In 2016–17, 271 entities from the 2015–16 corporate transparency population (including 61 Australian private, 82 Australian public and 128 foreign-owned entities) were no longer in scope. We analyse these entities to ensure that exits are for legitimate reasons and entities are not manipulating their income tax returns to fall outside the corporate transparency measure. Of these exits from the transparency population:
- 163 reported income levels below the transparency thresholds
- 80 joined a consolidated group during the year (income earned after joining was reported by their head company)
- 11 were not required to lodge a company tax return due to various other reasons - for example, deregistration
- 17 had not yet lodged or had lodged a company tax return that was not processed by the cut-off date for this report (1 September 2018).
The number of entities that exited the transparency population in 2016–17 due to a drop in income is consistent with a normal level of churn in the population over recent years, including years prior to the first corporate tax transparency report.
The headline results are summarised in Figure 12. Exits by reason are also shown in Figure 13 for Australian private groups, Figure 14 for Australian public entities and Figure 15 for foreign-owned entities.
Figure 12: Exits from the corporate transparency population – entire population
Figure 13: Exits from the corporate transparency population – Australian private entities
Figure 14: Exits from the corporate transparency population – Australian public entities
Figure 15: Exits from the corporate transparency population – foreign-owned entities