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Appendix B: Australia’s new Resale Royalty Scheme—how will it work?
Form of legislation
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A
resale royalty right will be introduced through stand-alone legislation to
ensure artists and art market professionals fully understand their rights and
obligations.
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Application
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Prospective
application – the royalty will be applied only to resales of original works
of visual art sold through the secondary art market where the seller has
acquired the work after the legislation takes effect. It will not be
restricted just to works created after the scheme starts.
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Nature
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The
right will be inalienable and unable to be waived.
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Entitlement
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Royalties
are to be paid to artists who are Australian citizens or permanent residents,
or their heirs.
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Definition of work of art
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The
right will cover original works of graphic or plastic art, such as a
painting, a collage, a drawing, a limited edition print, a sculpture, a
ceramic, an item of glassware or a photograph. This definition reflects
similar arrangements in the EU.
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Duration of right
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It
will cover works being resold during an artist’s lifetime and for 70 years
after the artist’s death.
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Liability
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Joint
and several liability – where the seller and the other ‘relevant person’ in
the resale are jointly and severally liable to pay. The ‘relevant person’ is
taken to be, in sequence, the agent of the seller, or the agent of the buyer,
or, the buyer. This arrangement works effectively in the UK.
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Definition of resale
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The
scheme will include all resales involving art market professionals, public
institutions or organisations, and all resales subsequent to the first
transfer of ownership, regardless of whether the first transfer was made by
sale, gift or any other means.
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Rate
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Royalty
to be calculated on a flat rate of 5%, uncapped.
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Threshold
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The
minimum resale price before a royalty is imposed will be $1000.
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Administration
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The
scheme will be managed by a single collecting organisation, appointed by the
Australian Government following an open tender selection process.
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International reciprocity
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Works
by Australian artists sold overseas may also be eligible for royalty payments
under the multilateral copyright treaty, the Berne Convention for the
Protection of Literary and Artistic Works.
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Other
countries that acknowledge a resale royalty right for visual artists:
Algeria,
Austria, Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Congo, Costa Rica,
Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Ecuador, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany,
Greece, Guinea, Holy See, Hungary, Italy, Ireland, Ivory Coast, Latvia,
Lithuania, Luxembourg, Madagascar, Mali, Malta, Mongolia, Morocco, Netherlands,
Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russian Federation,
Senegal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Tunisia, Turkey, United Kingdom and
Uruguay.
Prospective
application
Prospective
application means the new resale royalty right will apply to the resale of all
works of art acquired after the legislation comes into effect.
It
does not mean the resale royalty right applies only to works created after
the legislation comes into effect. Resales of existing works of art acquired
after the right commences, including works by deceased artists, will be covered
by the scheme.
This
is to ensure that buyers of works of art make their purchases with the knowledge
that a royalty may be payable if they decide to re-sell works.
Examples
of how the prospective resale royalty right will work
Deceased estate
A
sculpture created in 1994 by a now-deceased artist and first purchased in 1995
sells at auction for $800,000 in August 2009, after the resale royalty right
legislation has come into effect.
There
will be no royalty payable to the artist on this sale, as it is the first
transfer of ownership of the work following the introduction of the resale
royalty right.
The
same sculpture is sold again through a dealer in July 2010 for $900,000. This
second sale triggers a royalty payment of $45,000 (less administration costs) which
would be paid to the heir of the deceased artist.
Inheritance
A
collector who had purchased a limited edition etching in 2001 for $5,000 dies
in 2010, after the resale royalty right legislation comes into effect, and
leaves the etching to her son in her will.
In
2012, the son sells the etching at auction for $7,000. This resale triggers a
royalty payment to the artist of $350 (less administration costs), as the
seller (the son) had acquired the work following the introduction of the resale
right.
Indigenous art
In
July 2009, after the resale royalty right legislation has come into effect, a
gallery owner negotiates with an Indigenous art centre the outright purchase of
a range of works. One canvas is purchased for $10,000.
The
gallery owner puts the work up for sale at an exhibition in December 2009, and
the canvas is purchased by an investor for $16,000.
A royalty payment to
the artist of $800 (less administration costs) is triggered as the gallery
owner acquired the work following the introduction of the resale right.
Source: Fact
Sheet, Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts
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