Commissioner 82. Interest on early payments 83. Interest on overpayments 84. Delayed refund interest
Part F PENALTIES AND INTEREST RELATING TO RECEIVABLES ACTIVITIES
- 91. Introduction to Part F - penalties relating to receivables activities 92. Additional charges for late payment 93. General interest charge 95. Variation and underestimation penalties 96. Failure to notify penalty 97. Late reconciliation statement penalty 98. Lodgment penalty 99. Electronic notification and payment penalty 100. PAYG withholding non-registration penalty
Part G MISCELLANEOUS
- 111. Information gathering (including tracing a Taxpayer) 122. Update of ATO Receivables Policy
Part H ATO RECEIVABLES POLICY INDEX
- 123. Index A-L Index M-Z
Date of Issue: 6 September 2006
Date of Effect: 4 July 2006
File 06/14059
Subject References:
ATO Policy
Policy
GIC
penalties
approved forms
remission of penalties
bankruptcy
payment agreements
Mareva
securities
tax debts
interest on early payments
interest on overpayments
compromise
debt
accounting
lodgment
imposition of penalties
ATO receivables policy
Legislative References:
Refer to each chapter for relevant legislative references.
Case References:
Refer to each chapter for relevant case references
Margaret Crawford
Amendment history |
5 November 2007
Paragraph 4: Update email address Update contact details
6 August 2008
|
Other Business Lines consulted: | Excise, Superannuation, Lodgment Compliance, GST, Small Business, Personal Tax, OCTC |
Date: | Version: | |
You are here | 4 July 2006 | Original statement |
28 August 2008 | Archived |