mandelbrot
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Mandelbrot. I have no wish to fight with you as I have found you most helpful but I heard a tax official on radio stating that people who have a different valuation than the revenue for the LPT would leave themselves open to an Audit. That is not the type of word that is used by the ordinary person where a difference in property value is an issue. I've bought and sold property over the years and never used the word "Audit" in the negotiations. To the ordinary person the use of the term "Audit" is a threat. That is where I believe the use of word "audit" is inappropriate and disproportionate in the context of a genuinely held difference of opinion on price.
To infer from the mere use of the word audit (in a conversation which presumably was exclusively about the LPT), that Revenue were threatening comprehensive audits, is IMHO hysterical, and again confirms what I said at the outset a few posts ago - people are losing the run of themselves over this.
But such an impression has been given by various Revenue sources in recent months (including AAM if memory serves me correctly), specifically on the effect of LPT non-compliance on a taxpayer's rating within the Revenue's REAP system which selects "high risk" cases for audit.
Are you seriously suggesting that all things being equal, a non-compliance with LPT will shoot an otherwise compliant taxpayer to the top of the REAP system?
But such an impression has been given by various Revenue sources in recent months (including AAM if memory serves me correctly), specifically on the effect of LPT non-compliance on a taxpayer's rating within the Revenue's REAP system which selects "high risk" cases for audit.
But such an impression has been given by various Revenue sources in recent months (including AAM if memory serves me correctly), specifically on the effect of LPT non-compliance on a taxpayer's rating within the Revenue's REAP system which selects "high risk" cases for audit.
Where did I suggest anything like that?
That is the scare story being bandied around.
So let your accountant put a valuation on your property.
So it feeds into the overall risk evaluation, with an appropriate weighting attached to it. I'd be amazed if in isolation it would result in a comprehensive audit.
So would I. But again an impression has been created that LPT non-compliance (in which I personally would count evasive undervaluation) will feed into the REAP system.
And rightly so, why shouldn't it?!
For anyone unfamiliar with it, here's the description of REAP from Revenue's Code of Practice:
Risk Evaluation Analysis and Profiling – REAP
REAP is Revenue's risk analysis system. It risk-rates Revenue’s customer base providing coverage across all the main taxes and duties. 'Risk' in this context means the risk posed to Revenue's core business of 'collecting the right tax and duty at the right time'. REAP has been designed to analyse a vast amount of data (including third party data) that Revenue has on tax and duty cases and to attribute scores based on the level of risk they pose. It prioritises cases based on risk, enabling Revenue to target its attention on those who need it most and minimizing contact with compliant customers. It focuses on a customer's track record rather than single returns; it ensures fairness by applying the same rules to all cases.
These rules have been derived from the collective knowledge and experience of Revenue auditors.
To infer from the mere use of the word audit (in a conversation which presumably was exclusively about the LPT), that Revenue were threatening comprehensive audits, is IMHO hysterical, and again confirms what I said at the outset a few posts ago - people are losing the run of themselves over this.
'Why would anyone's accountant value their property?'
Would they not give an opinion to their client on the accuracy of the figures submitted to revenue?
So LPT non-compliance will or won't increase the chances of a comprehensive audit?
Tommy, what would be wrong if an accountant offered an opinion on a figure that one of their clients submitted or was about to submit to revenue. Accountants would have the same tools at their disposal as their clients are using.
Tommy, what would be wrong if an accountant offered an opinion on a figure that one of their clients submitted or was about to submit to revenue. Accountants would have the same tools at their disposal as their clients are using.
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