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House of Representatives Standing Committee on Economics
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Preliminary pages
Chair’s foreword
The Tax Laws Amendment (Countering Tax Avoidance and
Multinational Profit Shifting) Bill 2013 makes a number of amendments to the
tax law. Schedule 1 amends Part IVA of the Income Tax Assessment Act 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 2 of the Bill aims 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.
Both schedules were the subject of prior public consultation
by the Treasury.
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. The Government’s announcement was made after reviewing a
number of judicial decisions. 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, 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.
Schedule 1 amends Part IVA to address weaknesses that have
come to light as a result of judicial decisions in determining whether there is
a tax benefit in connection with a scheme and what that tax benefit is.
Schedule 1 provides that the Commissioner of Taxation may use either of two
alternative approaches to cancel a tax benefit obtained by a taxpayer in
connection with a scheme that was entered into for the sole or dominant
purpose, objectively ascertained, of avoiding tax.
These alternative postulates are an annihilation approach,
whereby the scheme must be assumed not to have happened but all other events
that actually happened must be incorporated; and a reconstruction approach
which must represent a reasonable alternative to the scheme but disregard any
potential tax costs. The result of either of these postulates will be that the tax
effect is less advantageous to the relevant taxpayer than that secured by the
taxpayer in connection with the scheme.
It was claimed in some of the submissions that the
amendments in Schedule 1 are unnecessary as the court decisions are reasonably
unique and of limited application. There are further claims in some submissions
that it is not clear how the alternative postulates will operate.
However, it is the Committee’s view that the amendments in
the Bill are a measured response to exposed weaknesses in the operation of the
tax benefit concept.
The Treasury emphasised in its submission to the committee
that the annihilation and reconstruction approaches are clearly intended to
operate as alternative bases for identifying tax benefits and will not lead to
more income tax being payable than results from the ordinary operation of the
tax law.
Schedule 2 of the Bill is vital to modernise Australia’s
transfer pricing rules and bring these into line with accepted international
arm’s length principles recommended by the OECD. Transfer pricing refers to the
prices at which an enterprise transfers physical goods and intangible property
or provides services to associated enterprises in different tax jurisdictions.
The arm’s length principle is the international standard
that OECD member countries have agreed should be used for determining transfer
prices for tax purposes. This principle is that each enterprise within a
multinational enterprise should be treated as a separate entity and it should
be determined what independent entities would have done in the place of the
parties. This provides a broad parity of tax treatment for members of multinational
groups and independent enterprises.
The committee notes claims in some of the submissions it received
that the Bill is not consistent with OECD transfer pricing guidelines and that
Schedule 2 goes beyond the exceptional circumstances specified by these
guidelines for a tax administration to disregard the structure adopted by a
taxpayer for a controlled transaction.
It is also proposed in several submissions that the seven
year limit for a transfer pricing adjustment to be made by the Commissioner of
Taxation is too long and should be four years only, as applies to general
income tax assessments.
However the application and effect of the proposed
reconstruction rules are clearly based on the language used in the OECD
guidelines and that the Bill also contains a guidance provision that requires
the relevant rules to be interpreted consistently with these guidelines. The
Treasury also asserts that a four year limit to conduct transfer pricing
adjustments would not provide the Commissioner with adequate time to conduct transfer
pricing audits.
It is clear that the OECD transfer pricing guidelines are
currently the ‘best thinking evident in transfer pricing’. The committee
considers that reconstruction powers in exceptional circumstances are a core
part of modern transfer pricing regimes and that the Bill implements these
powers consistently with the OECD guidelines.
In conclusion, the Bill will enable the Commissioner of
Taxation to objectively and reasonably enforce tax avoidance measures and
collect revenue to which the Commonwealth is entitled under the law. The Bill
should pass.
On behalf of the committee, I thank the organisations that
assisted the committee during the inquiry through submissions. I also thank my
colleagues on the committee for their contribution to the report.
Julie Owens MP
Chair
Membership of the Committee
Chair
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Ms Julie Owens MP
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Deputy Chair
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Mr Steven Ciobo
MP
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Members
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Mr Scott Buchholz MP
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Mr Stephen
Jones MP
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Hon Joel
Fitzgibbon MP
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Dr Andrew
Leigh MP
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Ms Kelly
O'Dwyer MP
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Mr Craig
Thomson MP
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Committee Secretariat
Secretary
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Mr Stephen Boyd
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Inquiry Secretary
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Dr Kilian Perrem
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Inquiry Staff
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Ms Samantha Mannette
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Administrative Officers
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Ms Natasha Petrović
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Ms Carissa Skinner |
Terms of reference
On 14 February 2013 the Selection Committee referred the Tax
Laws Amendment (Countering Tax Avoidance and Multinational Profit Shifting)
Bill 2013 to the committee for inquiry and report.
Under Standing Order 222(e), the House is taken to have
adopted the Selection Committee’s reports when they are presented.
List of abbreviations
ATO
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Australian Taxation Office
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CPA
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CPA Australia
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CTA
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Corporate Tax Association
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ICAA
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Institute of Chartered
Accountants Australia
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ITAA 1936
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Income Tax Assessment Act 1936
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ITAA 1997
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Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
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MNE
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Multinational enterprise
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OECD
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Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
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OECD TPGs
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OECD Transfer Pricing
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and Tax Administrations
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PE
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Permanent establishment
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TAA 1953
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Taxation Administration Act
1953
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the Bill
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Tax Laws Amendment (Countering Tax Avoidance and
Multinational Profit Shifting) Bill 2013
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Recommendation
2 Issues in the Bill
Recommendation 1 (Paragraph 2.133)
The House of Representatives pass the Tax Laws Amendment
(Countering Tax Avoidance and Multinational Profit Shifting) Bill 2013 as
proposed.
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