Where the amount claimed as a deduction represents a waiver or partial waiver for reasons other than the financial position of the debtor, the deduction may be inadmissible. Typical circumstances in which the deduction may be open to challenge include those where:
It may, however, be found that the amount waived, while inadmissible as a bad or doubtful debt, is admissible as representing a special discount or trade allowance.
If the debtor is habitually a slow payer, and there are no grounds to believe his financial position has changed, then we would not accept that the length of time a debt has been outstanding is on its own sufficient reason to regard it as doubtful. A provision made on these grounds cannot be considered as being ‘estimated to be bad'.