HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) is
postponing the launch of its new
PAYE payroll tax
systems because of concerns it would not be able to handle sufficient
information by its October start date.
A new date has not yet been set for the system launch a key part of HMRC’s
efficiency drive to save £11.5bn by 2011.
Higher levels of automation have led to greater transaction volumes than
originally forecast, said a spokesman for HMRC.
“We have decided to defer implementation while we make design changes to
accommodate the higher volumes,” he said.
A report last week by the National Audit
Office questioned whether HMRC’s overhaul would achieve the planned savings.
HMRC has also delayed the implementation of new compliance and enforcement,
enterprise infrastructure and government banking systems all of which have an
IT element.
“According to the department’s risk monitoring, seven of the major programmes
at March 2008 had issues requiring attention to ensure delivery of the benefits
within the planned timescales,” says the NAO report.
The news comes in the same week that HMRC said it has fixed a security breach
revealed by Computing in the existing PAYE system which allowed a business
customer to see the personal details of another company.
In a letter to the affected customer, Mike Walker of the HMRC online customer
support team said: “An urgent investigation was commissioned to determine the
exact cause of the error you reported. Our in-depth investigation has identified
the root cause of the error that you encountered.”
The breach poured further embarrassment on the department in the same week it
was found guilty by the
Poynter
Review of “woefully inadequate” security procedures over the
loss
of 25 million child benefit records.
As a result of the review, HMRC will spend £155m on improving security over
the next three years.
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