ATO bean counters launch café crackdown by monitoring coffee sales

The Australian Taxation Office has always had plenty of bean counters on its staff, but they’ve never taken their job literally - until now.

In the latest assault from the ATO on the cash economy, cafés who purchase more than 15kg of coffee a week will have their earning declarations cross-checked with information provided by their coffee suppliers to see if some coffee sales are going unreported.

The information will be taken retrospectively from the beginning of the 2009-2010 financial year in an attempt to weed out cafés that are underreporting their sales, or running part of their normal business activities off the books. 

However Betty Penna from Coffee Supreme, a specialty coffee supplier in Victoria, questioned whether measuring coffee supplies was a reliable measure of café income.

“We provide guidelines for how many shots of coffee baristas can expect from a one kilogram bag, but people don’t stick to them.”

She said there were between 50 to 70 shots of coffee per bag, which could account for around $100 in discrepancy, without taking into account wasted shots, staff coffees, and coffee training during the quieter periods of the day.

General manager of The Institute of Chartered Accountants Australia Yasser El-Ansary said small businesses should expect the inclusion of third party analysis to become the norm.

“The ATO is becoming smarter about how they match data with their statements,” Al-Ansary said.

“It’s a strategy they’ve been taking for the past few years, because it gives them the capacity to find those underreporting.

“I’m not sure that it’s the most reliable method, but we have to keep in mind the ATO is built around a suit of assessment. I suspect this is not the only measure they use.”

This will add to the stock-pile of information the tax office collates to audit over 500 million transactions each year.

The ATO is ratcheting up its attack on the cash economy, which began in earnest in 2009 with the introduction of Small Business Benchmarks.

The benchmarks are financial ratios set by the ATO for over 100 industries, covering more than 900,000 small businesses earning less than $15 million a year.

The ratios are developed to provide a performance indicator against which the ATO can measure similar businesses within each particular industry and target businesses that fall outside of their benchmarks and have unusually high profits.  


busy
 

50 gems from Australia's top SME entrepreneursFREE eBOOK: 50 gems from Australia's top SME entrepreneurs

In this eBook you’ll read tips and advice from some of SmartCompany's favourite entrepreneurs

Register for the SmartCompany Newsletter and receive '50 gems from Australia's top SME entrepreneurs'.

Please enter a valid email address. For example fred@domain.com .

By submitting your email you are agreeing to our Terms & Conditions.

Free Daily Newsletter
SmartCompany Newsletter Please enter a valid email address. For example fred@domain.com .
Follow us:

By submitting your email you are agreeing to our Terms & Conditions.

Sponsored Links

Business Resources

Our Partners

 

Private Media Publications

Crikey

loading...

Crikey Blogs

loading...

StartupSmart

loading...

Property Observer

loading...

Leading Company

loading...
Smartco

DIRECT LINKS

TOPICS

OUR PARTNERS

NETWORK PARTNERS

SmartCompany.com.au is Australia's leading website for SMEs featuring business news, business information and business blogs. SmartCompany's archive of news, feature articles, entrepreneur interviews and business webinars cover topics such as advertising and marketing, buying or selling a business, starting a business, growing a business, franchising, SEO, superannuation and tax.
SmartCompany is a Private Media website

Online Solution by Valegro

Download SmartCompany eBooks: 10 quick sales and marketing wins | Steve Jobs: Lessons from a legend50 tips from Australia's top SME entrepreneurs

Popular on Partner sites: Small business awards | Property Investment Tips | How to Write a Business Plan | Technology in Business | Business MentorsBusiness to Business | Small Business | How to Write a Marketing Plan | Federal Budget 2012 | Federal Budget 2012 webinar25 start up ideas