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Home News

Industry reaction to TBAR labelled as ‘overkill’

Parts of the SMSF industry have overreacted to events-based reporting with the requirements for the TBAR far less onerous compared with the old reasonable benefit limits regime, says an industry consultant.

by Miranda Brownlee
October 10, 2017
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Miller Super Solutions founder Tim Miller said unlike preparing a business activity statement, which requires all the incomings and outgoings for a quarter or instalment activity statement which requires a reconciliation of the income that has been paid for the quarter, transfer balance account reporting only requires a fund to report when certain events occur.

“Based on everything I’ve seen it doesn’t come close to the onerous reporting obligations that existed under the RBL regime,” said Mr Miller.

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Reporting under the RBL regime, he added, had to be completed on systems that didn’t have decent data feeds.

“You might have had transaction feeds where you had numbers coming through, but you then had to reconcile and work out exactly what they were,” said Mr Miller.

“If you look at what we had to do previously with RBLs, or even with PAYG reporting for the over 60s, it’s far more onerous with regards to calculating tax, lodging activity statements and reconciliation statements and RBLs for lump sums and pensions and commutations.”

Mr Miller said he considers the time frames provided in option 1 of the ATO’s position paper on events-based reporting to be very reasonable.

“I can understand that any time something new comes along there’s always a positive and negative reaction to it, but I think with some parts of the industry, the reaction has been a bit of an overkill,” said Mr Miller.

“[For] a lot of the older administration firms they previously did all this stuff so the reporting is not new, and I would suggest that this reporting requirement is a lot less than what we had to do before 2007.”

 

Tags: News

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Comments 1

  1. Phillip Hey says:
    8 years ago

    Well argued Tim. I am old enough to remember the RBL reporting and it was very difficult to deal with.

    Events based reporting is simple. The big question is how will the ATO manage the exception reporting. Lets hope they do a better job than they do with contribution caps and superannuation surcharge.

    Reply

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