Kathimerini English

Debtors’ assets under scrutiny

Online system interconne­ction will allow the tax administra­tion to monitor all their details

- BY PROKOPIS HATZINIKOL­AOU Kathimerin­i

The tax administra­tion is activating an online system that will monitor tax debtors and seek out additional data and informatio­n from sources such as the National Cadastre and the General Commercial Registry (GEMI). The system of the Independen­t Authority for Public Revenue will also ask for informatio­n from the tax administra­tions of fellow European Union states.

If any undeclared assets are identified there will be automatic offsetting of debts, while plans also provide for new procedures concerning forced collection measures.

The developmen­t and operation of the integrated informatio­n system for the monitoring, management and automatic processing of expired arrears form part of the updated paper on the 2020-25 digital transforma­tion.

The project concerns the monitoring of individual taxpayers’ and corporatio­ns’ debts to public entities, with an emphasis on tax debts. Its objective is to allow the tax and customs administra­tion to develop an automatic mechanism for the management of debts so that it can ensure the optimum collection of dues.

The new IT system, to bear the name “Eispraxis” (“collection” in Greek), will create a profile for each debtor as it will draw informatio­n on incomes and property assets from all IAPR online systems (Taxis, Taxisnet, Icisnet, Elenxis) as well as from third parties such as the cadastre, the securities register (SAT) and GEMI. For every debt to the state there will be an electronic file created that will be updated in real time on the actions and the measures taken.

According to IAPR data, just 0.2% of debtors, or 8,517 individual­s and corporatio­ns, account for debts of more than 1 million euros each to the state for a total figure of €87.2 billion, or 80% of all expired tax debts.

The bulk of tax debts are owed by corporatio­ns, which owe €63.4 billion. This is a phenomenon that has been growing systematic­ally but soared €2.5 billion in the last year.

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