Federal Central Tax Office Explained

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Agency Name:Federal Central Tax Office
Nativename:Bundeszentralamt für Steuern (BZSt)
Jurisdiction:Government of Germany
Headquarters:Bonn
Employees:2,200
Chief1 Name:Maren Kohlrust-Schulz
Chief1 Position:President
Parent Agency:Federal Ministry of Finance
Website:bzst.de

The Federal Central Tax Office (German: Bundeszentralamt für Steuern, abbreviated BZSt) is a German federal agency responsible for administering various sections of the country's tax code. It was created out of its current parent agency, the Federal Ministry of Finance, on 1 January 2006 and has approximately 2,200 employees.[1]

Beginning in July 2007, the BZSt began issuing a unique National identification number to every resident, replacing the formerly decentralized system. The BZSt also operates informational databases relating to the local tax offices.

Departments

The Federal Tax Auditing Departments I, II and III employ approximately 500 auditors, who are responsible for reviewing the roughly 15,000 concerns incorporated in Germany.

To increase efficiency and effectiveness in the administration of taxes, the Regulatory Impact Assessment, Risk Management, and Reporting departments are being expanded.

Offices

The BZSt's main offices are in Bonn in the district of Beuel at An der Küppe 1 and Platanenweg 33. Additional offices are in Berlin, Saarlouis, and Schwedt/Oder.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Über uns . . n.d. . bzst.de . de . 2014-09-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140921053003/http://www.bzst.de/DE/Ueber_Uns/ueber_uns_node.html . 2014-09-21 . dead .