By Rob Hosking
|
Friday 29th August 2003 |
Text too small? |
Tax expert Jeff Owens told Parliament's finance and expenditure select committee tax officials needed to make greater allowance for genuine mistakes, and MPs needed to give the IRD permission to make those allowances.
Mr Owens said a client of his was up for $100,000 because of an error made by a low-ranked staff member. That error had not cost the IRD anything it involved the double counting of an imputation credit for dividends.
"The dividend was never paid and it only existed as a credit to the shareholder's current account. So there was no loss to the Revenue. But the department did not accept that and the company was required to pay around $100,000 in income tax, along with a 10% penalty." In the end a settlement was reached but that was largely on a technicality, Mr Owens said.
And while he supported the general direction of the clauses in the Taxation (Annual Rates, GST, Trans-Tasman Imputation and Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill, he said there were still some anomalies that caused unnecessary penalties to taxpayers.
No comments yet
Contact Energy 2026 Half Year Results Presentation
February 2nd Morning Report
VHP - Half year results announcement date and webcast details
Devon Funds Morning Note - 30 January 2026
AIA - Auckland Airport new board appointment
General Capital (GEN:NZ) Subsidiary General Finance Update
January 30th Morning Report
January 29th Morning Report
VSL - Date for 1H FY26 results announcement
January 28th Morning Report