Page 70 - DCOM508_CORPORATE_TAX_PLANNING
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Unit 3: Corporate Tax Planning




                                                                                                Notes


             Notes  Some of the instances of tax evasion relate to failing and claiming:

             Failing to:
             1.   report all income
             2.   report cash wages
             3.   forward tax withheld from employee’s wages to the ATO
             4.   withhold tax from a worker’s wages - for example, paying cash in hand

             5.   pay employee super entitlements
             6.   lodge tax returns, in an attempt to avoid payment
             7.   lodge a tax return in order to avoid child support or other obligations
             Claiming:

             1.   deductions for expenses not incurred or legally deductible
             2.   input credits for goods or services that GST has not been paid on.


          3.3.1 Importance of Tax Evasion

          Tax evasion is important for many reasons.
          (i)   It reduces tax collections, thereby affecting taxes that compliant taxpayers face and public
               services that citizens receive.
          (ii)   Evasion creates misallocations in resource use when individuals and  firms alter their

               behaviour to cheat on their taxes.
          (iii)  Its presence requires that government expend resources to deter non-compliance, to detect
               its magnitude, and to penalise its practitioners.
          (iv)  Tax evasion alters the distribution of income unpredictably; unless tax evaders are caught,
               they pay fewer taxes than honest taxpayers. Evasion may contribute to feelings of unfair
               treatment and disrespect for the law, creating a self-generating cycle that feeds upon itself
               and leads to even more evasion. It affects the accuracy of macroeconomic statistics.
          (v)   More broadly, it is not possible to understand the true impact of taxation without
               recognising the existence of evasion.

          3.3.2  Causes of tax evasion

          Following are the causes of Tax Evasion:

          (i)   Controls and Licensing System: The system of controls, permits, quotas and licenses which
               are associated with misdistributions of the commodities in short supply results in the
               generation of black money which leads to tax evasion. Since considerable discretionary
               powers lay in the hands of those who administered controls this provided them with a
               scope for corruption – ‘speed money’ for turning a blind eye to the violation of controls. All
               this gave rise to trading in permits, quotas and licenses, malpractices in distribution and
               in the process; it generated sizeable sums of black money.” Price and distribution controls
               have in the past led to the generation of black money on a signifi cant scale.





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