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Taxman to axeman: Small business “carnage” as ATO wind-ups soar

  Sydney insolvency practitioner Jamieson Louttit has warned the soaring number of SMEs being wound up by the Tax Office is resulting in “carnage”. Figures compiled by Jamieson Louttit & Associates show 396 applications to wind up companies were filed with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission in July.     This is a decrease […]
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Cara Waters
Taxman to axeman: Small business “carnage” as ATO wind-ups soar

 

Sydney insolvency practitioner Jamieson Louttit has warned the soaring number of SMEs being wound up by the Tax Office is resulting in “carnage”.

Figures compiled by Jamieson Louttit & Associates show 396 applications to wind up companies were filed with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission in July.

 

 

This is a decrease from May when 582 applications were filed but the data shows the number of wind-up applications over the past four months is the highest on record for that period of time.

Jamieson Louttit told SmartCompany the ATO has focused on extracting money from SMEs since the budget.

“It is like a shotgun that has gone off,” he says.

“It seems like carnage is hitting small businesses.”

Louttit says another 40 wind-up applications were revealed this morning showing that “the carnage is continuing”.

“To me the government is looking at [small business] as an easy target as opposed to big corporations which have a lot of money to defend it,” he says.

“My thought is the government is just short of money, to me it is as simple as that.”

Jamieson says the wind-up application threshold was $300,000 in the past but has now dropped to $30,000 and the government is “not as forgiving” about entering into arrangements with small business.

“Every business runs around on cash not WIP and debtors, at the moment the government has $20 billion in WIP and debtors in SMEs,” he says.

“The budget came out in May and since then the increase in wind-ups has been significant.”

Jamieson says the affects on small business and the broader economy are significant.

“It is just killing the economy, it really is,” he says.

“For every insolvency, four other people are affected, that’s the people who are owed money, suppliers and customers.  Every business they wind up rather than being a bit more forgiving has a detrimental affect on the economy.”

A spokesperson for the ATO told SmartCompany its preference is to work with businesses to help them manage their tax debts.

“As the Commissioner said during his address to the National Small Business Summit on 16 July, our intention is to be more active to prevent debts, to provide appropriate help and support when people are in debt, to take the right action to prevent debts from escalating, and to take legal action earlier when it is warranted,” the spokesperson says.

He says the ATO uses “sophisticated analytics” to tailor the timing and selection of our next best action, from preventative measures, such as SMS reminders to legal recovery which enables it to resolve debts earlier.

“Where a business does not work with us, we will take stronger action to ensure that it does not gain an unfair financial advantage over the majority of businesses who pay their tax bills on time,” the spokesperson says.

“This includes initiating wind-up action where there is evidence that a company is insolvent.”

The decision to grant a winding-up order rests with the court and the ATO has provided over 500,000 payment arrangements in 2014-15.

“We did have a greater focus on legal action in the second half of the 2014/15 year and filed about 1200 wind up actions in this period,” the ATO spokesperson says.