Create a free account, or log in

Treasury launches e-invoicing solution to pay SMEs within five days

Treasury has officially adopted a fully integrated e-invoicing solution, enabling businesses to be paid within five days.
Shannon Jenkins
Shannon Jenkins
Treasury
Source: AAP/Lukas Coch.

The Department of Treasury has officially adopted a fully integrated electronic invoicing solution, enabling businesses to be paid within five days.

In October, the federal government announced all Commonwealth agencies must adopt e-invoicing by July 2021, as part of its COVID-19 recovery plan to support the uptake of technology across the economy.

The Treasury on Friday went live with its e-invoicing solution, provided by Australian software company TechnologyOne and Adelaide startup Link4.

TechnologyOne has been working with Treasury and the Australian Tax Office for more than a year to develop a highly secure solution, while Link4 secured a contract with Treasuryย in September.

Council of Small Business Organisations of Australia CEO Peter Strong said e-invoicing could make the lives of business owners easier.

โ€œIt should be noted that it is small business associations and the software industry who have led the way in getting e-invoicing onto the business and governmentโ€™s agenda,โ€ he said in a statement.

โ€œNow, more than ever, Australian small businesses need e-invoicing.

โ€œLast year, we were saying e-invoicing was the future. Itโ€™s now the present, and itโ€™s great to see Treasury is truly leading by example.

โ€œItโ€™s also very pleasing to see the federal government putting their โ€˜buy localโ€™ message into action by choosing an Australian company like TechnologyOne, to lead the charge.

โ€œE-invoicing is about less stress for small business folk and more time to run the business or spend time with family.โ€

Early last year, Prime Minister Scott Morrison and New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced they intended to adopt the Pan-European Public Procurement Online (PEPPOL) interoperability framework โ€” an internationally-recognised framework for e-invoicing โ€” and established e-invoicing board ANZEIB.

The federal government passed legislation allowing Australia to implement the PEPPOL framework in September 2019.

Assistant Treasurer Michael Sukkar recentlyย launched a consultation paperย on the proposed options to accelerate eโ€‘invoicing adoption by businesses. Submissions close on January 18.

โ€œIn Australia, over 1.2 billion invoices are exchanged annually with almost 90% of small and medium business still processing paper-based invoices,โ€ he said.

โ€œWhen an e-invoice replaces a paper invoice, the businesses involved could share savings of up to $20 per invoice.

โ€œThese reforms have the potential to deliver significant economic benefits for businesses and the wider Australian economy.

โ€œThe Morrison government expects that it will become common practice for businesses to be able to use e-invoicing when dealing with all three levels of government.โ€

This article was first published by The Mandarin.