The audit office found the ATO was only partially effective in its efforts to recoup lost superannuation and encourage employers to pay super.Credit:Gabriele Charotte
A report from the Australian National Audit Office calculated the ATO was owed $2.9 billion in tax charged to employers that failed to pay superannuation,while the industry estimates the shortfall is as high as $5 billion a year.
About 95 per cent of super contributions are paid without the Tax Office intervening. But employers that don’t comply have a big impact on the retirement incomes of Australians.
The audit office report into that non-compliance found the ATO was only partially effective in its efforts to recoup lost superannuation and encourage employers to pay super.
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It said the Tax Office had made a commitment to be proactive in 40 per cent of compliance cases in the three or four years to 2020-21.
Instead,the report found proactive compliance activities declined after the super guarantee taskforce was introduced in 2017,with a shift “from resource-intensive audit activity to low-touch nudges”.
Between 2013-14 and 2018-19,the audit report found the Tax Office’s compliance activities in detecting and collecting unpaid super amounted to less than 15 per cent per year of the estimated amount of unpaid super.