I just got a letter from revenue that I owe them 190 euro from 2006. They also say I need to pay a surcharge of 240 euro.
Does this seem unusual to anyone? It seems a bit unfair to just drop this one one me! Are the Govt resorting to this due to the dire state of their finances?
Current revenue policy appears to be to apply extremely harsh penalties for simple mistakes if you are self employed. This presumably is much less effort for them than actually bothering to track down people who do not make any declarations at all.
They argue this encourages compliance but it doesn't. Any more than hanging people for stealing cars would cut down on joyriding.
I presume you have an axe to grind if you're resurrecting a thread that petered out over a week ago...?
I presume you have an axe to grind if you're resurrecting a thread that petered out over a week ago...?
Do you work for the Revenue or something mandelbrot?
A good rule of thumb is to always remember the Revenue are the enemy. Never trust them or expect to be treated fairly.
If you work for the Revenue then you are not impartial.Sorry, what does it matter who I work for?
If you work for the Revenue then you are not impartial.
So you do work for the Revenue then?Or maybe I'm even less trustworthy because I've switched sides?!
I didn't make any reference to any other section of the public sector, just the Revenue. This thread is about dealing with the Revenue, and my advice is to remember that they are the enemy. They are, after all, out to extract as much money as possible.Are Revenue your enemy because you don't want to fulfil your end of the social contract, or is it the whole public sector, for stealing your money to pay their wages
Are you familiar with this Revenue policy? Can you provide specific examples of what you're talking about? How harsh is "extremely harsh" in your opinion? And what do you mean by simple mistakes (example)? I presume you have an axe to grind if you're resurrecting a thread that petered out over a week ago...?
Let's say I earned 500K a year (I wish) and so had a liability of I don't know say 200K. I pay myself as a PAYE employee of my own company which is fully up to date in all PAYE and VAT returns. I have overpaid tax in the year in question. But I forgot to file my return and was 2 months late filing my return so I am fined €20,000. Does this sound reasonable to you?
If I am lucky I can get this overturned but there is no policy that guarantees me that I will. If I get the wrong official on the wrong day or maybe I get the wrong TD to "put in a good word" or whatever the fine sticks and policy says they can make it stick and the appeals process and the review process all support it.
Is this policy reasonable, consistent, unbiased, fair and equitable?
I didn't make any reference to any other section of the public sector, just the Revenue. This thread is about dealing with the Revenue, and my advice is to remember that they are the enemy. They are, after all, out to extract as much money as possible.
With regards 'Social Contract', I did not enter into any 'Social Contract'.
I pay my taxes not because of any perceived 'Social Contract' but because if I do not, then there will be menaces. I would rather not pay any taxes at all because I believe my tax money is misappropriated. However, I'm forced to pay, so I do. I am fully tax compliant.
I think it's not a policy change thats needed, its a legislative one.
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