The activities that need to be suppressed can vary according to the reason for suppression - for example, if a tax authority receives notice that a bankruptcy proceeding is in place that affects taxes owed, penalty and interest (P&I) calculation and overdue processing activity must be suppressed until the bankruptcy case is closed.
In most cases, processing is put on hold starting at the suppression's start date and resumes on the suppression's release date. Penalty and interest calculations are an exception to this, as P&I may be recalculated to accommodate retroactive changes to the obligation's balance. Refer to How Suppression Affects Penalty and Interest for more details on P&I specific processing.
A suppression event does not actively "hold" work but rather affects how the associated processes work . It is the responsibility of the associated processes to consider effective suppressions whenever actions are initiated. The way in which suppression affects processing can differ according to the activity being suppressed. For example:
P&I provides the ability to turn off P&I rules for the suppressed period
Overdue Processing has a plug-in designed to hold event activation
Business object -based processes such as overpayment processing need algorithms that suppress actions like state transitions
The system provides sample algorithms that can be used to suppress some common activities. Refer to Configuring Overdue Processes For Suppression, Configuring Overpayment Processes For Suppression, and Configuring Obligation Types For P&I Suppression for a description of how these processes can be suppressed.
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