House of Representatives

Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011

Minerals Resource Rent Tax Act 2012

Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Consequential Amendments and Transitional Provisions) Bill 2011

Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Imposition - Customs) Bill 2011

Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Imposition - Customs) Act 2012

Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Imposition - Excise) Bill 2011

Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Imposition - Excise) Act 2012

Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Imposition - General) Bill 2011

Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Imposition - General) Act 2012

Explanatory Memorandum

(Circulated by the authority of the Deputy Prime Minister and Treasurer, the Hon Wayne Swan MP)

General outline and financial impact

Minerals Resource Rent Tax

The Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) is a tax on the economic rents miners make from the taxable resources (iron ore, coal and some gases) after they are extracted from the ground but before they undergo any significant processing or value add. 'Economic rent' is the return in excess of what is needed to attract and retain factors of production in the production process.

The MRRT is a project-based tax, so a liability is worked out separately for each project the miner has at the end of each MRRT year. The miner's liability for that year is the sum of those project liabilities.

The tax is imposed on a miner's mining profit, less its MRRT allowances, at a rate of 22.5 per cent (that is, at a nominal rate of 30 per cent, less a one-quarter extraction allowance to recognise the miner's employment of specialist skills).

A project's mining profit is its mining revenue less its mining expenditure. If the expenditure exceeds the revenue, the project has a mining loss. Mining revenue is, in general, the part of what the miner sells its taxable resources for that is attributable to the resources in the condition and location they were in just after extraction (the 'valuation point'). Mining revenue also includes recoupments of some amounts that have previously been allowed as mining expenditure.

Mining expenditure is the cost a miner incurs in bringing the taxable resources to the valuation point.

Mining allowances reduce each project's mining profit. The most significant of the allowances is for mining royalties the miner pays to the States and Territories. It ensures that the royalties and the MRRT do not double tax the mining profit.

In the early years of the MRRT, the project's starting base provides another important allowance. The starting base is an amount to recognise the value of investments the miner has made before the MRRT.

Other allowances include losses the project made in earlier years and losses transferred from the miner's other projects (or from the projects of some associated entities).

If a miner's total mining profit from all its projects comes to less than $50 million in a year, there is a low-profit offset that reduces the miner's liability for MRRT to nil. The offset phases out for mining profits totalling more than $50 million.

2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15
Nil $3,700m $4,000m $3,400m

Compliance cost impact: This measure is expected to impose significant compliance costs on taxpayers in the iron ore and coal sectors (approximately 320 taxpayers). In the first year of the MRRT's operation, taxpayers will need to value their starting base and modify their accounting procedures. Ongoing compliance costs will reduce over the medium to long term.


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