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SMALL BUSINESS, EDUCATIONAL AND COMMUNITY ADVISER EDUCATION PROGRAMME. 1. SMALL AND MEDIUM BUSINESS COURSE 1: GST Introduction & Registration. THE NEW TAX SYSTEM. A better tax system. TAX REFORM. Abolition of hidden indirect taxes Substantial personal income tax reductions
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SMALL BUSINESS, EDUCATIONAL AND COMMUNITY ADVISER EDUCATION PROGRAMME 1 SMALL AND MEDIUM BUSINESS COURSE 1: GST Introduction & Registration
THE NEW TAX SYSTEM A better tax system TAXREFORM • Abolition of hidden indirect taxes • Substantial personal income tax reductions • The introduction of GST
TAXREFORM THE NEW TAX SYSTEM The Introduction of GST • A very visible tax - enables hidden taxes to be abolished • The abolition of wholesale sales tax will reduce costs for many businesses • GST does not increase costs for a GST registered business • Not all goods and services are subject to GST
TAXREFORM THE NEW TAX SYSTEM Impact of GST • GST impacts many facets of a business • Incorrect handling of GST can cause financial loss • Staff need to be educated and trained
TAXREFORM THE NEW TAX SYSTEM Government Assistance Initiatives • The New Tax System Advisory Board • The role of the Australian Tax Office • The role of the GST Start-Up Assistance Office
TAXREFORM THE NEW TAX SYSTEM The Role of the GST Start-up Assistance Office • GST and Business Skills - an Action Guide • Organisation delivered assistance • Adviser education program • Direct assistance program
TAXREFORM THE NEW TAX SYSTEM The role of the ACCC • Ensuring there is no price exploitation as a result of the tax changes • Ensuring that savings from the abolition of hidden taxes are passed on • Will oversee pricing changes from 9 July until July 2002
GSTTERMS THE IMPORTANCE OF TERMINOLOGY Overview of GST • It is important to become familiar with the key GST concepts and correct GST terms • Understanding these terms and concepts is the easiest way to start implementing GST in your business • This section is an overview of these terms and concepts • Remember: GST is a tax on domestic consumption of goods and services
GSTTERMS THE IMPORTANCE OF TERMINOLOGY There are four kinds of GST supply • Taxable supply • GST - free supply • Input taxed supply • Supply by non-registered persons All GST details flow from these concepts These are the keys to understanding GST
GSTTERMS GST TERMS Enterprise • Getting things done • Providing the things we need • Delivering the goods and providing the services • Some enterprises are required to register for GST • All enterprises have the option to register
GSTTERMS GST TERMS Entity • An entity is a person, or an organisation, or any other ‘body’ that has a separate legal identity • Single entities may be made up of several enterprises • When registering for GST care needs to be taken to register all entities that comprise a single enterprise • Group registration may be an option
GSTTERMS GST TERMS ABN (Australian Business Number) • When a business registers for GST it will receive an ABN • An ABN can be obtained without registering for GST • A business that does not have an ABN will have withholding tax at the rate of 48.5¢ in the dollar deducted from payments made to it by other businesses. • All businesses should obtain an ABN
GSTTERMS GST TERMS BAS (Business Activity Statement) • Using this form, the business will advise the ATO of its GST liability or refund claim. • This form will also be used for all tax payments in addition to GST • The GST section of this form will be completed every month, or every three months, depending on the basis of GST registration
GSTTERMS GST TERMS Goods and Services • Goods are the tangible things we consume • Services are things people do for others • Goods and Services have a cost and, generally, a price • Goods and Services are what an enterprise produces
GSTTERMS GST TERMS Taxable Supplies • Supplies of goods and services connected with Australia, made by registered persons or entities, for consideration
GSTTERMS GST TERMS Input Tax Credits • GST is included in the price of ‘GST supplies’ a business acquires • This GST can be claimed as an input tax credit if those supplies were acquired for business purposes • A business must have a TaxInvoice to claim the input tax credits
GSTTERMS GST TERMS Input Tax Credits • The aggregate of input tax credits is deducted from GST collected from customers • The net GST is payable to the ATO
GSTTERMS GST TERMS GST - free supplies • GST is not included in the price of GST-free supplies • Therefore, no input tax credits are available when you purchase GST-free supplies • GST input tax credits can be claimed on taxable supplies acquired by a registered person to make GST-free supplies • Note the categories of supplies that include GST-free supplies
GSTTERMS GST TERMS Input Taxed Supplies • GST is not included in the price of input taxed supplies • Therefore, no input tax credits are available to the purchaser for input taxed supplies • GST input tax credits cannot be claimed on taxable supplies acquired to make input taxed supplies • Note the categories of input taxed supplies
GSTTERMS GST TERMS Consideration • Consideration is what is given in return for supplies made • Consideration can be in money • Consideration can be in goods or services that have worth in money terms
GSTTERMS GST TERMS Value • When used in a GST context, value means the GST exclusive price of the goods or services supplied • The price of goods or services comprises of the value plus applicable GST
GSTTERMS GST TERMS Attribution rules • Determine time of GST supplies • Cash basis rules • Accrual basis rules
THE BASICS OF GST GST affects almost all transactions • GST will apply to business transactions unless a specific exemption applies • If a transaction is a taxable supply, GST is included in the price • The rate of GST is 10%
THE BASICS OF GST GST affects almost all transactions • GST collected by ‘business’ from its customers periodically gets paid to the ATO • In principle a registered business is able to get back the GST it has to pay on its purchases • GST thus is not a tax on the business; it is not a business cost
THE TAX FRACTION The GST is 1/11th of the price charged or paid • The GST inclusive price includes both a GST content and the cost / income element
GST TRANSACTIONS Every business transaction most likely will: • Involve a supply for GST purposes • For GST purposes transactions are called supplies • If a transaction is not treated as a taxable supply, there must be valid reasons why not
GST TRANSACTIONS Every business transaction most likely will: • Involve a supply for GST purposes • If the transaction is a supply, it has GST implications • The attribution rules determine in which GST period: GST output tax has to be accounted for GST input tax credits may first be claimed
CONTRACTS All contracts should address GST issues • If the contract doesn’t pass the GST on to the customer, the business will wear the cost • Special rules provide relief from GST for some contracts entered into pre 1 July 2000 but completed after 1 July 2000 • The ATO has released a fact sheet / charts which summarise these rules
LIMITS ON INPUT TAX CREDITS There are some transactions for which you cannot claim input tax credits • A registered person cannot claim back GST included in the price of goods or services acquired for private consumption • A business cannot claim input tax credits on things bought to make input taxed supplies
GST INCLUSIVE GST supplies should always be priced GST inclusive • Setting prices / quoting • Signs, advertisements, price tags, catalogues • Alternative of: GST inclusive pricing, or the ‘value’ of the supply plus the amount of GST stated in dollars • Real risk of loss for traders when they get this wrong
WHO CAN REGISTER GST? To register for GST, you must be an entity conducting an enterprise • Businesses and entities conduct enterprises • Generally the GST net extends only to supplies connected with Australia
GST REGISTRATION Most businesses should register for GST • Last registration date 31 May using ABN registration form • Consider cash or accrual basis • Consider monthly or quarterly returns • Choices exist for some businesses • There is withholding tax exposure for businesses without an ABN
CASH BASIS OF REGISTRATION The ‘cash basis’ allows for simpler accounting systems • Only pay to the ATO the GST included in the payments received • Only claim from the ATO the GST in the payments made that are covered by tax invoices • Threshold is one million dollars
ACCRUAL BASIS OF REGISTRATION Use an accrual basis only if required to, or it provides substantial cash flow or other commercial advantages • To calculate GST on an accruals basis include accounts owed by and owed to the business • Identify GST on “outputs”- taxable supplies made by the business • Identify receivable GST on “inputs”- supplies acquired by the business • Accrual basis available to all
QUARTERLY OR MONTHLY RETURNS Most Businesses will find quarterly returns are best • Many businesses making GST taxable supplies will adopt quarterly returns • GST payments just 4 times a year - 21st day following period end • Cash flow or other commercial advantages may prompt monthly GST reporting
TAX INVOICE Always make sure a Tax Invoice is obtained • A tax invoice is your voucher to get money from the ATO • Needs to contain certain information • Different tax invoice levels exist- Up to $50 (before GST)- More than $50 and up to $1000 (before GST)- Greater than $1000 (before GST)
RECORDS Keep a record of all transactions to keep track of GST • Record all outflows • Record all inflows • File tax invoices received • Keep all bank statements • Record debtors and creditors
SYSTEMS Make sure the GST information needed to complete the BAS return is readily available • Keep GST records up to date on a regular basis • Ensure the GST information and records is accurate and readily available, when required
CONTROLS Always have checks in place to make sure GST is calculated correctly • Make sure you get it right • Nothing missed - Nothing wrong • Automatic checks and balances • No tax invoice from a supplier - no payment!
RISKS Always remember GST • Not identifying transactions which constitute taxable supplies • Misclassifying a GST taxable supply as a GST-free supply • Charging GST and not paying it to the ATO • Not including GST in prices
RISKS Always remember GST • Not collecting and holding valid tax invoices covering input tax credit claims • Not identifying GST input tax credits and not claiming refunds • Claiming a GST input tax credit for costs of making input taxed supplies • Spending GST owing to the ATO
TRANSITION Contracts entered into before 1 July 2000 and which span that date can have tax implications • Special transition rules apply • Need to check existing contracts now • Refunds available for WST paid on certain stock on hand at 30 June 1999
PLANNING ITEMS The planning for GST starts now • Register for GST • Printing invoices and price lists • Point of sale recording
GST REGISTRATION FLOW CHART BASIC REGISTRATION RULES Does the Business only make Input Taxed Supplies You are unable to Register for GST YES NO Is this a business with a current turnover greater than $50,000? You must register for GST YES NO YES Do you expect your turnover to exceed $50,000 in the next 12 months You may choose whether to register or not NO
GST RETURN PERIOD FLOW CHART Does the business have a turnover of GST supplies and GST free supplies in excess of $20,000,000 NO Does the business primarily make GST supplies Does the business primarily make only GST free supplies NO YES YES YES Registration on a quarterly basis may improve your cash position Registration on a monthly basis may improve your cash position You must register on a monthly basis