Title: Improving Revenue Collections through Debt Management
1(No Transcript)
2- Improving Revenue Collections through Debt
Management - SARS Case Study
3SARS BACKGROUND
- SARS Key mandate
- The South African Revenue Service Act No 34 of
1997 gives the entity the mandate to perform the
following tasks - Collect all revenues that are due
- Ensure maximum compliance to the legislation
- Provide a customer service that will maximize
revenue collection, protect the countrys borders
as well as facilitate trade in the country.
4SARS AT A GLANCE
5Case Study Debt Management
- SARS battles daily with an enormous debt burden
due to the failure of certain taxpayers to meet
their fiscal obligation
6Role of Debt Management
- The role of debt management is defined as the day
to day management of the total debt function of
SARS (Customs and Revenue) debtors book as well
as all outstanding returns
7Debt Management Actions
- Debt management actions can be defined as
- All credit risk management functions as well as
appropriate action per case whether friendly
notice or legal action. - Constant evaluation of SARS processes with
international best practices to ensure an optimal
approach to credit risk management. - Credit risk management is highly dependent on
intelligence - Intelligence and related information therefore is
the cornerstone of the debt function.
8SARS Debt Book
9Debt Management Achievements
10Debt Book
- What SARS has done over the years in response to
the growing debt book
11Debt Management Prior to 2000
- No specialisation with regards to different
categories of debt - Followed separate tax type approach
- No strategy
- Administrative method
- Manual driven
- No target setting
- No Call Centre intervention
- No legal assistance
- Poor management
- No reconciliations of accounts
- No segregation of duties
- No emphasis on finalisation of cases,
- Emphasis on easy collections
12Debt Management 2000 to 2005
- Negatives
- Admin focused staff with poor collections skills
- No case management and tracking system
- Limited focus on debt management and write off of
bad debt - The emphasis was on cherry picking of cases and
collections of easy money
13Debt Management 2000 to 2005
- Positive
- Establishment of the Enforcement Division
- Targets and KPI setting
- Introduction of an online debt management system
which is partially manual driven - Dedicated teams to focus on different categories
of debt - Different focus areas according to the age of the
debt - Integrated tax type approach
- Introduction of a collections manual to
assist/guide collectors - Introduction of collections training
14Debt Management 2000 to 2005
- Positives
- Legal assistance to collectors at all branches
- Dedicated tracing and prosecution departments to
assist collections - Split in collections and account maintenance
- Introduction of a the new debt management process
- Introduction of an internal call centre
- Introduction of three debt management projects to
reduce the debt book - Debt above R1 million
- Coded Debt
- Debt older than 24 months
15Debt Management 2006 to present
- Utilisation on write offs to manage bad debt
- Shift in focus from collection of easy money to
debt management - Refining the internal call centre
- Refining different focus areas and debt
categories - Refining the three debt management projects
16Debt Management Categories
- The manner in which debt arises informs the
manner in which SARS responds to collecting the
debt. Collections activities are categorised as
follows - Assessment Debt Debt arising as a result of
activities undertaken by Assessing typically an
assessment that remains unpaid past the due date - Enforcement Debt Debt arising as a result of
activities undertaken by Enforcement i.e. audit
conducted
17Debt Management Categories
- Customs Debt Debt arising as a result of
activities undertaken by Customs enforcement
activity i.e. a demand for payment with
attached schedule - Current Debt Debt inevitably arises within a
current financial year as a result of SARS
activities - Old Debt Debt not collected within the current
year is carried over to the next financial year - Collectors are allocated to various focus areas
based on skills and experience
18What we aimed for New Debt Management Process
- Significant improvement in both efficiency and
revenue collection via the debt collections
process - Objectives
- Efficient billing and accounting systems
- Ensure correctness of taxpayer data
- Recognize debt earlier
- Emphasis on telephone contact with taxpayers via
the use of the outbound call centre - Tracing taxpayers upfront
- Partnering with other stakeholders to improve
contact ability e.g. ITC, NATIS, Deeds, Mapnet
and others - Eliminate waste in core and support processes
- Profile cases and skills for enhanced collections
performance - Streamline end-to-end processes
19Current Debt Management Process
20Current Debt Collections System (Online Debt)
- Online system introduced to manage outstanding
payments - Roll-out piloted in Cape Town before being rolled
out nationwide - System customised for SARS accounts
- System responsible for
- Debt holding
- Case allocation and management
- Case tracking
- Reporting on debt
- KPI reports
21Where we come from other systems (Policies and
Procedures)
- Debt Collections or recoveries was governed by
Treasury Regulations - Regulations were rigid and not relevant to the
new debt management environment - Other guidelines were contained in regulations
for various acts e.g. prescription period - Difficult for ease of reference because they were
scattered all over
22Current Debt Management Policies and Procedures
- Debt Collections Manual finalised in 2002 with
the aim of - Creating a uniform collections policy
- Getting the debt into SARS bank account as
quickly as possible - Minimise deferred payments
- To encourage staff to initiate legal action
- These policies and procedures were updated to
make it relevant to the current debt management
environment in 2004
23Other instruments that SARS have at its disposal
- Garnishee orders/Appointment of Agents
- Employers
- Banks
- Vendors
- Representative taxpayer
- Individuals
- Exclusive litigation process
24Credit Assessment Policy in granting deferred
payment arrangement
- Credit Risk Profiling is not done upfront because
of forced debtors - In between credit assessment/vetting is done on
- Customs deferments
- Customs accreditation
- Deferment of outstanding payments
25Policy in granting deferred payment arrangement
- No deferment granted on certain taxes if
taxpayers have defaulted on trust money unless in
exceptional cases - All deferment applications from the taxpayer
should be in writing with reasons why a once off
payment can not be made - No telephonic deferments granted above a certain
threshold and certain taxes - Deferments may only be granted by Debt Management
departments
26Policy in granting deferred payment arrangement
- For a deferment to be considered, information
statement should be provided by the taxpayer in
the prescribed template (Cash flow, Income and
Expenditure, Assets and Liabilities statements) - A bank statement for the last three consecutive
months must accompany the application - In certain circumstances security against the
debt may be demanded as a condition of deferment
27Future Consideration
- Distinguish between pre-debt/revenue management
and delinquent Management - Integration of the call centre into the debt
management process - Automatic prioritization of debt according to
pre-defined allocation rules without human
intervention - Pull instead of push approach to allocating cases
- capacity based instead of allocation of ALL
cases - Improving the technical and management skill of
staff - SARS to do correct billing and accounts
management
28Future Consideration
- Introduce quality systems
- Credit Risk Profiling
- Introduce and optimize workflow and electronic
authorizations to minimize human dependent
handovers and time traps - Reduce the paper load (Admin work) through
scanning and imaging - Manage liquidations
29THANK YOU