Albanese government refuses to ditch red tape for local accountants and bookkeepers

Wednesday, 11 September 2024

The Albanese Labor Government has teamed up with the Greens and Senator David Pocock to block the Coalition’s attempt to throw out onerous new regulations for local accountants, bookkeepers and tax agents.

Eight Senate crossbenchers yesterday joined the Coalition to vote in support of a disallowance motion which would have nullified the Tax Agent Services (Code of Professional Conduct) Determination 2024.

On the floor of the Senate, the Government capitulated and finally admitted the regulation is defective and significant changes are required.

It remains to be seen whether the Assistant Treasurer will deliver on these piecemeal changes or backflip yet again. With these embarrassing, last minute concessions it is now another deal with the Greens that has blown up in the Government’s face.

The Government’s approach to consultation, communication and stakeholder management on these regulations has been bizarre and disrespectful.

Nine weeks after making this law, the Assistant Treasurer finally started consulting directly with industry stakeholders just hours before it was set to be disallowed.

This desperate attempt to salvage the regulations came after Stephen Jones had repeatedly told tax practitioners their serious concerns were unfounded, and the new regulation was ‘modest’.

It’s too little, too late and a Coalition Government would entirely reverse these regulations and unwind this attack from Labor and the Greens.

Shadow Assistant Treasurer and Shadow Minister for Financial Services Luke Howarth said this is bad government and the grassroots advocacy campaign from local tax practitioners has been effective and should not stop.

“These are small and family businesses who are some of the most trusted members of our community and they should be treated with respect. The Albanese Government has left them distraught and wondering whether they should stay in the profession.

72,000 tax practitioners, many small or individual practices, have been burdened with bad regulation in response to the sins of a few partners at PWC. A local BAS agent in North Lakes is very different to an international tax partner at PWC.

These new regulations are unnecessary and will drive up costs for individuals and small businesses who rely on and trust tax professionals to help manage their financial affairs.”

Shadow Assistant Minister for Competition, Charities, and Treasury Senator Dean Smith said the Government’s eleventh-hour concessions were a sign of a desperate Government operating in crisis mode.

“With the support of eight Senate crossbenchers and the entire tax practitioner community, we have sent a clear message to the Government about these far-reaching and poorly drafted regulations.

The ten leading professional associations have come together to repeatedly support the disallowance motion and secure multiple backdowns and concessions from the Government.
The Government’s chaotic process has been worst-practice consultation, communication and policymaking and the thousands of local accountants and bookkeepers who have been left reeling deserve better.”

Background:
â€Ē The Tax Agent Services (Code of Professional Conduct) Determination 2024 (the Determination) is a disallowable instrument made on 2 July 2024 which imposes new obligations on registered tax practitioners.
â€Ē The Determination has received significant criticism from the peak professional accounting and tax practitioner bodies and has been subject of a campaign from accountants, bookkeepers and tax agents to have it withdrawn or disallowed.
â€Ē Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand, CPA Australia, Institute of Public Accountants, The Tax Institute, Australian Bookkeepers Association, Institute of Certified Bookkeepers, Institute of Financial Professionals Australia, Financial Advice Association of Australia, NTAA PLUS and SMSF Association
(collectively the Joint Bodies) wrote to the Assistant Treasurer on 15 July 2024 to express strong concerns about the construct and implications of the provisions of the determination.
â€Ē The Joint Bodies again wrote to the Assistant Treasurer on 9 August 2024 to advise that proposed changes to the start date had not alleviated their concerns with the Determination and the significant compliance burdens and uncertainties on small tax professional businesses.
â€Ē These stakeholders continued to call for it to be withdrawn or disallowed and took out a full-page advertisement condemning the regulations on 5 September and wrote the Prime Minister.
â€Ē A vote on the disallowance motion, moved by Senator Dean Smith on 1 0 September, was negatived in a tied 31-31 vote in the Senate. Crossbenchers David Pocock and Lidia Thorpe, Labor and the Greens voted against disallowance.
â€Ē In a one-minute statement on the disallowance motion, the Government admitted further changes and public consultation would be required and sought to delay it.
â€Ē The new legislative power used by the Assistant Treasurer to make the Determination was part of Treasury Laws Amendment (2023 Measures No. 1) Bill 2023 which was passed in late 2023 as part of a deal with the Greens to ensure the passage of Labor’s franking credit reforms. Senator Barbara Pocock announced at the time that the Greens had secured the relevant amendments, and the Determination would follow.