
ATO readies contingency plans despite low relief uptake
The Australian Taxation Office has finalised contingency frameworks to address potential economic deterioration, even as initial data reveals a surprisingly low uptake of government-sanctioned tax relief.
Despite the Middle Eastern conflict and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz driving oil prices above US$100 a barrel, ATO Second Commissioner Jeremy Hirschhorn confirmed that interest in concessions remains limited to the "low thousands"—a fraction of Australia’s four million small businesses.
Following Treasurer Jim Chalmers’ April announcement of temporary relief for firms struggling with surging costs, the ATO is currently operating under "Stage 2" of the national fuel crisis response.
The phase focuses on expanded administrative concessions, such as more generous payment plans and the remission of interest, rather than the massive fiscal injections seen during the pandemic.
Hirschhorn noted that while the agency is ready to "dust off" systems used for JobKeeper, any large-scale intervention remains "well down the path".
A cautious approach dominates the ATO's strategy, informed by NSW Treasury research into "zombie businesses".
Officials warned that excessive leniency can be "cruel in the longer term" by eroding tax discipline and artificially sustaining unviable entities.
With employment exposure to such businesses particularly high in the mining and agriculture sectors, the ATO is balancing immediate support with long-term fiscal stability.
The agency maintains a streamlined digital portal for affected firms to flag interest, ensuring that institutional knowledge from past crises is leveraged without prematurely distorting the market.