News & Tax Insights

Our View – public service waste

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There has been a huge blowout in the wages bill for Australian Governments over the past four years.   We have checked the statistics provided by the Australian Bureau of Statistics. They say that the total cash wages for Government employees in the 2010/11 financial year was around $123 billion. In 2007/08, the wages bill was around $100 billion. Government wages increased by 5.6% pa in that four year period.   In the same timeframe, the number of Government employees increased from 1.75 million to 1.9 million an increase of 2.1% per year.   This large growth in the Government…

Data matching programs

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The Tax Office will exercise its data collection powers to chase up lawyers, visa holders, boat owners, motor vehicle registration holders, credit card holders and other taxpayers. Databases held by other Government departments, banks and insurance companies will be accessed and matched to the Tax Office’s own data holdings.   Data on approximately 1.3 million taxpayers will be taken from Centrelink to check on eligibility for Family Tax Benefit Part B for the 2009, 2010 and 2011 years with comparisons being made to check on incorrect claims for the Dependant Spouse Tax Offset.   Current membership and deregistration from State…

Excess Super Contribution Refunds

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Complicated super contribution rules are about to get… more complicated! Draft legislation was released in December to provide some people a once-off chance to be refunded up to $10,000 of excess concessional (employer or deductible personal) superannuation contributions made after July 2011.   Way back in 2007, the then Liberal Government made significant changes to the superannuation system providing significant additional tax benefits to retirees and creating incentives to get more money into super. To control the amount flowing into super, the Government placed limits on concessional and non-concessional (after tax non-deductible) contributions. The limit was originally $50k for concessional…

Save Tax: family tax planning

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Where there are large income differences between spouses, or there are children involved, especially adult children who are undertaking tertiary education, significant tax benefits can be obtained by careful tax planning.   Progressive tax rates and tax free thresholds make income splitting popular. If you operate your own business, one of the simplest ways of diverting income is to employ family members. Reasonable payments for services genuinely rendered by family members are as deductible as they would be in any employer/employee relationship. Children and spouses often perform a multitude of different tasks in any small business.   You should keep…

Holiday costs: Domestic up, International down

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Official inflation for the 2011 calendar year was 3.1% with some categories out of the “basket of goods and services” up and others down.   Domestic holiday travel and accommodation prices rose by 7.3%, where international holiday travel and accommodation got 1.9% cheaper.   Other categories that were up include: + Rents 1%; + Telecommunications 1.1%; + Beer (Oh no!) 1.2%; and + Automotive fuel 0.7%.   These were the declines in the CPI categories: + Fruit - 13.4%; + Pharmaceuticals - 5.6%; + Vegetables - 5%; + Audio, visual and computing equipment - 3.4%; and + Motor vehicles -…

Generate Cash Flow: automated reminders

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Set up a system of reminder emails, text messages or faxes for each customer to remind them when their payment is due so that it will be received on time.

Court changes Commissioner’s mind on Div 7A tax liability

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Deemed dividends where a company makes payments or loans, or forgives a debt to a shareholder or their associate, may be reduced following a decision of the Full Federal Court and the issue of a replacement Draft Tax Determination about when income tax becomes a present legal obligation.   The infamous Division 7A of the 36 Tax Act can deem a dividend (usually unfranked) to be paid where a company pays money, loans money, forgives a debt or provides the use of an asset to a shareholder or associate. The amount of the deemed dividend is limited to the “distributable…

Save Tax: partly paid shares

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Issue partly paid shares in a company to avoid value shift penalties when new shareholders can only afford part of the market value of the shares.

Big risks for employers with independent contractors

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Employers that misclassify someone as an independent contractor (rather than an employee) face big risks for employee entitlements, withholding tax, superannuation and also unfair dismissals following a Fair Work Australia decision in December.   The Full Bench of the national employment arbitrator found that a purported independent contractor working as a shop assistant in a furniture store was not a contractor, was paid a fixed weekly rate, did not have other clients and was not working through a company.   Unions, the Fair Work Ombudsman and the Tax Office are all cracking down on supposed “sham contracting”. In its decision,…

New Investment Manager Regime

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Private equity investors will miss out in the Government’s newly announced Investment Manager Regime designed to attract substantial funds from offshore for management within Australia.   The announcement in December follows acceptance of most of the recommendations from the Board of Taxation and pressure from the funds management industry.   The funds will have an exemption for Australian tax on “passive assets” invested on a portfolio basis, but this exemption will exclude certain land rich investments and withholding tax on dividends and interest.   The fund will not be able to operate or control a trading business in Australia and…

Save Tax: super co-contribution and salary sacrifice

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Can you reduce salaries payable to family members or others to below the super co-contribution threshold? If those family members then make a personal contribution to their super fund, they may become entitled to the Government co-contribution. Any salary sacrifice arrangement must be in place before the relevant salary has actually been earned.

Bring your kids into your super fund? Perhaps not

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Unforseen problems can arise if your grown up children become part of your self-managed super fund.   In July last year, DBA Lawyers argued against bringing your children into your super fund quoting two key cases.   In Triway Super Fund, a mother, father and son were members and trustees of the fund. The son was addicted to drugs and withdrew all of the funds such that the parents’ retirement savings were lost. The son became bankrupt and a couple of years later the trustees made a voluntary disclosure to the Tax Office.   The Tax Office issued a notice…

Tribunal accepts large software licence fee

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$305,000 of software license fees paid over two years will stand as an allowable deduction after the Tribunal overturned an assessment disallowing deductions for the fees.   A Personal Services Income audit for the 2004 and 2005 income years resulted in amended assessments to knock out claims for license fees of $155,420 in 2004 and $150,273 for 2005.   The license fee was for six years and with a resident of South Africa who would not testify and whose business name was not registered by the relevant South African authorities.   The Tax Office thought the fee was inherently unbelievable…

Grow Business: promote one product or service at a time

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This limits your prospect’s buying decision to either “yes” or “no”; avoid promoting more choices as some people will avoid the risk of making the wrong choice by simply saying no.   You should develop separate promotions for each product or service that you sell.   http://www.businessknowhow.com/

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