
Meet John Adam: he turned 18 years old in 2012 and registered to the Personal Income Tax (PIT) at the Tax authority of his country.
John is created as a business partner (BP). One contract account (CA) of type PIT and one contract object (CO) of type "Fiscal Id" are also created and assigned to him. A tax obligation (TOBL) is also created: it defines the periodicity and the validity dates of the tax obligation of a business partner for a specific tax type on a specific contract object. In our example, John Adam is an annual PIT taxpayer from 02.11.2012.
The Taxpayer Overview transaction displays as follows:
Remark: registration is supported in standard SAP TRM by a registration form bundle.
Now meet Jane Doe, she also turned 18 years on the same year as John and she has registered to PIT as well. She also got her driving license and bought a second-hand car. She is then registered to the Vehicle tax (VHT).
In our example, Jane Doe is a PIT taxpayer from 29.10.2012 and a VHT taxpayer from 19.12.2012.
Both types of taxes are supported in SAP TRM/PSCD. A contract object is required to support inbound correspondence management in FBT (invitation to file sent by the tax authority to the taxpayers) or store tax-specific data for tax calculation in OBT.
The Taxpayer Overview transaction displays Jane Doe as follows:
The screenshot below depicts the user interface of the tax agent to process the PIT submission of Jane Doe:
Remark: In our VHT example we only consider one car but Jane could have several cars, each one represented by a contract object, and each linked to the same one and only contract account.
For the sake of simplicity, we consider that due amounts resulting from tax assessment are posted on the existing triplet BP-CA-CO. It is wise to consider the creation of a specific contract object for each yearly tax assessment, especially in consideration of the interest calculation rules on overdue amounts that may be applied by the tax authority.
Jane and John then meet and it's love at first sight. They get married early on the 21st of May 2013.
Jane and John are defined as "individual" business partners. This means that fields like "date of birth", "gender" or "date of death" are available for entry.
A business partner of type "group" is created to represent the household, it represents a group of business partners or a group entity in itself. A contract account and a contract object are created to support the joint PIT assessment process. A tax obligation is defined to set the start of the tax obligation of the household from 21.05.2013. Finally, an end date is set to 20.05.2013 on the tax obligation on each individual PIT taxpayer (Jane and John). In addition to the tax obligation, a business partner relationship is set between each member of the household and the household itself. This BP relationship has a start validity date on the 21.05.2013. The BP relationship is used to track the history of the business partners. It can also be used to track fraud by allowing crosschecks between related business partners' tax returns.
First, the tax obligation is ended on the 20th May 2013 for both John and Jane on their respective PIT tax obligation.
Note the facts that
The VHT on Jane's car remains her sole responsibility and no change is done to his tax obligation.
The Taxpayer Overview transaction displays the happy couple as follows:
Tab "Relationship" provides the link between the two individual business partners
Jane's relationships are updated as well
Trustees and tax advisors of taxpayers are also represented with business partner relationships.
The tax officer is then able to process tax submission of corporate income tax from the Taxpayer Overview as well:
So far we demonstrated that each life event of taxpayers can easily be represented in SAP TRM.
You must be a registered user to add a comment. If you've already registered, sign in. Otherwise, register and sign in.
User | Count |
---|---|
7 | |
2 | |
1 | |
1 | |
1 | |
1 | |
1 | |
1 | |
1 | |
1 |