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|    can.taxes    |    All that "free" healthcare has a price    |    23,408 messages    |
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|    Message 22,802 of 23,408    |
|    Alan Baggett to All    |
|    =?windows-1252?Q?Canada_Revenue_Agency=9    |
|    19 Nov 13 04:23:33    |
      From: AlanBaggett@volcanomail.com              Canada Revenue Agency’s uncollected taxes up by 60% since 2006 : CRA SOTW              Amount owed to the CRA soars even as they crack down              Jason Fekete Published: April 25, 2013, 5:37 pm              OTTAWA — The Canada Revenue Agency’s total uncollected tax debt has soared       about 60 per cent to $29 billion in the last seven years, at the same time the       cost of “doubtful accounts” unlikely to be collected has more than doubled to       almost $12 billion.              The CRA has, however, also significantly increased its collection of other tax       debt in recent years — resolving $40 billion in 2011-12 — demonstrating it’s       having mixed results in snaring the tax dollars owed by Canadians.              Federal Auditor General Michael Ferguson will release his spring report on       Tuesday — coincidentally, the deadline for Canadians to file their taxes —       that includes a follow-up audit on the CRA’s collection of tax debts.              The agency has been under fire recently for not doing enough to crack down on       tax evasion and collect the revenue it’s owed, as the Conservative government       plans to cut about 3,000 jobs and more than $300 million from the agency’s       budget over the next        three years.              Next week’s auditor general report on the CRA follows up on a scathing 2006       audit on the agency’s tax collection strategies, that highlighted a number of       concerns and recommendations for improvement, including how to better collect       the tax debts owed by        Canadians.              An analysis conducted by Postmedia News finds the CRA’s total tax debt has       grown more than 60 per cent since the last audit to $29 billion in 2011-12,       from $18 billion in the 2004-05 fiscal year. (The former Liberal government       also struggled on the file,        as total tax debt grew 88 per cent between 1996-97 and 2004-05).              Total tax debt includes taxes and other revenues assessed or estimated over       several years by the CRA but not yet collected.              Also, the ratio of tax debt to total cash receipts, which is a trend indicator       of how well the revenue agency is managing tax debt, increased to 6.9 per cent       in 2011-12, compared to 5.4 per cent identified in the last audit. That means       the agency’s tax        debt continues to grow at a faster rate than the cash collected.              “It’s a shocking thing, especially to be reporting now as Canadians are       gearing up to pay their taxes,” NDP national revenue critic Murray Rankin said       about the tax debt data.              “This government is not taking care of one of the basic functions of       government, which is to collect revenues, and that cascades indisputably into       service cuts.”              While the uncollected tax debt has grown, so, too, has the amount of tax debt       collected or resolved by the agency. For the 2011-12 year, the CRA resolved       $40 billion in outstanding tax debts (including billions of dollars in       write-offs) — an increase of        more than $10 billion in debts resolved over the past few years.              Both the tax debt collected in one particular year and those debts still       uncollected can date back several years, allowing both amounts to increase in       a fiscal year.              “Our government is firmly committed to ensuring the CRA is equipped with the       tools it requires to maintain the integrity of the tax system. All tax debt is       in the process of being collected by the CRA, either through repayment plans       or other collections        measures,” Revenue Minister Gail Shea said in a statement.              “The CRA takes a balanced approach to collections that maintains the integrity       of the tax system and ensures taxpayers are treated fairly and with respect.”              Canada Revenue Agency officials say the growth in tax debt in recent years can       be attributed to a number of factors, including: an increase in overall       revenues due to a higher population and more businesses; new harmonized       provincial taxes in Ontario;        and combatting aggressive tax planning, which increases the amount of tax       assessed.              Also, the size of the CRA’s “allowance for doubtful accounts” — tax debts       viewed as having little potential for recovery — has grown more than 150 per       cent since the last audit to about $11.9 billion, compared to $4.7 billion       seven years ago, according        to CRA data.              In the 2006 report, the auditor general highlighted concerns with more than       one-quarter of the government’s tax debt being considered doubtful accounts       that were likely uncollectable. Today, more than 40 per cent of the tax debt       is from doubtful accounts.              The 2011-12 doubtful accounts included approximately $6.1 billion from       individuals, more than $1 billion from employers, $1.8 billion from       corporations and $2.8 billion from GST/HST.              Total CRA write-offs were more than $2.8 billion in 2011-12, up slightly from       almost $2.7 billion in the last audit, but a significant increase from the       $1.9 billion in write-offs in 2005-06.              Rankin believes the government should be hiring additional CRA staff — rather       than cutting thousands of positions — to help collect the dollars owed by       taxpayers.              “The enforcement priorities of this government are really dubious,” he added.              Total tax debt (taxes and other revenues assessed/estimated by CRA but not yet       collected):              2004-05: $18 billion       2005-06: $18.5 billion       2006-07: $20 billion       2007-08: $23.2 billion       2008-09: $24.4 billion       2009-10: $25 billion       2010-11: $27.4 billion       2011-12: $29 billion              Allowance for doubtful accounts:       2004-05: $5.7 billion       2005-06: $4.7 billion       2006-07: $6.4 billion       2007-08: $8.6 billion       2008-09: $9.3 billion       2009-10: $9.9 billion       2010-11: $10.9 billion       2011-12: $11.9 billion              Tax debt resolved:       2007-08: $30.5 billion       2008-09: $35.2 billion       2009-10: $29.6 billion       2010-11: $34.1 billion       2011-12: $40 billion              twitter.com/jasonfekete       © COPYRIGHT - POSTMEDIA NEWS              -----------------------------------------------------------        Miss a Tax Tale Miss a lot!        Visit the CRA SOTW Library at http://canada.revenue.agency.angelfire.com        ------------------------------------------------------------        Alan Baggett – Tax Collector’s Bible - http://taxcollectorsbible.com/              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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