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Tax Law - Tax Evasion - Tax planning

Date: February 22, 2012

Authors: Frank Egan B.A., LL.B., A.C.L.A., F.T.I.A. (Notary)

Tax evasion is committed by a person or entity when they deliberately fail to comply with tax and superannuation obligations by misinterpreting Australian legislation or concealing their income in an effort to reduce the amounts paid to the Commonwealth. The result is that this results in either no tax paid or less tax being paid than they would otherwise have to pay which is in contravention of the law.

Tax evasion includes the failure to lodge, disclose, overstate or overclaim deductions or rebates so that the net effect is that little or no tax is paid. This is always problematic because the risk of detection is ever-increasing as are the consequences. Gaol is a consequence which is commonplace where tax evasion or tax fraud is evident. The threshold for tax evasion is extremely low yet the risks are manifest.

How Tax Evasion is Committed

Set out below are some examples of what constitutes tax evasion:

  • Failure to declare income;

  • Non-lodgment of required documents;

  • Concealing or transferring income or assets;

  • Claiming credits to which a taxpayer is not entitled;

  • Participating in the cash/underground economy;

  • Participating in offshore tax schemes;

  • Failure by the employer to withhold amounts from an employee’s salary;

  • Money laundering.

Consequences of Tax Evasion

The consequences of committing tax evasion will vary on a case-by-case basis, depending on the taxpayer’s circumstances and the severity of the offence(s) committed. In addition to shortfall amounts that have to be paid the taxpayer may also have to pay the following if the ATO concludes they have committed tax evasion:

  • Shortfall interest charge (SIC)

  • General interest charge (GIC)

  • FTL (failure to lodge) penalty

  • Other administrative penalties

A taxpayer may also be incarcerated for up to 10 years if their violation is proven to be severe enough. Many taxpayers think that if they hide or conceal assets or income then all they will have to do is pay the back-tax forgetting about penalties and interest. The uplift penalty is 20% of the amount of tax avoided. Interest causes doubling of the amount of tax avoided every seven years which is really a sobering thought.


Tax Planning

Legitimate tax planning has always been allowed. Part IVA of ITAA 1936 defines and relies on the concept of tax benefit. Its effect always has to be carefully considered for tax planning purposes because to trespass beyond the limits will inevitably be fixed with problems which will prove incredibly expensive to fix. Tax planning on its own will be caught by Part IVA.

Collaboration with other Government Agencies

Regardless from where the income is derived, residents are subject to tax. Taxation catches residents and some non-resident entities as long as they derive income from activities in Australia whether through employment or business activities.

The ATO works collaboratively with the other branches of the government to notify tax offenders to ensure that they contribute to the revenue.

The ATO works constantly with the following government agencies:

  • Australian Federal Police (AFP)

  • Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions (CDPP)

  • Australian Government Solicitor (AGS)

  • Australian Crime Commission (ACC)

  • Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC)

  • ASIO and Interpol, in exceptional cases.

Conclusion

Should you have a problem contact LAC Lawyers now for proper professional tax advice and assistance. These matters do not fix themselves.

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