HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) is to
invest £156m over the next five years in an IT change programme to increase
clerical accuracy, productivity and performance as well as reducing costs.
A report published today
by the National Audit Office (NAO) says a push to automate clerical
processes at the department has already been successful in reducing error
levels.
The £156m investment is aimed at delivering efficiency savings equivalent
to 3,000 full-time staff, says the report.
Modernised IT systems are also expected to deliver annual revenue benefits of
at least £300m, including reduced levels of error in tax coding and calculation.
The main aim of the IT transformation is the automation of PAYE processes by
integrating systems to provide a complete view of an individuals’ tax affairs by
creating a single customer record.
It is hoped that the single customer view will eliminate errors and improve
the speed of processing, as well as improving customer service through better
resolution of customer queries.
The programme also includes developing an early warning system for emerging
processing problems and separating out the more complex cases for processing.
A major challenge for the transformation project includes linking and
extracting information from separate legacy systems to carry out the overall
integration process.
According to the NAO report, HMRC wrongly taxed one million people in the
year to April 2007 due to clerical errors.
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