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Self Employed Australia

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JobKeeper/JobSeeker

ATO Small Business Debt: Patience Needed

December 15, 2022 by Self-Employed Australia

patienceThe Australian Taxation Office views small business tax debt as a major problem. The ATO says that small business debt is two-thirds of the $37 billion owed to the ATO—in other words, $24 billion.

Fortunately, the ATO does recognise that much of existing small business debt is the direct result of huge losses small business people suffered due to Covid lockdowns and restrictions. The ATO is showing some understanding. But we hope that the understanding is sufficient and that it will ‘stay the course’. Here’s one story that demonstrates the ‘Covid business disaster’ experienced by (at least) tens of thousands of self-employed people.

I had a chat the other day with a single mum who’s been running her own small business for about six years. She rents a commercial space that’s critical for her particular business. Things were going reasonably well and in 2019 she needed to move from one premises to another. She spent quite a bit of money upgrading the new premises, moved in and business was looking up. Then Covid hit in early 2020.

During the entire Covid lockdowns of 2020–21 the rules meant that she was prohibited from operating at all. Income dropped to zero. Yes, zero! She’d signed a five-year lease and had a bank mortgage. In early 2022 she could start operating again. But the loyal customers she had built up had drifted away. She’s had to rebuild, and although things are looking better, they are not yet back to pre-Covid (2019) levels.

She owes money to the ATO related to her pre-Covid trading. The ATO (fortunately) has her on a payment plan. She’s been very upfront with the ATO. But she’s still needing to cover her mortgage payments plus pay the rent on her premises. If she loses the premises, she’s out of business.

She talked to me about the struggle. I really don’t know if she can survive. She’s a self-motivated, positive, ‘go getter’. But my words of encouragement and support are just words and don’t cover the bills. She’s the sort of person who is most likely to battle through and, give her several years, get on top of the mess and start to make a profit again.

This lady is just one typical story. The economic pain of Covid has impacted the most vulnerable in our community—the ‘go getter’ small business individuals.

We hope that the ATO maintains its small business patience and support. But this needs to happen on a case-by-case basis, with high quality ATO communication and realistic assessments of individuals’ circumstances. It will be a long haul over several years. This is the economic ‘long Covid’.

Filed Under: Covid-19, Defining Self-employment, Independent contracting, JobKeeper/JobSeeker, Self-employment, Tax Reform, Taxation, The nature of work

Jobkeeper and JobSeeker Extension Information

July 29, 2020 by Self-Employed Australia

Last week (22 July) the Morrison government announced that JobKeeper and JobSeeker are being extended past the current cut-off of at the end of September. But there are changes to eligibility and the amounts being paid.

We’ve waited a week to produce this update to check some details with the ATO. Be aware that the legislation for the extension has not passed Parliament, so our summary below is the best information available at the moment.

Current JobKeeper – No changes. Everything is the same until 27 Sept 2020. See here.

Summary: JobKeeper extension (after 28 Sept 2020)

Employees and self-employed people are still both eligible as per current rules.

Payments are reduced (and will be smaller still if you worked fewer than 20 hours a week in February 2020—see note below):
$1,200 a fortnight for October, November, December 2020 (28 September 2020 to 3 January 2021). But
$750 a fortnight if you/your employees worked fewer than 20 hours a week in February 2020.
$1,000 a fortnight for January, February, March 2021 (4 Jan 2021 to 28 March 2021). But
$650 a fortnight if you/your employees worked fewer than 20 hours a week in February 2020.

Payments continue to be made in arrears.

Turnover requirements change

Projected turnover is out. Actual turnover will be used.
For small businesses your turnover must still be down 30%+, but this must be down
in both the June & September 2020 quarters for the $1,200 ($750) payment;
in the June & September & December 2020 quarters for the $1,000 ($650) payment.

If you are not currently on JobKeeper, you can still apply if your turnover then drops during the extension period.

Declaring turnover

This is assessed on your BAS return for actual declared GST turnover.
You do not include any JobKeeper receipts in your turnover because JobKeeper doesn’t have GST. (We have checked with the ATO on this.)
Generally, you compare your 2020 quarterly turnover with your 2019 same quarter turnover (eg: September quarter 2020 to September quarter 2019 and so on).

Hours worked—Self-employed
Whether you have worked 20 hours more/less each week is based on the work you did in February 2020. That is, if you worked more than 20 hours a week in each week of February 2020, you will need to prove that to the ATO.

Based on our long experience with the ATO we expect that the audit division of the ATO will conduct aggressive audits of this. We cannot find any information on what hourly work records the ATO expects of you, particularly as a self-employed person. We strongly urge that if you intend to claim the higher amount (+20 hours) that you go back to your work records first and check that you have significant proof of hours worked. This should include invoices to clients and so on.

Summary: JobSeeker
Higher Covid-19 payments for unemployment (JobSeeker) and other social security have been extended to the end of December 2020, but the amounts drop.
On top of the $565.70 per fortnight you receive

Plus $550 per fortnight to 24 September 2020 (current) but this drops to
Plus $250 per fortnight from 25 September 2020 to the end of December 2020.

Government source documents
Check the government’s fact sheets for full information:

JobKeeper here.
JobSeeker here.

Filed Under: Covid-19, JobKeeper/JobSeeker, Self-employment

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