Chapter 1 Introduction
Referral of the Bill
1.1
On 14 February 2013, the Selection Committee referred the Tax Laws
Amendment (Countering Tax Avoidance and Multinational Profit Shifting) Bill
2013 (the Bill) to the committee for inquiry and report.[1]
1.2
The Bill has two schedules. Broadly, they:
- amend Part IVA of the
Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936) with the aim of ensuring that
the Act continues to counter schemes that comply with the technical
requirements of the tax law but which, when viewed objectively, are conducted
in a particular way mainly to avoid tax (Schedule 1); and
- aim to modernise
Australia’s transfer pricing rules and provide a new, comprehensive and robust
transfer pricing regime that is aligned with internationally accepted
principles. The objective of these new transfer pricing rules is to ensure that
an appropriate return for the contribution of Australian operations of a
multinational group is taxable in Australia for the benefit of the broader
community (Schedule 2).
Origins and purpose of the Bill
Schedule 1 – General anti-avoidance
rules
Overview
1.3
As outlined in the Explanatory Memorandum (EM) ‘Schedule 1 to this Bill
amends Part IVA of the ITAA 1936 to ensure its effective operation as the
income tax general anti-avoidance provision’.[2] The EM states:
The principal role of Part IVA is to
counter arrangements that, objectively viewed, are carried out with the sole or
dominant purpose of securing a tax advantage for a taxpayer. Broadly speaking,
Part IVA operates to counter such arrangements by exposing the substance or
reality of the arrangements to the ordinary operation of the income tax law.[3]
1.4
The EM broadly summarises the purpose of Schedule 1 as follows:
Part IVA is the income tax law’s
general anti-avoidance rule that operates to protect the integrity of the tax
law from contrived or artificial arrangements designed to obtain a tax
advantage. Recent court cases have brought to light some weaknesses in Part IVA
that put at risk its capacity to properly perform that operation. The
amendments made by this Schedule ensure that Part IVA can continue to protect
the integrity of the income tax law.[4]
1.5
The EM describes the legislative history of the anti-avoidance
provisions of Part IVA of the ITAA 1936:
Part IVA was enacted in 1981 to
overcome deficiencies that judicial decisions had exposed in the operation of
the previous general anti-avoidance provision—section 260 of the ITAA 1936. The
explanatory memorandum accompanying Part IVA [in 1981] explained that Part IVA
was ‘designed to overcome’ the difficulties with section 260 and ‘provide —
with paramount force in the income tax law — an effective general measure
against those tax avoidance arrangements that — inexact though the words may be
in legal terms — are blatant, artificial or contrived’.[5]
1.6
The EM further states that these amendments are expected to prevent the
loss of over $1 billion a year. The EM maintains that ‘this Schedule is
compatible with human rights as it does not raise any human rights issues’.[6]
Context of amendments
1.7
The EM comments that ‘a number of recent decisions of the Full Federal
Court have revealed weaknesses in the way in which the tax benefit concept in
section 177C operates’.[7] Section 177C(1) relates
to whether a taxpayer obtained a tax benefit in connection with a ‘scheme’.
1.8
On 1 March 2012, the Government announced that it would introduce
amendments to ensure Part IVA continued to be effective in countering tax
avoidance schemes.[8] The context for these
amendments is explained in the EM as follows:
The Government’s announcement was
made after reviewing a number of judicial decisions, including the decision of
the Full Federal Court in RCI [2011] FCAFC 104, handed down on 22 August
2011. The High Court dismissed the Commissioner’s application for special leave
to appeal against that decision on 10 February 2012.
The Government was concerned that
some taxpayers had argued successfully that they did not get a ‘tax benefit’
because, absent the scheme, they would not have entered into an arrangement
that attracted tax—for example—because they would have entered into a different
scheme that also avoided tax, because they would have deferred their
arrangements indefinitely or because they would have done nothing at all.[9]
1.9
The EM further explains that ‘the Government was also concerned that
Part IVA might not be working effectively in relation to schemes that were
steps within broader commercial arrangements’.[10]
Prior consultation by Government
1.10
The Government established a consultation process to assist with the
design of these amendments. The EM states that the process:
… involved setting up a roundtable of industry representatives,
legal academics and tax experts to assist Treasury identify and explore
possible approaches to clarifying the law. It also involved the Government
seeking advice on different design options from senior members of the bar with
particular expertise in Part IVA.[11]
1.11
The EM further states in relation to these consultations:
The role of the roundtable was not to revisit the policy
decisions announced by the Government on 1 March 2012. The roundtable was
established because of the unique role that Part IVA plays in the income tax
laws, in addition to the normal Treasury consultation processes, to improve the
legislative response to the problems that have emerged with Part IVA.
The roundtable process was constructive, and significantly
deepened the Government’s understanding of the issues with Part IVA that the
Government is seeking to address.[12]
1.12
In 2012, meetings were held with the roundtable members in Canberra or
by telephone on 16 May, 26 September, 31 October and 6 December. Public
consultation on the draft legislation was conducted by the Treasury between 16
November and 19 December 2012. Twenty three submissions were received by the
Treasury.[13]
1.13
The Treasury summarises the key issues arising from the public
consultation process, entitled Ensuring the effectiveness of the income tax
general anti-avoidance rule, as follows:
- Many submissions
suggested that the approach taken in the exposure draft legislation was overly
prescriptive and would introduce new and difficult concepts into the
provisions.
- The Bill simplified
the expression of the assumptions and removed concepts that were said to be
uncertain.
- Some submissions
opposed the requirement that tax costs be disregarded when constructing an
alternative postulate to a scheme to work out whether the scheme produced a tax
benefit.
- The Bill did not omit
that requirement because it would be inconsistent with the policy underlying
Part IVA of countering artificial or contrived tax avoidance schemes by
exposing their substance or reality to the ordinary operation of the law.
- A number of
submissions proposed delaying application of the amendments until the Royal Assent.
- This proposal was not
adopted as it would have allowed taxpayers to gain an advantage from artificial
or contrived schemes entered into between the release of the exposure draft and
the Royal Assent.[14]
1.14
The EM comments in relation to the application of the new provisions in
Part IVA that ‘the amendments apply from 16 November 2012; that is, from a date
before the amendments become law’.[15] The EM asserts that:
16 November 2012 was the date on which a draft of the
amendments was released for public comment. Applying it from that date is
necessary to ensure that taxpayers are not able to benefit from artificial or
contrived tax avoidance schemes entered into in the period between that date
and the date of Royal Assent.
Application from that date does not affect the operation of
any criminal law.[16]
The current anti-avoidance regime
1.15
The current statutory regime that operates under Part IVA is outlined in
the EM as follows:
The Commissioner of Taxation (Commissioner) may cancel a tax
benefit obtained by a taxpayer in connection with a scheme ‘to which Part IVA
applies’ (subsection 177F).
1.16
In relation to the application of this regime, the EM emphasises:
Although the Commissioner is entitled to put his case in
relation to the scheme and the tax benefit in alternative ways, the existence
of the Commissioner’s discretion to cancel the tax benefit does not depend upon
the Commissioner’s opinion or satisfaction that there is a tax benefit or that,
if there is a tax benefit, it was obtained in connection with a scheme. The
existence of a scheme and a tax benefit must be established as matters of
objective fact.[18]
1.17
The EM further notes that ‘the “bare fact” that a taxpayer can be shown
to have obtained a tax benefit in connection with a scheme does not in itself
compel the application of Part IVA’.[19] The EM states that:
The tax benefit must be obtained in connection with a scheme
to which Part IVA applies.
In determining whether Part IVA applies to a scheme, the
critical question— indeed the fulcrum upon which Part IVA turns— … is whether
a person or persons who participated in the scheme did so for the sole or
dominant purpose of enabling the taxpayer to obtain a tax benefit that has been
so obtained. The relevant purpose must be established objectively based on an
analysis of how the scheme was implemented, what the scheme actually achieved
as a matter of substance or reality as distinct from legal form (that is, its
end effect) and the nature of any connection between the taxpayer and other
parties (and each of the other actors in paragraph 177D(b)). A person’s
subjective motive is irrelevant.[20]
Role of an alternative postulate
1.18
The EM notes that a Part IVA inquiry into a scheme ‘requires a
comparison between the scheme in question and an alternative postulate’.[21]
The EM states:
A comparison between the scheme and an alternative postulate
serves the Part IVA inquiry in two ways:
- first, comparisons
between the tax consequences of the scheme and the tax consequences of
alternative postulates provide a basis for identifying (and quantifying) any
tax advantages (of the relevant kind) that may have been obtained from the
scheme; and
- second, a
consideration of alternative postulates may … assist in reaching a conclusion
about the purposes of the participants in the scheme … a consideration of
whether there were other ways that the participants in the scheme could have
achieved their non-tax purposes facilitates a weighing of those purposes
against any tax purposes that can be identified.[22]
1.19
The EM further states that ‘an alternative postulate could be merely
that the scheme did not happen or it could be that the scheme did not happen
but that something else did happen’.[23]
Tax benefit
1.20
The EM explains that ‘the purpose and function of section 177C is to
define the kind of tax outcomes that a participant in the scheme must have had
the purpose of securing for the taxpayer, and which must have been secured in
connection with the scheme, if Part IVA is to apply’.[24]
The EM states:
The tax outcomes with which section 177C(1) is concerned, and
which are labelled ‘tax benefits’, are:
- an amount not being
included in assessable income;
- a deduction being
allowed;
- a capital loss being
incurred; and
- a foreign income tax
offset being allowed.[25]
The new law
Overview
1.21
The EM comments that the amendments in Schedule 1 of the Bill aim to ‘target
deficiencies in section 177C and the way it interacts with other elements of
Part IVA, particularly section 177D, as revealed by recent decisions of the
Full Federal Court’.[26] The EM asserts that:
The amendments are not intended to change the operation of
Part IVA in any other respect.[27]
1.22
In terms of the Bill’s aims, the EM states:
Consistent with the policy
underlying Part IVA, the amendments are intended to have the following effects:
- to put it beyond
doubt that the ‘would have ‘and ‘might reasonably be expected to have’ limbs of
each of the subsection 177C(1) paragraphs represent alternative bases upon
which the existence of a tax benefit can be demonstrated;
- to ensure that, when
obtaining a tax benefit depends on the ‘would have’ limb of one of the
paragraphs in subsection 177C(1), that conclusion must be based solely on a
postulate that comprises all of the events or circumstances that actually
happened or existed other than those forming part of the scheme;
- to ensure that, when
obtaining a tax benefit depends on the ‘might reasonably be expected to have’
limb of one of the paragraphs in subsection 177C(1), that conclusion must be
based on a postulate that is a reasonable alternative to the scheme, having
particular regard to the substance of the scheme and its effect for the
taxpayer, but disregarding any potential tax costs; and
- to require the
application of Part IVA to start with a consideration of whether a person
participated in the scheme for the sole or dominant purpose of securing for the
taxpayer a particular tax benefit in connection with the scheme; and so
emphasising the dominant purpose test in section 177D as the ‘fulcrum’ or ‘pivot’
around which Part IVA operates.[28]
1.23
A comparison of key features of the new and current law is summarised in
the EM as shown below in Table 1.1.
Table 1.1 Key comparisons between new and current
anti-avoidance tax law
New law
|
Current law
|
It is clear that the ‘would
have’ and ‘might reasonably be expected to have’ limbs of each of the
subsection 177C(1) paragraphs represent alternative bases upon which the
existence of a tax benefit can be demonstrated.
|
It is
unclear whether the ‘would have’ and ‘might reasonably be expected to have’
limbs of each of the subsection 177C(1) paragraphs represent separate and
distinct bases upon which the existence of a tax benefit can be demonstrated.
|
It is clear that the ‘would
have’ limbs of each of the subsection 177C(1) paragraphs operate on the basis
of a postulate that comprises existing facts and circumstances minus the
scheme.
|
The operation of the ‘would
have’ limbs of each paragraph of subsection 177C(1) is uncertain. Recent
Federal Court cases appear to have proceeded on the basis that the ‘would
have’ limb involves a prediction about events or circumstances, as opposed to
a mere deletion of the scheme.
|
It is clear that the ‘might
reasonably be expected to have’ limbs of each of the subsection 177C(1)
paragraphs operate on the basis of postulates that are reasonable
alternatives to the scheme, having particular regard to the substance of the
scheme and the non-tax results and consequences achieved by the taxpayer from
the scheme, but disregarding potential tax costs.
|
The operation of the ‘might
reasonably be expected to have’ limbs of each of the subsection 177C(1)
paragraphs depends on an inquiry about what other courses of action were
reasonably open to the participants in the scheme.
|
The question whether Part
IVA applies to a scheme starts with a consideration of whether any person
participated in the scheme for the sole or dominant purpose of securing for
the taxpayer a tax benefit in connection with the scheme. This ensures that
the examination of the tax benefit happens in the context of examining a
participant’s purpose.
|
The question whether Part
IVA applies to a scheme starts with a consideration of whether a taxpayer has
secured a particular tax benefit in connection with the scheme.
|
Source Explanatory
Memorandum, Tax Laws Amendment (Countering Tax Avoidance and Multinational
Profit Shifting) Bill 2013, pp. 17–18.
Bases for identifying tax benefits
1.24
The EM emphasises that Schedule 1 ‘amends Part IVA to address weaknesses
that have come to light in how it works out whether there is a tax benefit in
connection with a scheme and what that tax benefit is’. The EM explains that:
A conclusion that one of the paragraphs of subsection 177C(1)
[which defines tax benefits in Part IVA] is satisfied requires a conclusion
that one of the tax effects specified in that subsection
(for example, the inclusion of an amount of assessable
income) ‘would have’, or ‘might reasonably be expected to have’, happened,
absent a particular scheme.
The new provision puts it beyond doubt that the ‘would have’
and ‘might reasonably be expected to have’ limbs of each of the paragraphs in
subsection 177C operate as alternative bases for identifying relevant tax
effects.[29]
Alternative bases
1.25
The EM states that ‘Subsection 177C(1) [of Part IVA] contains two bases
upon which the existence of a tax benefit can be demonstrated’.[30]
The EM goes on to explain these two bases:
The first is that, absent the scheme, a relevant tax outcome ‘would
have been’ the case. The second is that, absent the scheme, a relevant tax
outcome ‘might reasonably be expected to have been’ the case.[31]
1.26
These two bases are referred to as ‘limbs’ and are further explained in
the EM as follows:
The first limb requires a comparison of the tax consequences
of the scheme with the tax consequences that ‘would have’ resulted if the
scheme had not occurred.
The second limb requires a comparison of the tax consequences
of the scheme with the tax consequences that ‘might reasonably be expected to
have’ resulted if the scheme had not occurred.[32]
1.27
The EM elaborates on the first of these two alternatives as follows:
One approach to the first limb has been to view it as
satisfied in cases where a relevant tax advantage is exposed by applying the
taxation law to the facts remaining once the statutory postulate has done its
work in deleting the scheme. In those cases, a tax benefit exists if it can be
demonstrated that the relevant tax advantage flows, as a matter of law, once
the scheme is assumed not to have happened. This may be referred to as an ‘annihilation
approach’. Although this approach involves an alternative postulate, that
postulate consists solely of deleting the scheme.[33]
1.28
The second limb is described in the following terms by the EM:
… the second limb is a qualitatively different test that may
be satisfied notwithstanding an element of uncertainty in the postulate. For
example, it has been applied in cases where the mere deletion of the scheme
would not necessarily leave a coherent state of affairs for the tax law to
apply to — where a prediction is required about facts not in existence and/or
about facts which are in existence not being in existence. In other words, it
contemplates a postulate based on a reasonable reconstruction of either the
scheme, or of the scheme and things that happened in connection with the
scheme. This is sometimes referred to as a ‘reconstruction approach’.[34]
1.29
In its description of the manner in which the Commissioner of Taxation
may exercise discretion under subsection 177F(1) to cancel a tax benefit the EM
states:
… [the Commissioner] is entitled to put his or her case in
alternative ways (including by relying, in the alternative, on the different
limbs of the paragraphs in subsection 177C), [however] the tax benefit cancelled
must be a tax benefit that has been obtained in connection with a scheme to
which Part IVA applies.[35]
1.30
The EM further emphasises in this regard that:
As such, the question in every case will be whether or not it
can be established, as a matter of objective fact, that the tax benefit the
Commissioner is purporting to cancel is a tax benefit that was obtained in
connection with a scheme that was entered into or carried out with the
requisite tax avoidance purpose.[36]
Annihilation approach
1.31
In further describing the annihilation approach the EM comments that ‘a
decision that a tax effect “would have” occurred if the scheme had not been
entered into or carried out must be made solely on the basis of a postulate
comprising all of the events or circumstances that actually happened or
existed, other than those that form part of the scheme’.[37]
The EM states:
This provision makes it clear that, when postulating what
would have occurred in the absence of the scheme, the scheme must be assumed
not to have happened—that is, it must be ‘annihilated’, ‘deleted’ or ‘extinguished’.
Otherwise, however, the postulate must incorporate all the ‘events or
circumstances that actually happened or existed’.
In other words, the speculation that is permitted about any
other state of affairs that might have come about if the scheme had not been
entered into or carried out is limited to the removal of the scheme. A
postulate cannot assume the existence of events or circumstances not in
existence, nor can it assume the non-existence of events or circumstances that
are in existence (other than those that form part of the scheme).[38]
1.32
The EM further explains the operation of the annihilation approach as
follows:
Under this approach, a taxpayer will have obtained a tax
benefit in connection with a scheme if it can be demonstrated that a relevant
tax effect would have flowed, as a matter of law, from the application of the
taxation law to the facts remaining once the scheme is assumed away, that is, a
tax effect less advantageous to the taxpayer than the tax effect secured by the
taxpayer in connection with the scheme.[39]
Reconstruction approach
1.33
In commenting on the use of the reconstruction approach in assessing the
tax benefits of a scheme, the EM asserts that:
… a decision that a tax effect ‘might reasonably be expected
to have’ occurred if a scheme had not been entered into or carried out must be
made on the basis of a postulate that is a reasonable alternative to the
scheme, having particular regard to the substance of the scheme and its results
and consequences for the taxpayer, and disregarding any potential tax results
and consequences.[40]
1.34
The EM comments that ‘the amendment makes it clear that when postulating
what might reasonably be expected to have occurred in the absence of a scheme,
it is not enough to simply assume the non-existence of the scheme - the
postulate must represent a reasonable alternative to the scheme, in the sense
that it could reasonably take the place of the scheme’.[41]
The EM states:
Such a postulate will necessarily require speculation about
the state of affairs that would have existed if the scheme had not been entered
into or carried out. This may include speculation about the way in which
connected transactions would have been modified if they had had to accommodate the
absence of the scheme.
Under this [reconstruction] approach, a taxpayer will obtain
a tax benefit in connection with a scheme if it can be demonstrated that a
relevant tax effect would have flowed, as a matter of law, from the application
of the taxation law to the alternative postulate; again, a tax effect that is
less advantageous to the relevant taxpayer than the tax effect secured by the
taxpayer in connection with the scheme.[42]
1.35
The EM further notes that ‘a reconstruction approach is an effective way
to identify a tax benefit in relation to a scheme that achieves substantive non-tax
results and consequences’.[43] The EM states:
In these cases, simply annihilating the scheme would be
inconsistent with the non-tax results and consequences sought for the taxpayer
by the participants in the scheme.
Typically this will be the case in an income scheme (or a
withholding tax scheme) that both produces and shelters
economic gains. In such cases an annihilation approach would be an ineffective
way to expose the tax avoidance achieved by the tax shelter, since deleting the
scheme would destroy both the gain and the shelter. In such cases, a prediction
will necessarily be required about other ways in which a comparable gain could
have been produced without the tax shelter.[44]
Schedule 2 – Modernisation of the
transfer pricing rules
Overview
1.36
Schedule 2 of the Bill aims to modernise Australia’s transfer pricing
rules and ensure they are aligned with internally accepted principles, of which
the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and Tax Administrations
(OECD TPGs) are a crucial component. The EM outlines Schedule 2 of the Bill as
follows:
Schedule 2 inserts Subdivisions 815-B, 815-C and 815-D into
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) and Subdivision 284-E
into Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (TAA 1953). These
Subdivisions contain amendments that modernise the transfer pricing rules
contained in Australia’s domestic law. They ensure Australia’s transfer pricing
rules better align with the internationally consistent transfer pricing
approaches set out by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD).[45]
1.37
The EM further comments that these amendments will ‘ensure greater
alignment between outcomes achieved for international arrangements involving
Australia and another jurisdiction irrespective of whether the other country
forms part of Australia’s tax treaty network’.[46] The EM states:
Subdivisions 815-B, 815-C and 815-D modernise and relocate
the transfer pricing provisions into the ITAA 1997 to ensure that
consistent rules apply to both tax treaty and non-tax treaty
cases.
In addition, Subdivision 284-E of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953
contains rules related to transfer pricing documentation. Consistent with the
approaches under Division 13 [of the ITAA 1936], the new rules in Subdivision
815-B apply the arm’s length principle to relevant dealings between both
associated and non-associated entities.[47]
OECD Guidelines
1.38
There has been significant growth in multinational enterprises (MNEs) in
recent decades, which have led to complex taxation issues where there are a
number of entities operating in various countries covered by different national
tax regimes. The OECD takes the view that these taxation issues cannot be
addressed by separate country rules alone and must be addressed in a broader
international context.[48]
1.39
The OECD TPGs provide guidance on the application of the ‘arm’s length principle’,
the approach to be taken when evaluating the transfer pricing of associated
enterprises, i.e. attributing a value, for tax purposes, of cross-border
transactions between associated enterprises.
1.40
The OECD TPGs defines transfer prices as ‘the prices at which an
enterprise transfers physical goods and intangible property or provides
services to associated enterprises’. The OECD TPGs focus on international
aspects rather than domestic issues of transfer pricing, maintaining that:
Transfer prices are significant for both taxpayers and tax
administrations because they determine in large part the income and expenses,
and therefore taxable profits, of associated enterprises in different tax
jurisdictions.
… These international aspects are more difficult to deal with
because they involve more than one tax jurisdiction and therefore any
adjustment to the transfer price in one jurisdiction implies that a
corresponding change in another jurisdiction is appropriate. However, if the
other jurisdiction does not agree to make a corresponding adjustment the MNE
group will be taxed twice on this part of its profits. In order to minimise the
risk of such double taxation, an international consensus is required on how to
establish for tax purposes transfer prices on cross-border transactions.[49]
1.41
The aim of transfer pricing is to ensure that a given country can
collect the appropriate amount of tax from the MNEs which reflects that country’s
contribution to the business transactions. However, determining that is
complicated by a range of issues, for example whether the tax is residence
based, source based, or both. The OECD member countries agreed that treating
each enterprise within an MNE group as a separate entity is ‘the most
reasonable means for achieving equitable results and minimising the risk of
unrelieved double taxation’.[50]
1.42
The OECD TPGs describe the arm’s length principle as:
The international standard that OECD member countries have
agreed should be used for determining transfer prices for tax purposes. It is
set forth in Article 9 of the OECD Model Tax Convention as follows: where ‘conditions
are made or imposed between the two enterprises in their commercial or
financial relations which differ from those which would be made between
independent enterprises, then any profits which would, but for those
conditions, have accrued to one of the enterprises, but, by reason of those
conditions, have not so accrued, may be included in the profits of that enterprise
and taxed accordingly’.[51]
1.43
Key aspects of the OECD TPGs include:
- To help tax
administrators (in OECD and non-member countries) and MNEs by indicating ways
to find mutually satisfactory solutions to transfer pricing cases.
- Analysis of the
methods for evaluation whether the conditions of commercial and financial
relations within an MNE satisfy the arm’s length principle, and discuss
practical application of the methods.
- OECD member countries
and taxpayers are encouraged to consider the OECD TPGs in their domestic
transfer pricing practices.
- To govern the
resolution of transfer pricing cases in mutual agreement proceedings between
OECD member countries and, where appropriate, arbitration proceedings.[52]
1.44
The OECD TPGs were originally introduced in 1995, and were updated in
2009 and more substantially revised in 2010. The OCED TPGs are widely
recognised, but not generally binding on tax administrators, legislators or
taxpayers.
1.45
In the Australian context, the Australian Government has considered how
to best ensure effective transfer pricing rules. A 2011 Consultation paper on
the issue states:
[T]here is uncertainty over the role of the OECD Guidelines
in applying the profit allocation rules. At a formal level, direct resort to
the Guidelines has not been endorsed by the courts in Australia, but evidence
based on the approach taken in the Guidelines has been accepted. It appears
that the OECD Guidelines could be available if it was demonstrated that parties
to a relevant treaty would apply the Guidelines in similar circumstances. In
practice the OECD Guidelines are extensively used by treaty partner administrations,
the ATO and practitioners. Importantly the Guidelines changed in 2010 to give
profit based methods equal priority to traditional methods. There is a strong
case for reducing uncertainty by mandating the use of the OECD Guidelines in
tax legislation. A clearer legal pathway for use of the Guidelines might also
reduce the need for legal argument on this point in litigation.[53]
Context of amendments
1.46
The EM comments on the growth of multinational trade over the past
decade and that ‘growth of this nature underscores the need for modern, robust
transfer pricing rules capable of dealing with complex arrangements’.[54]
The EM states:
Australia’s transfer pricing rules seek to ensure that an
appropriate return for the contribution made by an entity’s Australian operations
is taxable in Australia for the benefit of the community. The appropriate
return is determined through the application of the arm’s length principle,
which aims to ensure that an entity’s tax position is consistent with that of
an independent entity dealing wholly independently with others.
The new rules apply the arm’s length principle by identifying
the conditions that might be expected to operate in comparable circumstances
between independent entities dealing wholly independently with one another.[55]
1.47
The EM also asserts that ‘the OECD Guidelines are widely recognised as
representing international best practice’.[56] The EM states:
Greater consistency with international standards reduces
uncertainty and the risk of double taxation, and assists in minimising
compliance and administration costs.[57]
Prior consultation by Government
1.48
On 1 November 2011, the then Assistant Treasurer, the Hon Bill
Shorten MP, announced that the Government would ‘reform the
transfer pricing rules in the income tax law and Australia’s future tax
treaties to bring them into line with international best practice, improving
the integrity and efficiency of the tax system’.[58]
1.49
The then Assistant Treasurer also released a Consultation
Paper, Income tax: cross border profit
allocation—Review of transfer pricing rules.
The paper outlined the history of the transfer pricing rules, and suggested a
number of areas of change, including introducing the arm’s length standards and
ensuring consistency with the OECD TPGs. The Treasury
received 28 submissions to the consultation.[59]
1.50
The Assistant Treasurer, the Hon David Bradbury MP, subsequently
released on 22 November 2012 an exposure draft of the proposed amendments
to Australia’s transfer pricing rules. The Treasury received
24 submissions to the consultation, which closed on 20 December 2012. The
Treasury also conducted a consultation meeting with peak-body, industry and
corporate representatives on 7 December 2012.
1.51
In its summary of the consultation process, the Treasury states that the
Bill ‘has greatly benefited from feedback received’. The Treasury indicated
that following the consultation substantive changes were made to the draft
Bill, and the explanatory material was amended to ‘provide further explanation
and clarification in response to the specific issues raised in submissions’. [60]
1.52
The Treasury noted that most of the submissions supported the alignment
of Australia’s domestic transfer pricing rules with the OECD TPGs, and the move
towards self-assessment. Concerns raised by submitters to the consultation in
relation to documentation rules, the reconstruction power and the time limit
for the Commissioner to amend a taxpayer’s assessment to give effect to the new
rules, led to changes to the draft Bill.
1.53
Other issues raised during the consultation included:
- the extent to which
certain concepts are defined in domestic law, as opposed to being left to the
OECD TPGs;
- a suggestion that the
rules should allow a taxpayer to downward assess a liability;
- that the scope of the
documentation rules was too broad, as they require a taxpayer to prepare
documentation in respect of all conditions that satisfied the cross-border
requirement; and
- the link between
preparing documentation and having a reasonably arguable position in respect of
administrative penalties was inappropriate.[61]
Current transfer pricing rules
1.54
Australia’s domestic transfer pricing rules are currently set out in
Division 13 of the ITAA 1936 and in Subdivision 815-A. Transfer pricing rules
are also contained in Australia’s bilateral tax treaties.[62]
The EM states:
The rules in Division 13 generally focus on determining the
arm’s length consideration for the supply or acquisition of property and/or
services under an international agreement. By contrast, in determining whether
outcomes are consistent with the arm’s length principle, Australia’s tax
treaties and the OECD Guidelines also allow for consideration of the totality
of arrangements that would have been expected to operate had the entities been
dealing with each other on a wholly independent basis. This focus permits the
consideration of a broad range of methods in determining arm’s length
outcomes. Such methods include, but are not limited to, traditional
transaction methods.[63]
1.55
The EM further comments that ‘Subdivision 815-A, enacted by the Tax
Laws Amendment (Cross-Border Transfer Pricing) Act (No. 1) 2012, applies to
ensure that Australia’s tax treaty transfer pricing rules operate as intended’.[64]
The EM states:
The purpose of Subdivision 815-A is to limit taxable profits
being shifted or misallocated offshore.[65]
The new law
1.56
The Bill repeals Division 13 of the ITAA 1936 and introduces
Subdivisions 815-B, 815-C and 815-D to the ITAA 1997 and Subdivision 284-E into
Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (TAA 1953). The EM
comments that ‘Subdivision 815-A will no longer have effect when Subdivisions
815-B and 815-C are enacted’.[66] The EM states:
Subdivisions 815-B, 815-C and 815-D modernise and relocate
the transfer pricing provisions into the ITAA 1997 to ensure that consistent
rules apply to both tax treaty and non-tax treaty cases…
Unlike the current transfer pricing rules in Division 13 [of
the ITAA 1936] and in Subdivision 815-A [of the ITAA 1997], which both rely on
the Commissioner of Taxation (Commissioner) making a determination,
Subdivisions 815-B and 815-C are self-executing in their operation. This better
aligns Australia’s domestic transfer pricing rules with the design of Australia’s
overall tax system which generally operates on a self-assessment basis.[67]
1.57
A comparison of key features of the new and current transfer pricing
rules is summarised in the EM as shown below in Table 1.2.
Table 1.2 Key comparisons between new and current
transfer pricing rules
New law
|
Current law
|
Arm’s length principle
|
Subdivisions
815-B and 815-C and the tax treaty transfer pricing provisions apply the
internationally accepted arm’s length principle which is to be determined
consistently with the relevant OECD Guidance material.
|
|
Division 13 operates to
ensure that for all purposes of the Act, an arm’s length amount of
consideration is deemed to be paid or received for a supply or acquisition of
property or services under an international agreement.
Subdivision 815-A and the
tax treaty transfer pricing provisions apply the internationally accepted arm’s
length principle which is to be determined consistently with the relevant
OECD Guidance material.
|
Transfer pricing
adjustments
|
A
transfer pricing adjustment may be made under Subdivision 815-B,
Subdivision 815-C, or the relevant transfer pricing provisions of a tax
treaty.
Subdivision
815-B applies to certain conditions between entities and Subdivision 815-C
applies to the allocation of actual income and expenses of an entity
between the entity and its permanent establishment.
To the
extent they have the same coverage as the equivalent tax treaty rules, an
adjustment under Subdivision 815-B or Subdivision 815-C gives the same result
as the transfer pricing provisions of a tax treaty.
|
|
A
transfer pricing adjustment may be made under Division 13, the transfer
pricing provisions of a tax treaty, or Subdivision 815-A.
Subdivision
815-A, for practical purposes, generally gives the same result as the
application of the transfer pricing provisions of a tax treaty by adopting
the terms and text of the relevant parts of the transfer pricing articles
contained in Australia’s tax treaties.
|
Assessment of
transfer pricing adjustments
|
Subdivisions 815-B and
815-C apply on a self-assessment basis.
|
The Commissioner must make
a determination under Division 13 or Subdivision 815-A in order to give
effect to a transfer pricing adjustment.
|
Application of the
rules to conditions between entities
|
Subdivision 815-B applies to conditions that satisfy the
cross-border test, irrespective of whether entities are associated or not
and/or operating in treaty or non-treaty countries.
The transfer pricing
provisions of a tax treaty may apply in the event of an inconsistency with
Subdivision 815-B.
|
Division 13 applies to
international agreements between both associated and unassociated entities
irrespective of tax treaty coverage (although the transfer pricing provisions
of a tax treaty may apply in the event of an inconsistency).
Subdivision 815-A and the
tax treaty transfer pricing provisions apply in treaty cases and in respect
of associated entities only.
|
Allocation of profits
between entities and their permanent establishments
|
Subdivision 815-C applies
to the allocation of actual income and expenses of an entity between the
entity and its permanent establishment.
Subdivision 815-C applies
to a foreign permanent establishment of an Australian resident and to an
Australian permanent establishment of a foreign resident entity, irrespective
of whether a tax treaty applies.
The transfer pricing
provisions of a tax treaty may apply in the event of an inconsistency with
Subdivision 815-C.
|
Subdivision 815-A and the
relevant tax treaty transfer pricing provisions allocate profits (the income
and expenses) to the Australian permanent establishment of a foreign resident
entity in treaty cases only.
The transfer pricing
provisions of a tax treaty may apply in the event of an inconsistency with
Subdivision 815-A.
|
Record keeping
|
Subdivision 284-E of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953 sets out optional record keeping requirements for
entities to which Subdivision 815-B or 815-C applies.
Records that meet the
requirements are necessary, but not sufficient to establish a reasonably
arguable position for the purposes of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953.
If the documentation as
specified in the Subdivision is not kept in respect of a matter, an entity is
not able to demonstrate that it has a reasonably arguable position in
relation to that matter for the purposes of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953.
|
The general record-keeping
provisions of the tax law apply to the transfer pricing provisions.
|
Administrative
penalties
|
Administrative penalties
may apply if an assessment is amended by the Commissioner for an income year
to give effect to Subdivisions 815-B or 815-C and the provisions of section
284-145 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953 have been met.
|
Administrative penalties
may apply where a transfer pricing adjustment has been made by the
Commissioner under Division 13 or Subdivision 815-A and the provisions of
section 284-145 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953 have been met. This is subject
to the operation of a transitional rule where the Commissioner makes a
determination under Subdivision 815-A in respect of income years prior to the
first income year starting on or after 1 July 2012.
|
Amendment period
|
An amendment to give effect
to Subdivision 815-B or Subdivision 815-C can be made within seven years
after the day on which the Commissioner gives notice of the assessment to the
entity.
Some tax treaties impose
specific time limits in relation to transfer pricing adjustments under the
tax treaty.
|
Subject to subsection
170(9C), subsection 170(9B) of the ITAA 1936 provides an unlimited period in
which the Commissioner may amend an assessment to give effect to a transfer
pricing adjustment under Division 13, the tax treaty transfer pricing
provisions, or Subdivision 815-A.
Some tax treaties impose
specific time limits in relation to transfer pricing adjustments under the
tax treaty.
|
Source Explanatory
Memorandum, Tax Laws Amendment (Countering Tax Avoidance and Multinational Profit
Shifting) Bill 2013, pp. 37-39.
Subdivision
815-B: Arm’s length rule for entities
1.58
The object of Subdivision 815-B is described by the EM as ‘to ensure
that the amount brought to tax in Australia from cross-border conditions that
operate between entities reflects the arm’s length contribution made by an
entity’s Australian operations’.[68] The EM asserts that:
Subdivision 815-B seeks to achieve this outcome in a way that
facilitates trade and investment through alignment with international
standards. The international standard that is widely accepted by Australia’s
trade and investment partners is the arm’s
length principle, the application of which is set out in the
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) Transfer
Pricing Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and Tax Administrations …
(OECD Guidelines).[69]
1.59
The EM further comments that Subdivision 815-B ‘…implements this
principle by requiring entities that would otherwise get a tax advantage in
Australia from non–arm’s length conditions, to calculate their Australian tax
position as though the arm’s length conditions had instead operated’.[70]
The EM asserts that:
Subdivision 815-B takes precedence over other provisions of
the … ITAA 1936 and the … ITAA 1997 unless a limitation to its
operation is explicitly provided within the Subdivision …
In contrast to the transfer pricing rules that were
introduced by Subdivision 815-A (in particular, section 815-30), Subdivision
815‑B does not contain an explicit rule requiring individual amounts to
be specified. A rule of this kind is not necessary because under Subdivision
815-B an entity is required to work out its taxable income, loss of a
particular sort, tax offsets or withholding tax payable on the basis that
independent conditions operated.[71]
1.60
The EM further explains in relation to the operation of Subdivision
815-B that ‘applying the arm’s length principle is the internationally accepted
approach to dealing with transfer pricing issues’. The EM states:
The OECD Guidelines, in particular, expand on the application
of the arm’s length principle and contain authoritative international know-how
on the application of transfer pricing rules. The OECD Guidelines are widely
used by both member and non-member tax administrations, and were described by
the UK Special Commissioners as ‘the best evidence of international thinking on
transfer pricing’.[72]
1.61
The EM further elaborates on the principles behind the use of OECD
guidance material to determine the arm’s length conditions, commenting that
‘most of Australia’s major trading and investment partners look to the OECD
Guidelines to ensure consistent application of transfer pricing rules’.[73]
The EM states in this regard that:
In the event that different standards were used there would
be a greater risk that jurisdictions might each tax the same amount under their
transfer pricing rules (resulting in double taxation), or not tax an amount at
all (leading to double non taxation).
The identification of arm's length conditions under
Subdivision 815-B must be done in a way that best achieve consistency with the
following material:
- the OECD Guidelines;
and
- any other documents,
or part(s) of a document, prescribed by the regulations for this purpose.[74]
1.62
The EM defines the term ‘transfer pricing benefit’ as the ‘shortfall
amount of Australian tax that an entity has as the result of its non–arm’s
length dealings with other entities’.[75] The EM defines the
conditions under which this benefit is obtained as follows:
An entity gets a transfer pricing benefit in an income year
from conditions that operate between the entity and another entity in
connection with their commercial or financial relations if:
- the actual conditions
differ from the arm's length conditions;
- the actual conditions
result in a tax advantage in Australia, relative to the arm's length
conditions; and
- the actual conditions
satisfy the cross-border test.[76]
Subdivision 815-C: Arm’s length
rule for permanent establishments
1.63
The object of Subdivision 815-C is described by the EM as follows:
… to ensure that the amount brought to tax in Australia by
entities operating at or through permanent establishments is not less than it
would be if the permanent establishment (PE) were a distinct and separate
entity engaged in the same or comparable activities under the same or
comparable circumstances, but dealing wholly independently with the entity of
which it is a part.[77]
1.64
The EM summarises the policy intent of Subdivision 815-C as follows:
Subdivision 815-C modernises Australia’s transfer pricing
rules in respect of the attribution of profits between a permanent
establishment and the entity of which it is a part …
Broadly, the allocation of profits between a permanent
establishment and the entity of which it is a part is determined by analysing
the functions performed, the assets used or contributed, and the risks assumed
or managed by the various parts of the business. From this analysis, the most
appropriate and reliable transfer pricing method or combination of methods
should be chosen, having regard to the circumstances of the commercial or
financial relations …
Within this framework, applying the most appropriate and
reliable transfer pricing method or methods determines the arm’s length profits
that are attributable to the permanent establishment of an entity.[78]
Subdivision 815-D: Special rules
for trusts and partnerships
1.65
The object of Subdivision 815-D as described by the EM is to set out ‘special
rules about the way Subdivisions 815–B and 815–C apply to trusts and partnerships’.[79]
The EM states:
The rules ensure that the transfer pricing rules apply in
relation to the net income of a trust or partnership in the same way they apply
to the taxable income of a company. The Subdivisions also apply to the
partnership loss of a partnership in the same way they apply to the tax loss of
a company.[80]
Amendments to the TAA 1953: Record
keeping and penalties
1.66
The EM explains that the introduction of Subdivision 284-E of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953 ‘sets out the type of documentation that an entity may prepare
and keep in self–assessing its tax position under Subdivision
815-B or 815-C’.[81] The EM asserts that:
This documentation is referred to as transfer pricing
documentation. In order to satisfy the requirements of Subdivision 284-E,
transfer pricing documentation must be prepared before the lodgement of the
relevant tax return.[82]
1.67
The EM emphasises that ‘while the Subdivision does not mandate the
preparation or keeping of documentation, failing to do so prevents an entity
from establishing a reasonably arguable position’.[83]
The EM states:
Establishing a reasonably arguable position is one avenue
through which an entity can lower administrative penalties. However, nothing in
these amendments prevents the Commissioner from exercising a general discretion
to remit administrative penalties where appropriate (as currently available
under the law).[84]
Date of Effect
1.68
The amendments in Schedule 1 apply to schemes entered into, or commenced
to be carried out, on or after 16 November 2012, the day on which draft
legislation was released for public comment.
1.69
The transfer pricing rules specified by the amendments in Schedule 2 apply
to income years commencing on or after the earlier of:
- 1 July 2013; and
- the day this Bill
receives Royal Assent.
Objectives and scope of the inquiry
1.70
The objective of the inquiry is to investigate the adequacy of the Bills
in achieving their policy objectives and, where possible, identify any
unintended consequences.
1.71
In its report, the Selection Committee gave the following reasons for
referral and principal issues for consideration:
Significant economic impact; and ensure drafting is correct.[85]
Conduct of the inquiry
1.72
Details of the inquiry were placed on the committee’s website. On 15 February
2013 the Chair issued a media release announcing the inquiry and seeking
submissions.
1.73
Sixteen submissions were received, which are listed in Appendix A.