Skip to content
Business Company News

Legislation to deny deductions to general interest charge must be reconsidered, says CPA Australia

CPA Australia 3 mins read

28 January 2025

Legislation to deny deductions to general interest charge must be reconsidered, says CPA Australia

  • The tax laws and incentive bill to deny deductions for general interest charge and short fall interest charge should be amended.
  • All submissions were effectively ignored by Treasury, with the government deciding to go ahead with this blanket indiscriminate policy.
  • ATO facing criticism from CPA Australia members for long delays in service delivery and uncertainty of inconsistent outcomes on GIC remission requests.

CPA Australia is strongly urging the Senate Economics Legislation Committee to reconsider the government’s proposed denial of general interest charge (GIC) and shortfall interest charge (SIC) measures and not pass the Bill without amendments.

CPA Australia’s Tax Lead, Jenny Wong, says the Bill to remove deductions for the general interest charge will have a devastating impact on small businesses already grappling high interest rates and inflation.

“We have previously expressed significant concerns regarding the disproportionate impact on small businesses and sheer lack of fairness on taxpayers with cash-flow troubles,’ says Ms Wong

“It’s very disappointing that our submission in September containing amendments to the Exposure Draft to address these critical issues has simply been ignored.

“All submissions were effectively ignored by Treasury and the Government has decided to go with this indiscriminate policy of denying GIC/SIC deductions for everyone, rather than targeting those with high tax debt accounts.

“Introducing a blanket policy instead of a targeted measure to address accounts with high levels of tax debt is indiscriminate and punitive.

“With interest rates as high as they are, this will disproportionately affect businesses with cash flow issues, particularly sole traders on the highest marginal tax rate.

“You have to question if this really is about repaying outstanding tax debt, or just a penalty on taxpayers struggling to do the right thing and meet their obligations. The impact on existing tax debt is very concerning.”

Ms Wong highlights that, during the COVID-19 pandemic, governments encouraged many businesses to delay their tax payments, with the ATO offering flexible payment arrangements.

“Good sense says that if businesses had known the GIC would later become non-deductible, they might have made quite different financial decisions,” she says,

“For tax-paying small companies, the non-deductibility of GIC effectively raises the penalty rate by 25%. For sole traders, it potentially increases the penalty rate by up to 47% depending on their marginal tax rate. This significant increase could put additional financial pressure on businesses already struggling, and it may force directors to question the viability of their operations.

“By making these interest costs on tax debts non-deductible, the proposal risks accelerating the accumulation of tax liabilities of small businesses to unsustainable levels, potentially threatening the viability of many small businesses.”

This measure comes at a time when the ATO faces criticism from CPA Australia members for long delays in service delivery and the uncertainty of inconsistent outcomes on GIC remission requests.

“The ATO’s operational challenges also adds fuel to argument that the proposal to deny deductions for GIC/SIC unfairly penalise taxpayers who may already face delays in obtaining certainty and assistance from the ATO,” said Ms Wong.

“Taxpayers can be misled when comparing interest rates as they will not necessarily be aware of the additional costs, much like hidden fees in financial products.

“In the interest of transparency and fairness to taxpayers, repayments should be encouraged through a higher GIC/SIC margin rather than hidden costs that are realised through tax assessments.”


About us:

About CPA Australia   

CPA Australia is Australia’s leading professional accounting body and one of the largest in the world. We have more than 173,000 members in over 100 countries and regions. Our core services include education, training, technical support and advocacy. CPA Australia provides thought leadership on local, national and international issues affecting the accounting profession and public interest. We engage with governments, regulators and industries to advocate policies that stimulate sustainable economic growth and have positive business and public outcomes. Find out more at cpaaustralia.com.au


Contact details:

Simon Downes, External Affairs Lead, [email protected] or 0401 461 503

Media

More from this category

  • Business Company News, Oil Mining Resources
  • 15/12/2025
  • 10:22
Jane Morgan Management

Resolution Minerals appoints Chief Metallurgist to accelerate U.S. critical minerals processing strategy

Adelaide, Australia – Resolution Minerals Ltd (ASX:RML; OTCQB:RLMLF) (“Resolution”) has strengthened its U.S.-aligned downstream critical minerals strategy with the appointment of Dr Adam Roper as Chief Metallurgist – Critical Metals Extraction, a senior technical role focused on advancing processing pathways for antimony, tungsten and gold from the Company’s Horse Heaven Project in Idaho, USA. Dr Roper brings extensive experience in complex metallurgical processing, flowsheet development and pilot-to-production scale programs across strategic and critical minerals. His appointment significantly enhances Resolution’s capability to design and commercialise modern, U.S.-based extraction, refining and processing solutions at a time when American defence and industry demand…

  • Contains:
  • Business Company News, Oil Mining Resources
  • 15/12/2025
  • 10:12
Jane Morgan Management

Locksley Resources (ASX:LKY) Appoints Former U.S. Military Leader as Strategic Advisor to Advance Defence and Critical Minerals Strategy

15 December 2025 – Perth, Australia | Locksley Resources Limited (ASX: LKY / OTCQX: LKYRF / ADR: LKYLY) has strengthened its engagement with the United States defence, national security and critical minerals sector with the announcements of its appointment of Lieutenant General (Ret.) Mark C. Schwartz as Strategic Advisor – U.S. Government Initiatives. Lieutenant General Schwartz brings more than 33 years of senior U.S. military leadership experience, including service as U.S. Security Coordinator for Israel and the Palestinian Authority, Commander of Special Operations Command – Europe, Deputy Commanding General of Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), and Deputy Commander of Special…

  • Contains:
  • Business Company News, Defence
  • 15/12/2025
  • 10:00
Jane Morgan Management

Amaero Limited (ASX:3DA) Receives US Navy Letter of Support Validating PM-HIP Manufacturing for Maritime Industrial Base

Amaero Limited (ASX:3DA, OTC:AMROF) has today announced it has received a Letter of Support from the United States Department of the Navy, recognising the Company’s powder metallurgy hot isostatic pressing (PM-HIP) manufacturing technology as a viable alternative to traditional castings and forgings for the Maritime Industrial Base. The Letter of Support follows an 18-month development collaboration between Amaero and the US Department of the Navy, which demonstrated Amaero’s strong and differentiated technical capability in PM-HIP manufacturing of near-net-shape components. This collaboration delivered notable advances in material behaviour modelling, geometric precision and process development. The Navy acknowledged PM-HIP as a mature…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.