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US/Ukraine minerals deal: Digging into the detail
The United States and Ukraine governments have announced the signature of an agreement of a minerals deal for Ukraine.
Tax and superannuation measures
Global | Publication | May 3, 2016
After much anticipation, Treasurer Scott Morrison today handed down his first Federal Budget. The Budget unveiled several significant tax changes that will impact businesses and individuals across Australia, including superannuation reforms, a diverted profits tax and a new tax and regulatory framework for collective investment vehicles. The following is a summary of the highlights of the principal business income tax and international tax measures and some of the significant personal income tax measures contained in the Federal Budget.
The Government intends to reduce the company tax rate to 25 per cent over 10 years. Businesses with an annual aggregated turnover of less than $10 million will be taxed at 27.5 per cent from the 2016-17 income year. All companies will be taxed at 27.5 per cent in the 2023-24 income year and the company tax rate will then be progressively lowered until it reaches 25 per cent in the 2026-27 income year.
Small businesses will experience a range of benefits from this year’s Budget.
The Budget confirms that measures previously announced for angel investors will be introduced. The Budget also confirms that the announced measures for venture capital limited partnerships will proceed.
The Government has accepted that the Taxation of Financial Arrangements (TOFA) regime has failed to deliver the simplification intended by that regime. The Government will redesign the TOFA framework with the aim of reducing compliance costs, simplifying the system and removing the majority of taxpayers from the TOFA rules.
The Budget announces three changes to the consolidation regime, intended to improve the integrity of the system:
The Budget introduces two new collective investment vehicles (CIVs), a corporate CIV and a limited partnership CIV, for which a new tax and regulatory framework will be required. These new investment structures can support the new Asia Region Funds Passport regime - an APEC initiative, the pilot program for which is scheduled to commence in 2017. These new CIV structures are more familiar to many non-resident investors than the unit trust structures that operate in Australia.
The Government has been reviewing the tax treatment of CIVs since May 2010, when the then Assistant Treasurer and the then Minister for Financial Services, Superannuation and Corporate Law announced that the Government would ask the Board of Taxation (Board) to review the tax treatment of CIVs, including whether a broader range of tax flow-through CIVs should be permitted.
The CIV changes in the Budget are based on the recommendations made by the Board of Taxation in the final report it released on 4 June 2015. It is anticipated that the new CIVs will be tax flow through vehicles that will operate in a similar way to managed investment trusts. They will be required to meet similar eligibility criteria, such as being widely held and engaging in primarily passive investment.
These proposed new CIVs strengthen the international competitiveness of Australia’s funds industry, and accordingly build on a key theme arising out of the final report of the Financial System Inquiry.
Certain asset backed financing arrangements (such as hire purchase arrangements and deferred purchase arrangements) will be taxed in an equivalent way to interest bearing loans or investments. This measure is intended to support Islamic financing and will apply from 1 July 2018.
Australia will follow the UK and introduce its own diverted profits tax (DPT), from 1 July 2017. The type of arrangements to which the DPT will apply are arrangements between related parties:
Such arrangements will attract a 40 per cent tax on diverted profits. The tax is not intended to be deductible or creditable for income tax purposes (although franking credits may be allowed). The measure applies to large companies with global revenue of $1 billion or more, although companies with Australian revenue of less than $25 million will be exempt (unless the arrangements are artificial).
In its simplest form, a hybrid mismatch is a financial instrument which is treated as debt for purposes of the tax rules in one jurisdiction but equity in another, with the result that the payments under the instrument are tax deductible for the payer but tax exempt for the payee.
As part of its “Base Erosion and Profit Shifting Project” (commonly known as “BEPS”), the OECD has developed a set of recommended hybrid mismatch rules for domestic implementation, to combat use of these arrangements. The Board of Taxation has recently consulted on the OECD’s hybrid mismatch rules, and the Government has asked the Board to undertake further work in this area. The Government will implement the OECD’s rules to eliminate hybrid mismatches, taking into consideration the Board’s recommended changes to those rules, from the later of 1 January 2018 or 6 months following the date of Royal Assent of the legislation. The OECD’s rules in this area are extremely complicated. Although there is currently not much detail on how Australia will implement the OECD’s reforms, it is likely that any changes will be significant.
Following the ATO’s loss in Commissioner of Taxation v SNF (Australia) Pty Ltd [2011] FCAFC 74, the Government hard wired the OECD’s 2010 Transfer Pricing Guidelines into Australian legislation. The OECD has recently updated its Guidelines. Under this Budget, the OECD’s most recent Guidelines will apply to Australia’s transfer pricing rules from 1 July 2016.
The Government will introduce five new measures to improve the administration of the tax system:
The Government will increase the Medicare levy low income threshold for certain taxpayers. The Government will also provide targeted personal income tax relief by increasing the 32.5 per cent personal income tax threshold from $80,000 to $87,000 from 1 July 2016.
Prior to releasing the Budget, the Government had foreshadowed significant changes to superannuation and confirmed that wealthy Australians will pay more tax on their superannuation. The Budget releases some of the detail around those announcements, and also contains many other measures that, when taken together, result in major changes to the superannuation system. The changes are:
The GST will be extended to low value goods imported by consumers from 1 July 2017. This will result in low value goods imported by consumers facing the same tax regime as goods that are sourced domestically.
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The United States and Ukraine governments have announced the signature of an agreement of a minerals deal for Ukraine.
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