Annual Compliance Arrangements with Large Corporate Taxpayers



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ANAO Report 2014-2015 05
United States of America
1.30 The United States Internal Revenue Service (IRS) developed the Compliance Assurance Process (CAP) in 2005. The CAP was developed to avoid years of uncertainty about a large corporation’s actual tax liability IRS audits of the tax returns lodged by large corporations were taking, on average, four years to complete. With the CAP, the IRS and taxpayers agree on how to report tax issues before their return is filed. Compliant and cooperative taxpayers can receive a streamlined IRS review of their tax return through its Compliance Maintenance process.
1.31 The United States Government Accountability Office (GAO) assessed the CAP process and in August 2013 released its report Corporate Taxi iCompliance: IRS Should Determine Whether Its Streamlined Corporate Audit Process
is Meeting Its Goals. The report noted that while anecdotal evidence indicated that CAPs maybe effective in ensuring compliance, increasing certainty and saving resources, the IRS had not succeeded at assessing whether or not the CAP was achieving its goals. Recommendations made by the GAO included that the IRS evaluate the process develop measures and targets for the goals and consistently capture data to track goal progress.
47
Netherlands
1.32 ACAs are similar to the horizontal monitoring approach undertaken by the Dutch Tax Administration. Horizontal monitoring is based on mutual trust, transparency and understanding, with respective roles and responsibilities set out in a mutual agreement.
46 ibid, p. 88.
47 GAO, Corporate Tax Compliance IRS Should Determine Whether Its Streamlined Corporate Audit
Process Is Meeting Its Goals, August 2013, p. 27. Background and Context
ANAO Report No 2014–15 Annual Compliance Arrangements with Large Corporate Taxpayers
39
1.33 In 2011, the Netherlands State Secretary for Finance established an independent Committee to evaluate the horizontal monitoring program to measure the results and success of the program and make recommendations for future development. The Committee released its report Tax
Supervision―Made to Measure in June 2012.
1.34 The report confirmed the advantages of greater transparency, speedier certainty and increased mutual understanding for the revenue body. As to whether compliance costs have decreased, the Committee observed satisfaction from taxpayers in the very large business segment, however, there was no empirical data to support this. The Committee recommended that appropriate performance indicators be developed as, on the information available, it could not answer the question of whether horizontal monitoring was effective and efficient.
48

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