House of Representatives

Tax and Superannuation Laws Amendment (2014 Measures No. 7) Bill 2014

Excess Exploration Credit Tax Bill 2014

Explanatory Memorandum

(Circulated by the authority of the Treasurer, the Hon J. B. Hockey MP)

Chapter 7 - Miscellaneous amendments

Outline of chapter

7.1 Schedule 7 to this Bill makes a number of miscellaneous amendments to the taxation and superannuation laws. These amendments are part of the Government's commitment to the care and maintenance of the taxation and superannuation systems.

7.2 These amendments include style changes, the repeal of redundant provisions, the correction of anomalous outcomes and corrections to previous amending Acts.

Context of amendments

7.3 Miscellaneous amendments to the taxation and superannuation laws such as those contained in Schedule 7 are periodically made to remove anomalies and correct unintended outcomes. Progressing such amendments gives priority to the care and maintenance of the tax system, a process supported by a 2008 recommendation from the Tax Design Review Panel.

7.4 Industry input is collected through the Tax Issues Entry System (TIES). Part 1 of Schedule 7 addresses two TIES issues:

ensuring that taxpayers are not inappropriately denied automatic roll-over relief for balancing adjustments in relation to certain depreciating assets (TIES reference number 005/2011); and
allowing corporate limited partnerships to effectively return capital to partners without anomalous tax outcomes (TIES issue 0009/2014).

Summary of new law

7.5 These miscellaneous amendments address technical deficiencies and legislative uncertainties within several taxation and superannuation provisions.

7.6 Schedule 7 contains the following Parts:

Part 1: Amendments commencing on the day after Royal Assent.
Part 2: Other Amendments.

Detailed explanation of new law

Part 1: Amendments commencing on the day after Royal Assent

Harmonisation of the self-actuating system for indirect taxes with the self-assessment system for income tax

7.7 The Indirect Tax Laws Amendment (Assessment) Act 2012 harmonised the self-actuating system for goods and services tax, luxury car tax, wine equalisation tax and fuel tax credits with the self-assessment system for income tax. Minor technical amendments are made to ensure that the legislation achieves the intended policy outcomes.

7.8 Prior to the amendments in this Part, section 17-15 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act) provided that a taxpayer's net amount for a tax period was calculated from the information provided in their goods and services tax (GST) return. This outcome is now achieved through the assessment making process in section 155-15 of Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (TAA 1953). Therefore, section 17-15 of the GST Act is removed as it is redundant. [Schedule 7, item 1, section 17-15 of the GST Act]

7.9 Prior to the amendments in this part, subsection 31-15(3) provided that a GST return could state an entity's net amount as worked out under section 17-5 rather than as provided in the approved form for the GST return. Subsection 31-15(3) was included in the GST Act because section 17-15 provided an alternative means of working out the net amount. However, with the repeal of section 17-15, subsection 31-15(3) is also repealed as it is redundant. [Schedule 7, item 2, subsection 31-15(3) of the GST Act]

7.10 The repeal of section 17-15 and subsection 31-15(3) applies to tax periods starting after the day this Bill receives Royal Assent. [Schedule 7, item 3]

7.11 Before the amendments, section 93-15 of the GST Act denied an input tax credit where the GST had 'ceased to be payable'. The term 'ceased to be payable' is used in section 105-50 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953. This section sets a four-year time limit on recovery by the Commissioner of Taxation (Commissioner) by stating that an unpaid amount 'ceases to be payable four years after it became payable by you'.

7.12 Section 105-50 does not apply to tax periods starting on or after 1 July 2012 and is repealed on 1 January 2017 (see Part 2 of Schedule 1 to the Indirect Tax Laws Amendment (Assessment) Act 2012).

7.13 This amendment updates the terminology in section 93-15 so that it does not use the term 'ceased to be payable'. The new wording makes it clear that an entitlement to an input tax credit ceases when the Commissioner is no longer able to amend an assessment of the assessable amount relating to the GST. [Schedule 7, item 5, section 93-15 of the GST Act]

7.14 The amendment applies to creditable acquisitions for which the GST on the related supply is attributable to tax periods starting after the day this Bill receives Royal Assent. [Schedule 7, item 6]

7.15 Before the amendments, the time limit for objecting to a private indirect tax ruling for tax periods starting on or after 1 July 2012 was the later of:

60 days after the ruling was made; or
four years from the day after the notice of assessment was given for the tax period to which the ruling relates.

7.16 This time limit posed two difficulties. Firstly, it allowed taxpayers an unlimited objection period where they had not received a notice of assessment. Secondly, it resulted in the time limit for objecting to private indirect tax rulings differing from the time limit for objecting to other private rulings that do not relate to indirect tax. This is inconsistent with the intention of applying rules for indirect taxes that are consistent with the self-assessment system for income tax.

7.17 This amendment ensures that taxpayers who do not receive a notice of assessment do not have an unlimited period to lodge an objection, and aligns the time limit for objecting to private indirect tax rulings with the time limit for objecting to other tax rulings. It sets the time limit for objecting to a private indirect tax ruling as the later of:

60 days after the ruling was made; or
four years after the last day that a return can be lodged concerning the assessment of the assessable amount to which the ruling relates.

[Schedule 7, item 36, paragraph 14ZW(1AAC)(b) of the TAA 1953]

7.18 The amendment to the time limit for objecting to a private indirect tax ruling applies to tax periods starting after the day this Bill receives Royal Assent. It also applies to payments or refunds that do not correspond to any tax period, but relate to liabilities or entitlements that arise after the day this Bill receives Royal Assent. [Schedule 7, item 37]

Updates to the section references in the Excise Act 1901

7.19 Section 5 of the Excise Act 1901 states that offences against the Act are punishable by a penalty that does not exceed the penalty specified in the section that was contravened. Before the amendments, section 5 included the words '(except as provided by sections 129 to 132, inclusive)' to allow for more serious penalties in certain circumstances.

7.20 The words in brackets in paragraph 7.19 above are now redundant as the penalty provisions in sections 129 to 132 have been repealed. Accordingly, this amendment deletes the words in brackets. [Schedule 7, item 7, section 5 of the Excise Act 1901]

7.21 Prior to the amendments, subsection 116(2) of the Excise Act 1901 provided for goods sold or offered for sale in breach of paragraph 120(iiia) to be forfeited to the Crown. However, there is no paragraph 120(iiia) in the Excise Act 1901.

7.22 This amendment corrects the section reference in section 116 so that it refers to paragraph (iiia) of subsection 120(1), rather than paragraph 120(iiia). [Schedule 7, item 8, subsection 116(2) of the Excise Act 1901]

Clarification of the corporate limited partnership provisions (TIES issue 0009/2014)

7.23 Division 5A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936) operates to, broadly, treat certain limited partnerships as companies for income tax purposes. The Division operates so that, so far as is relevant, any payment made by a corporate limited partnership to its partners that is paid or credited against profits or in anticipation of profits is deemed to be a dividend paid out of profits (section 94L). As a result, the payment is assessable to the partner as a dividend under section 44.

7.24 Section 44 was amended in 2010 as a consequence of changes to the meaning of a dividend in the Corporations Act 2001. The effect of the amendment to section 44 is to treat a dividend paid out of an amount other than profits to be a dividend paid out of profits for the purposes of the income tax law (subsection 44(1A)).

7.25 Prior to the introduction of subsection 44(1A), a distribution made by a corporate limited partnership paid or credited against partnership capital would not have been assessable under section 44 as it was not deemed to be a dividend paid out of profits.

7.26 When subsection 44(1A) was introduced, there was no intention to change the circumstances in which section 94L operates to deem a distribution made by a corporate limited partnership to be a dividend paid out of profits.

7.27 This miscellaneous amendment clarifies that subsection 44(1A) does not operate for the purposes of determining whether a payment made by a corporate limited partnership is taken to be a dividend under section 94L. [Schedule 7, item 9, section 94L of the ITAA 1936]

7.28 The amendment applies in relation to dividends paid on or after 28 June 2010 - that is, from the date of effect of subsection 44(1A). [Schedule 7, item 10]

7.29 In this regard, the amendment is beneficial to taxpayers and allows corporate limited partnerships to effectively return capital to partners.

Incorrect Cross-Reference to International Agreements Act

7.30 Subsection 160ZZVB(2) of the ITAA 1936 relates to the application of provisions regarding Australian branches of offshore banks.

7.31 The provision provides that, where a bank is subject to an international agreement, they may elect that the Part (Part IIIB of the ITAA 1936) does not apply.

7.32 In incorporating the defined term 'agreement', the provision refers to the Income Tax (International Agreements) Act 1953, which has been renamed the International Tax Agreements Act 1953.

7.33 The amendment corrects the reference. [Schedule 7, item 11, subsection 160ZZVB(2) of the ITAA 1936]

Updates to the list of tax offsets

7.34 Section 13-1 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) is a guide that lists a number of tax offsets. The Government has identified a number of tax offsets that are not included in the list. These amendments add two new offsets to the list. [Schedule 7, items 13 and 14, section 13-1 of the ITAA 1997]

Clarification of the description of certain capital gains tax roll-over restrictions in guide material (TIES reference number 005/2011)

7.35 In order to assist taxpayers in understanding the operation of the tax law, where a provision refers to another part of the tax law, it will generally include a brief description of this provision to which it refers. This description has no operative effect - it is included solely to assist taxpayers.

7.36 This amendment corrects a case where this brief description was potentially misleading as it did not sufficiently cover the operation of the section that was being referenced. While this flawed description does not affect the operation of the law, it did have the potential to confuse taxpayers.

7.37 Specifically, section 40-340 of the ITAA 1997 provides for a roll-over on disposal of a depreciating asset in circumstances in which the capital gains tax (CGT) provisions would provide a roll-over. See for example, item 1 of the table in subsection 40-340(1), which provides a roll-over on disposal of an asset to a wholly-owned company if that disposal would have attracted a CGT roll-over under Subdivision 122-A of the ITAA 1997. The intention of this provision is generally to provide the same relief under the depreciation regime as would be available for an equivalent asset in relation to CGT.

7.38 Subsection 40-340(2) of the ITAA 1997 instructs the taxpayer to disregard some provisions in deciding if a CGT roll-over would have been available for the purposes of the roll-over for depreciating assets, allowing roll-overs for depreciating assets in circumstances where they would not be available for the purposes of CGT. This prevents CGT-specific requirements from excluding relief under the depreciating asset regime.

7.39 Paragraph 40-340(2)(b) of the ITAA 1997 instructs you to disregard subsection 122-25(3), which effectively excludes roll-over relief for 'precluded assets', which includes, for example, depreciating assets. Consistent with the general rule of providing a description where a section is referenced, paragraph 40-340(2)(b) of the ITAA 1997 describes subsection 122-25(3) as excluding certain assets from roll-over relief under Division 122-A. While not inaccurate, the present wording of this description is slightly misleading as 'precluded assets' under subsection 122-25(3) are also excluded from accessing a number of other CGT roll-overs beyond just those in Division 122-A. As a result, a taxpayer on reading paragraph 40-340(2)(b) could receive an incorrect impression about the scope of the CGT rollovers that 'precluded assets' cannot access.

7.40 These amendments revise the description of subsection 122-25(3) in paragraph 40-340(2)(b) to make clear that subsection 122-25(3) excludes a wider range of assets from rollover relief. [Schedule 7, item 15, paragraph 40-340(2)(b) of the ITAA 1997]

7.41 This clarification eliminates the potential for taxpayers to be confused or misled about the CGT treatment of 'precluded assets' by the guidance material in paragraph 40-340(2)(b). It has no impact on the substantive tax law.

Deductions for amounts contributed to superannuation funds

7.42 An amendment is made to correct the section reference in item 2B in the table that sets out other deductions for superannuation funds to subsection 295-490(1) of the ITAA 1997.

7.43 Item 2B relates to situations where a taxpayer gives a deduction notice to a successor fund in respect of a contribution to their original fund, and then gives a variation notice to vary their concessional contributions. It may also apply to a mandatory transfer of members under a MySuper transfer.

7.44 Prior to the amendment, the successor fund was only entitled to the deduction if the fund included the contribution as assessable income under item 2A in the table to subsection 295-490(1). A successor fund would never be able to satisfy this requirement because item 2A only applies when a deduction notice is given to the original fund, not the successor fund.

7.45 The intention was for the deduction in item 2B to be available where the superannuation fund included the contribution in assessable income at the time they received the deduction notice. This ensures that the successor fund is compensated for including in assessable income, an additional amount that would not have been included if the fund member had initially contributed the correct amount and did not issue a variation notice.

7.46 Accordingly, this amendment corrects the section reference so that the deduction for superannuation funds in item 2B operates in the way intended. [Schedule 7, item 17, item 2B in the table to subsection 295-490(1) of the ITAA 1997]

Example 7.1: Deduction where superannuation contribution reduced

ABC Superannuation Fund (ABC) is a complying superannuation fund. ABC receives $150,000 as a rollover superannuation benefit. The amount forms part of a successor fund transfer from another superannuation fund (Exsuper) and represents contributions made to the other fund in that income year by Sebastien who is a member of Exsuper. As the payment of the rollover benefit to ABC is for the benefit of Sebastien, it is treated as being made to Sebastien for the purposes of section 307-15.
Subsequent to the transfer to ABC, but before ABC has lodged its income tax return for the income year in which the transfer was made, Sebastien provides ABC with a notice under section 290-170 of his intention to claim a deduction in relation to $25,000 of the contribution. ABC acknowledges receipt of the notice from Sebastien.
In accordance with item 2A of the table in subsection 295-190(1), ABC includes the $25,000 rollover superannuation benefit it received in relation to Sebastien, which was covered by the section 290-170 notice, in its assessable income for the income year.
In February of the following income year, after ABC has lodged its income tax return for the income year in which the transfer was made, Sebastien provides ABC with a further notice, for the purposes of section 290-180. The notice advises of his intention to reduce the deduction claim previously notified in the earlier section 290-170 notice to nil.
Under item 2B of the table in subsection 295-490(1), ABC is entitled to a deduction of $25,000 in the income year the second notice is received (unless ABC chooses the alternative option provided by subsection 295-197(4)). The deduction offsets the amount included in ABC's assessable income for the income year in which the transfer was made to reflect that Sebastien has notified ABC that no amount of superannuation contributions will now be deducted.

7.47 The amendment applies to notices given to a superannuation fund to deduct a personal contribution under section 290-170 of the ITAA 1997 on or after the day following Royal Assent. [Schedule 7, item 18, paragraph (a)]

7.48 It also applies to notices of variation given under section 290-180 of the ITAA 1997 after the day of Royal Assent. This is irrespective of whether the notice being varied was given before, on or after the day of Royal Assent. [Schedule 7, item 18, paragraph (b)]

Consequential amendments to delegation provisions for designated infrastructure projects

7.49 Division 415 of the ITAA 1997 sets out special rules for the tax treatment of the losses and bad debts of 'designated infrastructure projects'.

7.50 Under Division 415, the Infrastructure CEO (formerly the Infrastructure Co-ordinator) may exercise a number of powers and functions, including designating projects as designated infrastructure projects.

7.51 Section 415-95 allows the Infrastructure CEO to delegate any of the office's powers or functions under Subdivision 415-C (designating infrastructure projects) to a Senior Executive Service (SES) (or acting SES) employee of Infrastructure Australia who is a member of the staff assisting the Infrastructure CEO under section 39 of the Infrastructure Australia Act 2008.

7.52 Following amendments made by the Infrastructure Australia Amendment Act 2014, there will no longer be staff to whom this provision can apply.

7.53 These amendments revise section 415-95 to allow the delegation of powers or functions by the Infrastructure CEO under Subdivision 415-C to SES and acting SES staff engaged by or seconded to Infrastructure Australia. [Schedule 7, item 19, section 415-95 of the ITAA 1997]

7.54 This will preserve the current scope for delegation under the new employment arrangement for the staff of the Infrastructure CEO established by the Infrastructure Australia Amendment Act 2014.

Acquisition cost of Australian Carbon Credit Units

7.55 Prior to the amendments, there was no mechanism for determining the acquisition cost of Australian carbon credit units (ACCUs) purchased on the Registry. These units do not fall within the scope of subsections 420-60(3) of the ITAA 1997 as they are not issued under the Carbon Farming Initiative. Before the amendments, these units did not fall under subsection 420-60(4) of the ITAA 1997 as the subsection did not apply to any ACCUs.

7.56 A method for determining the acquisition cost for all registered emission units is needed as units are accounted for using the rolling balance method. This method involves taxpayers subtracting the acquisition cost of a registered emissions unit from its value at year end, and bringing the difference to account as assessable income or a deduction at the end of the first income year that they held the units.

7.57 This amendment provides for the acquisition cost of ACCUs purchased on the Registry to be calculated in the same way as other registered emission units.

7.58 Accordingly, the acquisition cost of an ACCU purchased on the registry is determined by totalling the expenditure incurred in becoming the holder of the unit, such as the price paid for the unit, brokerage fees and other transaction costs. Expenditure cannot be included in the acquisition cost if it is not deductible under section 420-15 of the ITAA 1997. [Schedule 7, item 20, subsection 420-60(4) of the ITAA 1997]

7.59 The amendment applies in relation to income years starting on or after the day following Royal Assent. [Schedule 7, item 21]

7.60 The Schedule also repeals the transitional rules for determining the acquisition cost for units acquired prior to the commencement of Division 420 of the ITAA 1997. These transitional rules are redundant as there are no new transactions that fall within the scope of the rules and the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 protects previous transactions that relied on the rules. [Schedule 7, item 22, Subdivision 420-B of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997]

7.61 The repeal of the transitional rules applies on or after the day following Royal Assent.

Conditions in the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment Act 1987 for transferring expenditure from loss companies to profit companies

7.62 Loss companies may transfer expenditure on a project to a profit company if they satisfy the conditions in clause 31 of Schedule 1 to the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment Act 1987 (PRRTAA). One of these conditions applies when the expenditure is indirectly incurred through another entity. This condition refers to the section in the PRRTAA that sets out the rules for determining which company made the payment.

7.63 The Tax Laws Amendment (2013 Measures No. 2) Act 2013 amended the rules for determining which company made a payment and changed the section numbers. However, it did not make a consequential amendment to change the reference in the condition in clause 31.

7.64 Accordingly, this item amends the condition so that it refers to the correct paragraph in the PRRTAA. [Schedule 7, item 23, subparagraph 31(1)(b)(ii) of Schedule 1 to the PRRTAA]

7.65 The amendment applies retrospectively so that it operates to allow transfer of expenditure to profit companies from the same time as the amendments in the Tax Laws Amendment (2013 Measures No. 2) Act 2013. It has no adverse effect on companies as it simply corrects a reference and ensures that the amendments apply as intended to allow the transfer of expenditure. [Schedule 7, item 24]

General administration of provisions in the Retirement Savings Accounts Act 1997

7.66 Section 3 of the Retirement Savings Accounts Act 1997 provides for the general administration of the Act.

7.67 Subparagraph 3(1)(e)(ii) states that the Commissioner has the general administration of subsection 144(1A). The Act does not have this subsection. The subparagraph should refer to subsection 144(2A).

7.68 This amendment corrects the reference. [Schedule 7, item 25, subparagraph 3(1)(e)(ii) of the Retirement Savings Accounts Act 1997]

Repeal of spent provisions

7.69 Subsection 32C(4A) of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 provides that employer contributions to the Public Sector Superannuation Accumulation Plan (PSSAP) comply with the choice of fund requirements. This provision was required between 1 July 2005 and 1 July 2006 when the PSSAP was a part of the Public Sector Superannuation Scheme, a defined benefit fund not subject to the choice requirements.

7.70 The subsection ceased to have effect from 1 July 2006 when the PSSAP was established as a separate superannuation scheme and became subject to the broader choice of fund requirements.

7.71 This amendment repeals the subsection. [Schedule 7, item 28, subsection 32C(4A) of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992]

7.72 The Superannuation Act 2005 and the Superannuation (Productivity Benefit) Act 1988 also contain cross-references to the subsection. This amendment also removes those cross-references. [Schedule 7, items 26, 27 and 32, paragraph 18(3)(d) and subparagraph 14(4)(a)(iv) of the Superannuation Act 2005 and subparagraph 3AB(1)(b)(iii) of the Superannuation (Productivity Benefit) Act 1988]

Definition of business real property in the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993

7.73 This amendment re-inserts a reference to the definition of 'business real property' in paragraph 71(1)(g) of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 (SIS Act).

7.74 The Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Amendment Act 2010 (SISAA) removed the reference to the definition of 'business real property' contained in subsection 66(5). The explanatory memorandum did not explain the reason for the removal and simply noted that the amendment was consequential to the amendments made by the SISAA.

7.75 The removal may have created uncertainty as to the meaning of 'business real property' for the purposes of paragraph 71(1)(g) of the SIS Act.

7.76 For this reason, this amendment re-inserts the reference in paragraph 71(1)(g) to the definition of 'business real property', as defined in subsection 66(5), effective from when the reference was removed by the SISAA. [Schedule 7, items 29 and 30, paragraph 71(1)(g) of the SIS Act]

Definition of 'assessable amount' in the Taxation Administration Act 1953

7.77 This amendment inserts a definition of 'assessable amount' into the TAA 1953. The term 'assessable amount' is used in subsections 14ZY(1B) and 14ZW(1AAC) of the TAA 1953, but it has not been included in the definition section.

7.78 The definition provides that the term has the meaning given by subsection 155-5(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953. [Schedule 7, item 33, subsection 2(1) of the TAA 1953]

Commissioner's reporting obligations in section 3B of the Taxation Administration Act 1953

7.79 Section 3B of the TAA 1953 requires the Commissioner to prepare an annual report and provide it to the Minister.

7.80 Prior to the amendments, the Commissioner was required to include details about foreign currency transfers that breached subsection 14C(2) of the TAA 1953 in the annual report. However, section 14C of the TAA 1953 ceased to have effect on and from 18 September 2009. Accordingly the Commissioner's obligation to report on breaches of subsection 14C(2) is repealed as it is redundant. [Schedule 7, item 34, paragraph 3B(1AA)(a) of the TAA 1953]

7.81 The amendments to the Commissioner's reporting obligations have effect from the day following Royal Assent.

Repeal redundant definitions from the Taxation Administration Act 1953

7.82 Sections 14ZZK and 14ZZO of the TAA 1953 grant taxpayers the right to challenge an assessment on the basis that it is excessive or otherwise incorrect. Historically, the sections listed the assessments to which a taxpayer could object but the list of assessment was removed when the sections were rewritten in 2013.

7.83 There are now no substantive sections in the TAA 1953 that refer to a 'franking assessment'. Therefore, the definition of 'franking assessment' in the dictionary section in the TAA 1953 is repealed, as terms that are not used in the Act do not need to be defined. [Schedule 7, item 35, section 14ZQ of the TAA 1953]

7.84 This amendment applies from the day following Royal Assent.

Definition of tax-related liability for Subdivision 284-B

7.85 This amendment clarifies that subsection 284-75(3) of the TAA 1953 does not apply to a tax-related liability arising under the Excise Acts (as defined in section 4 of the Excise Act 1901). This subsection imposes an administrative penalty where you fail to give a notice or document to the Commissioner, and that notice is necessary to determine a tax-related liability. A tax-related liability is defined as one that is imposed under a 'taxation law'. Ordinarily this includes the Excise Acts because the Commissioner has general power of administration of those Acts. However, throughout Subdivision 284-B, wherever 'taxation law' is mentioned, the Excise Acts are specifically excluded. To clarify that subsection 284-75(3) is consistent with the remainder of Subdivision 284-B, this amendment specifically excludes from the definition of 'tax-related liability', liabilities arising under the Excise Acts. [Schedule 7, item 38, paragraph 284-75(3)(b) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]

7.86 This amendment applies in relation to documents required to be given to the Commissioner on or after the day following Royal Assent. [Schedule 7, item 39]

Disclosure of Protected Information to Public Officers of Companies and Trusts

7.87 It is a requirement that companies and certain trusts have an individual appointed as their 'public officer' (sections 252 and 252A of the ITAA 1936). The purpose of the public officer is to facilitate the administration of the tax laws. In this regard, a public officer is answerable for all things done by the company or the trust under the tax laws. Everything done in the capacity of public officer is deemed to be done by the company or trust.

7.88 Division 355 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953 regulates the disclosure, by taxation officers, of protected information collected from taxpayers under the tax laws. The law does not currently allow the disclosure of protected information to public officers.

7.89 Current administrative practice, therefore, relies on another exception, found in paragraph 355-25(2)(g), for disclosure to nominated individuals. This requires the entity to nominate the public officer in an approved form to act on the entity's behalf. As public officers are able to complete the form and nominate themselves, the practice imposes unnecessary compliance costs.

7.90 This amendment allows taxation officers to disclose protected information about an entity to the entity's public officer, and allows public officers to on-disclose the information, regardless of whether the public officer is nominated under paragraph 355-25(2)(g). [Schedule 7, item 40, paragraph 355-25(2)(ba) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]

7.91 The amendment applies to records or disclosures made on or after the day following Royal Assent (whenever the information was acquired). [Schedule 7, item 41]

Disclosure of Protected Information to Legal Practitioners

7.92 This amendment clarifies that taxation officers can make disclosures of taxpayer information to a legal practitioner representing an entity in relation to affairs under one or more tax laws, and not just the income tax laws. Ordinarily, taxation officers may make disclosures of taxpayer information to 'covered entities', which includes 'a legal practitioner representing the primary entity in relation to the primary entity's tax affairs'. 'Tax affairs' was defined as affairs relating to 'tax', and 'tax' was defined as income tax imposed by the ITAA 1936. This technically did not include legal practitioners if they represented an entity on a range of tax matters. [Schedule 7, item 40, paragraph 355-25(2)(b) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]

7.93 The amendment applies to records or disclosures made on or after the day following Royal Assent (whenever the information was acquired). [Schedule 7, item 41]

Updating references to the Crime and Misconduct Commission of Queensland

7.94 Effective from 1 July 2014, Queensland's Crime and Misconduct Commission was renamed the Crime and Corruption Commission. Accordingly, an amendment is made to update a reference to the Commission in the secrecy provisions of the TAA 1953. [Schedule 7, item 42, section 355-70 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]

7.95 To remove doubt that the exemption from the secrecy provisions continues to apply to the renamed Commission, item 43 makes it clear that this amendment applies from 1 July 2014, to align with the change in name. [Schedule 7, item 43]

Style, spelling, grammatical and typographical errors

7.96 The following amendments are made to correct minor style, spelling and typographical errors:

Table 7.1: Style, spelling, grammatical and typographical errors
Item(s) Provision(s) Affected
Schedule 7, item 4 Paragraph 63-27(1)(b) of the GST Act
Schedule 7, item 12 Subsection 272-87(3) of Schedule 2F to the ITAA 1936
Schedule 7, item 16 Subsections 165-115AA(2) and (3) of Schedule 1 to the ITAA 1997
Schedule 7, item 31 Note 3 to section 253 of the SIS Act

Part 2: Other Amendments

7.97 Part 2 of Schedule 7 makes a number of corrections to previous amending Acts to ensure that the amendments made under the earlier Acts are effective.

7.98 The amendments in this Part to previous amending Acts commence immediately following the commencement of the provisions they amend. This retrospectivity is necessary to ensure the amending Acts operate as intended.

Classes of expenditure in the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment Act 1987

7.99 The PRRTAA sets out ten categories of deductible expenditure, including 'Class 2 augmented bond rate general expenditure' in section 34A and 'Class 1 GDP factor expenditure' in section 35. Each of the ten categories of expenditure in the PRRTAA was designed to be mutually exclusive.

7.100 'Class 2 augmented bond rate general expenditure' excludes expenditure incurred more than five years before the earlier of the day specified in the production licence notice and the day the production licence was issued.

7.101 Before this amendment, 'Class 1 GDP factor expenditure' included expenditure incurred more than five years before the production licence came into force.

7.102 Therefore, before this amendment, there was a potential for petroleum project expenditure to satisfy the definition of both 'Class 2 augmented bond rate general expenditure' and 'Class 1 GDP factor expenditure' if the day specified in the production licence notice was earlier than the day the licence was issued and came into force. For example, project expenditure incurred on 1 May 2009 would have satisfied the definition of both classes of expenditure if the production licence was issued (and came into force) on 1 June 2014 but the day specified in the notice was 1 April 2014.

7.103 The unintended overlap between the two classes of expenditure arose when the relevant date for 'Class 2 augmented bond rate general expenditure' was amended by the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment Amendment Act 2012, but a consequential amendment was not made to amend the date for 'Class 1 GDP factor expenditure'.

7.104 This item amends the qualifying dates for 'Class 1 GDP factor expenditure' so that they are the same as the dates for 'Class 2 augmented bond rate general expenditure'. This removes the unintended overlap between the two classes of expenditure. [Schedule 7, item 44, paragraph 35(1)(a) of the PRRTAA]

7.105 The amendment applies retrospectively from the day that the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment Amendment Act 2012 commenced. It is a technical amendment to the definition of 'Class 1 GDP factor expenditure' and corrects a drafting error. The amendment does not alter the intention of the law or the way the section is administered. It is not expected that any taxpayers will be adversely affected by the retrospective operation of the amendment.

Superannuation Laws Amendment (Capital Gains Tax Relief and Other Efficiency Measures) Act 2012 - References to the Commissioner

7.106 Items 22, 23 and 46 of Schedule 4 to the Superannuation Laws Amendment (Capital Gains Tax Relief and Other Efficiency Measures) Act 2012 amended subsections 299TA(1) and 299TB(1) of the SIS Act, and subsection 143B(1) of the Retirement Savings Accounts Act 1997 to insert the abbreviation 'Commissioner' for the Commissioner of Taxation.

7.107 This amendment ensures that the abbreviation is only inserted once in each subsection. [Schedule 7, items 45, 46 and 48, items 22, 23 and 46 of Schedule 4 to the Superannuation Laws Amendment (Capital Gains Tax Relief and Other Efficiency Measures) Act 2012]

Superannuation Laws Amendment (Capital Gains Tax Relief and Other Efficiency Measures) Act 2012 - Cross-referencing Error

7.108 Subitem 30(2) of Schedule 4 to the Superannuation Laws Amendment (Capital Gains Tax Relief and Other Efficiency Measures) Act 2012 referred to a regulation made for the purposes of subsection 45S(1) of the Retirement Savings Accounts Act 1997.

7.109 This amendment corrects the incorrect subsection reference to subsection 45R(1). [Schedule 7, item 47, subitem 30(2) of Schedule 4 to the Superannuation Laws Amendment (Capital Gains Tax Relief and Other Efficiency Measures) Act 2012]

Superannuation Legislation Amendment (Further MySuper and Transparency Measures) Act 2012

7.110 Sections 29QB and 29QC of the SIS Act were inserted by item 42 of Schedule 3 to the Superannuation Legislation Amendment (Further MySuper and Transparency Measures) Act 2012. Item 42 misdescribed where they were to be added: it provided for the sections to be added at the end of Division 6 of Part 2B, but that Division was repealed before the item was enacted.

7.111 This amendment corrects the error in the 2012 amending Act and provides that the provisions are to be located in a new Division 5 of Part 2B of the SIS Act. [Schedule 7, items 49 and 50, item 42 of Schedule 30 to the Superannuation Legislation Amendment (Further MySuper and Transparency Measures) Act 2012]

7.112 The misdescribed amendments contained regulation-making powers. These amendments therefore contain provisions to ensure the validity of regulations made in reliance on the amendments. [Schedule 7, item 51]

Tax and Superannuation Laws Amendment (2013 Measures No. 2) Act 2013

7.113 Item 11 of Schedule 1 to the Tax and Superannuation Laws Amendment (2013 Measures No. 2) Act 2013 was intended to include 'documentary' in the definition section at subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997. The entry for 'documentary' was to refer to the definition in section 376-25 of the ITAA 1997.

7.114 Prior to this miscellaneous amendment, item 11 did not take effect as the drafting direction ('insert') was omitted.

7.115 This amendment inserts the drafting direction into the amending Act so that item 11 takes effect. [Schedule 7, item 52, item 11 of Schedule 1 to the Tax and Superannuation Laws Amendment (2013 Measures No. 2) Act 2013]

Tax Laws Amendment (2013 Measures No. 2) Act 2013

7.116 Schedule 2 to the Tax Laws Amendment (2013 Measures No. 2) Act 2013 introduced a tax incentive for entities that carry on nationally significant designated infrastructure projects. The tax incentive (which is contained in Division 415 of the ITAA 1997):

uplifts the value of carry forward tax losses by the long term bond rate; and
exempts the losses from the continuity of ownership, same business, trust loss and bad debt deduction tests.

7.117 Item 34 of that Schedule made a minor consequential amendment to section 719-265 of the ITAA 1997 relating to the operation of the tax incentive for consolidated groups.

7.118 These miscellaneous amendments amend item 34 of Schedule 2 to the Tax Laws Amendment (2013 Measures No. 2) Act 2013 to correct the location of commas. [Schedule 7, items 53 and 54, item 34 of Schedule 2 to the Tax Laws Amendment (2013 Measures No. 2) Act 2013]

STATEMENT OF COMPATIBILITY WITH HUMAN RIGHTS

Prepared in accordance with Part 3 of the Human Rights (Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011

Tax and Superannuation Laws Amendment (2014 Measures No. 7) Bill 2014 - Miscellaneous Amendments

7.119 This Schedule is compatible with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared in the international instruments listed in section 3 of the Human Rights (Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011.

Overview

7.120 Schedule 7 to this Bill makes a number of miscellaneous amendments to the taxation and superannuation laws. These amendments are part of the Government's commitment to the care and maintenance of the taxation and superannuation systems.

7.121 These amendments include style changes, the repeal of redundant provisions, the correction of anomalous outcomes and corrections to previous amending Acts.

Human rights implications

7.122 These amendments make a number of minor and machinery changes to the taxation and superannuation provisions to ensure the provisions are consistent with their original policy intent. As such, this Schedule does not engage any of the applicable rights or freedoms.

Conclusion

7.123 This Schedule is compatible with human rights as it does not raise any human rights issues


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