Monday, April 18, 2011

Time to give consumers more protection

Last Friday the Assistant Treasurer, Bill Shorten, released the Discussion Paper he referred to at our National Tax Conference last week, exploring the merits of granting professional accountants access to a form of legal privilege over the tax advice they provide to their clients.

For those of you following this policy debate, you’ll remember that in 2008 the Australian Law Reform Commission handed down a report called Client Legal Privilege in Federal Investigations, which concluded that a new form of legal privilege, tax advice privilege, should be created under statute and granted to professional accountants. Successive government ministers since the time of that report have shied away from tackling the issue and taking it forward. But fortunately, the Assistant Treasurer has decided that it’s time to dust-off the report and test the merits of the proposal.

The Discussion Paper explores the genesis of the policy proposal, and acknowledges some of the arguments both for and against implementing a new tax advice privilege.

In essence, the substance of this issue really boils down to one central policy question: should consumers have access to the same legal protections and safeguards regardless of whether they seek tax advice from a lawyer or an accountant? If the answer is yes – and I believe it is – then we must direct energy towards identifying the best way to implement a model that delivers on that policy objective.

Over the coming weeks the Institute will be working closely with its members, as well as the legal profession, to discuss the proposal and a present sensible way forward to implement the changes. Please feel free to post a comment with your thoughts or suggestions on this issue.

This could mark the beginning of one of the most significant changes to the way in which Chartered Accountants provide tax advice - and in the end, it's taxpayers who stand to gain the most.

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