NOW and TVL mainly went to businesses with high turnover losses
The micro data we used also show that the uptake of NOW and TVL from the second quarter of 2020 until the second quarter of 2021 was concentrated with businesses suffering a relatively large turnover loss compared to previous years. Both high-performing and underperforming businesses have benefited from NOW and TVL. The fear that the support would mainly go to underperforming businesses therefore appears to be unfounded. At the same time, its use is not limited to businesses in sectors that have been hit hard by the coronavirus crisis. Businesses with heavy turnover losses in less affected sectors have also benefited from the support. After all, the schemes were designed (depending on the period) in such a way that all businesses with high turnover losses could apply for the scheme, regardless of their sector. As a result, part of the support may have been distributed ineffectively.
Tax deferral less targeted
Also in the case of the coronavirus-related tax deferral, we see that businesses in sectors that were hit relatively hard by the coronavirus crisis make use of the scheme more frequently and for higher amounts on average. Figure 2 shows the distribution of the outstanding tax deferral at 3 September 2021 for the ten hardest hit sectors and the ten sectors that were least affected by the coronavirus crisis. While an average of 43% of businesses from the hardest hit sectors have applied for tax deferral, this is only 18% on average for those sectors that were least affected by the crisis. The median amount of outstanding coronavirus-related tax deferrals is almost 25% higher in the hard-hit sectors. However, a large part of the tax deferral also goes to businesses that have been hit relatively mildly by the coronavirus crisis and, in contrast to the measures from the support package, relatively often to underperforming businesses. The difference between the tax deferral on the one hand and NOW and TVL on the other suggests that a turnover threshold, which was not used for the tax deferral, may be an important contribution to targeting the measure.
Tax deferral may also lead to payment problems
A relatively large part of the tax debt is owed by businesses whose past profitability may not be sufficient to repay the debt without any difficulties. In hard-hit sectors, 53% of businesses that benefited from a tax deferral are exposed to a high risk of payment problems, while this is as high as 73% for sectors that were affected only mildly by the coronavirus crisis. A high risk means that these businesses must use more than half of their pre-pandemic gross monthly profit for a period of five years in order to repay the coronavirus-related tax debt. These figures indicate that the scheme mainly benefits the less profitable businesses in the sectors that have only mildly been affected by the coronavirus crisis and thus potentially distorts healthy economic dynamics. However, by no means have all businesses made use of the tax deferral option. The businesses that are at high risk of running into tax debt repayment problems make up 7.5% of the total number of businesses in our data. Viable businesses with a high outstanding debt or tax debt may need debt restructuring for the healthy continuation of business activities. We therefore welcome the Tax and Customs Administration's announcement that it will be more lenient in amicable settlements and the Act on the Confirmation of Out-of-Court Restructuring Plans (Wet homologatie onderhands akkoord - WHOA)as of August 2022. In order to cushion a possible increase in the number of debt rescheduling agreements, it is important that the government identifies potential bottlenecks and resolves them if necessary. These bottlenecks can occur, for example, in the judiciary, in debt restructuring practice, in debt counselling and in the Tax and Customs Administration.