Senate

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

Revised Explanatory Memorandum

(Circulated by the authority of the Deputy Prime Minister and Treasurer, the Hon Wayne Swan MP)
This memorandum takes account of amendments made by the House of Representatives to the Bill as introduced

Glossary

following abbreviations and acronyms are used throughout this explanatory memorandum.

Abbreviation Definition
AAT Administrative Appeals Tribunal
ABN Australian Business Number
ABS Australian Bureau of Statistics
ACNC Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission
ATO Australian Taxation Office
AWOTE average weekly ordinary time earnings
CGT capital gains tax
Commissioner Commissioner of Taxation
Coordinator Infrastructure Coordinator
DCA DisabilityCare Australia
DGRs deductible gift recipients
DIP designated infrastructure project
Esso Esso Australia Resources Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation [2012] FCAFC 5
FBT fringe benefits tax
FBTAA Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986
GST goods and services tax
GST Act A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999
ITAA 1936 Income Tax Assessment Act 1936
ITAA 1997 Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
MRRT Minerals Resource Rent Tax
NDIS National Disability Insurance Scheme
NDIS Act National Disability Insurance Scheme Act 2013
PRRT petroleum resource rent tax
PRRTAA Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment Act 1987
R&D research and development
TAA 1953 Taxation Administration Act 1953
Treasury Department of the Treasury

General outline and financial impact

Monthly Pay As You Go instalments

Schedule 1 to this Bill amends Division 45 of Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 to require certain large entities to pay Pay As You Go (PAYG) instalments monthly.

The PAYG instalment system requires entities with business or investment income to pay instalments towards their income tax liability. It is designed to ensure the efficient collection of income tax, including the Medicare levy, Higher Education Loans Program (HELP) debts, and debts under the Student Financial Supplement Scheme and the Aboriginal Study Assistance Scheme (ABSTUDY).

Schedule 1 requires large entities to pay PAYG instalments monthly rather than quarterly or annually. Entities will be transitioned into the monthly PAYG instalment system over a four year period. This change does not increase the overall tax liability of an entity. Rather it makes PAYG instalments more responsive to the economic position of an entity and better aligns the timing of PAYG instalments with Government payments. This reduces the risk of an entity accumulating large tax debts.

Date of effect : The amendments introduced by Schedule 1 apply to corporate tax entities from 1 January 2014.

The amendments apply to all other entities from 1 January 2016.

Proposal announced : The Government announced the changes to the timing of instalment payments for corporate tax entities as part of the 2012-13 Mid-Year Economic Financial Outlook. The Government announced that the measure would apply to other large entities as part of the 2013-14 Budget.

Financial impact : This measure is expected increase revenue by $10.15 billion over the forward estimates.

2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
$5,600m $1,600m $2,000m $950m

Human rights implications : This Schedule does not raise any human rights issue. See Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights - Chapter 1, paragraphs 1.61 to 1.67

Compliance cost impact : Low.

Tax loss incentive for designated infrastructure projects

Schedule 2 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 to provide a tax incentive for entities that carry on a nationally significant infrastructure project that has been designated by the Infrastructure Coordinator.

The tax incentive:

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

Date of effect : This measure applies for the 2012-13 and later income years. The measure has a concessional retrospective element.

Proposal announced : This measure was announced by the Deputy Prime Minister and Treasurer and the Minister for Infrastructure and Transport in a Joint Media Release No 054 of 10 May 2011.

Financial impact : This measure has an unquantifiable but small impact on revenue over the forward estimates.

Human rights implications : This Schedule does not raise any human rights issue. See Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights - Chapter 2, paragraphs 2.182 to 2.186.

Compliance cost impact : Compliance costs will be reduced by the removal of the continuity of ownership, same business tests, trust loss and bad debt deduction tests.

Summary of regulation impact statement

Regulation impact on business

Impact : This measure will affect some companies and fixed trusts that carry on designated infrastructure projects.

Main points :

Companies and fixed trusts that carry on designated infrastructure projects, and do not carry on activities that are not for the purpose of the project, can uplift their tax losses and are allowed to utilise losses and bad debt deductions without applying the continuity of ownership and same business tests.
To limit the potential cost to revenue, the measure has been capped at projects with an estimated capital expenditure of $25 billion. In the absence of a cap, taxpayers would be able to self-regulate their access to the concessions. However, to manage potential costs to revenue and to ensure the highest value projects are supported, a decision maker (the Infrastructure Coordinator) will deem certain projects to be designated infrastructure projects.
Before entities can access the concessions, an entity (not necessarily the entity that uses the concessions) must apply for a project to be designated as a designated infrastructure project and the entity must meet additional integrity requirements (such as notifying the Commissioner of Taxation that is eligible for the concessions).
However, these costs are likely to be small relative to the size of the project and the sophisticated nature of the entities involved.
Entities may only carry on one project in an entity. This avoids the need to identify which part of the assessable income and allowable deductions for an entity (worked out under the ordinary income tax law) are eligible for the concessions.

Improving the transparency of Australia's business tax system

Schedule 5 to this Bill amends the Taxation Administration Act 1953 to:

require the Commissioner of Taxation to publish limited information about the tax affairs of large corporate taxpayers;
allow for the publication of certain aggregate tax information irrespective of whether the publication, in conjunction with publicly available information, may be reasonably capable of being attributed to a particular taxpayer (other than a natural person); and
allow for enhanced information sharing between Government agencies in relation to decisions under the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975 and Australia's Foreign Investment Policy.

Date of effect : These amendments apply to the 2013-14 income year and later income years.

Proposal announced : On 4 February 2013, the Assistant Treasurer announced the Government's intention to improve the transparency of the business tax system. These measures were canvassed in a discussion paper that was released on 3 April 2013.

Financial impact : Nil.

Human rights implications : Schedule 5 to this Bill does not raise any human rights issues, as the amendments contained therein do not affect individuals. The amendments in item 5 of Schedule 5 could potentially apply to individuals and therefore engage the right to privacy under Article 17 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. See Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights - Chapter 3, paragraphs 3.70 to 3.81

Compliance cost impact : Nil. The amendments relate only to information that is already reported to the Commissioner of Taxation. No additional information will be sought from taxpayers under this amendment.

Petroleum Resource Rent Tax

Schedule 6 of the Bill amends the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment Act 1987 to address the unintended impacts arising from the decision of the Full Federal Court in Esso Australia Resources Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation [2012] FCAFC 5.

Date of effect : The amendments apply generally to payments made in relation to petroleum projects from the applicable commencement date of the petroleum project. For most projects the applicable commencement date is 1 July 1986.

However, for payments made to a third party to procure project services, the relevant amendments apply from 1 July 2012 where the petroleum resource rent tax (PRRT) taxpayer has furnished a PRRT return in relation to their project interest prior to 14 December 2012.

The amendments apply retrospectively to address the outcomes of a Full Federal Court decision which would otherwise impose significant and unintended compliance and tax burdens on industry.

Proposal announced : This measure was announced in the Joint Media Release No.166 dated 14 December 2012 by the Deputy Prime Minister and Treasurer, the Minister for Resources and Energy and the Assistant Treasurer.

Financial impact : This measure has the following revenue implications:

2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
-$50m -$40m -$10m -$10m -$10m

Human rights implications : This Schedule does not raise any human rights issue. See Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights - Chapter 4, paragraphs 4.74 to 4.77.

Compliance cost impact: The amendments reduce compliance costs for most PRRT taxpayers. Removing the capital gains tax discount for foreign individuals

Removing the Capital Gains Tax Discount for Foreign Individuals

Schedule 7 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) to remove the capital gains tax (CGT) discount on discount capital gains accrued after 8 May 2012 for foreign resident and temporary resident individuals.

This Schedule also makes consequential amendments to the ITAA 1997.

Date of effect : This measure applies to disposals of CGT assets after 8 May 2012.

Proposal announced : The measure was announced as part of the 2012-2013 Budget and by the Assistant Treasurer, Minister Assisting for Deregulation's Media Release No. 026 of 8 May 2012.

Financial impact : This measure is estimated to have a $55.0 million gain to revenue over the forward estimates period.

Human rights implications : This Bill does not raise any human rights issue. See Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights - Chapter 5, paragraphs 5.68 to 5.75.

Compliance cost impact : This measure is expected to impose small compliance costs on affected entities.

Tax exemption for payments under the Defence Abuse Reparation Scheme

Schedule 8 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 to exempt from income tax, payments made under the Defence Abuse Reparation Scheme.

Date of effect : This measure applies to the 2012-13 income year and later income years.

Proposal announced : This measure was announced in the 2013-14 Budget.

Financial impact : Nil.

Human rights implications : This Schedule does not raise any human rights issues. See Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights - Chapter 6, paragraphs 6.14 to 6.17.

Compliance cost impact : Nil.

GST-free treatment for National Disability Insurance Scheme funded supports

Schedule 9 to this Bill ensures that certain services and other things supplied to a participant as a part of a National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) plan under the National Disability Insurance Scheme Act 2013 (NDIS Act) are GST-free.

Date of effect : The amendments made by this Schedule apply in relation to supplies made on or after the proclamation date for when an NDIS plan is in effect under the NDIS Act.

Proposal announced : This measure was announced on 14 May 2013 as part of the 2013-14 Budget.

Financial impact : This measure is estimated to have a negligible revenue impact over the forward estimates period.

Human rights implications : Schedule 9 to this Bill is compatible with human rights. See Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights -Chapter 7, paragraphs 7.29 to 7.36.

Compliance cost impact : This measure is expected to have a low overall compliance cost impact, comprising a low implementation impact and a low increase in ongoing compliance costs relative to the affected group.

Deductible gift recipients

Schedule 10 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 to update the list of specifically listed deductible gift recipients (DGRs).

Date of effect : The listing of United Way Australia applies to gifts made after 25 April 2013. The listings of Australian Neighbourhood Houses & Centres Association (ANHCA) Inc., the Australia Foundation in support of Human Rights Watch Limited, Layne Beachley - Aim for the Stars Foundation Limited, Aurora Education Foundation Limited and Social Traders Ltd apply to gifts made after 30 June 2013. The existing listings of the Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust and Roberta Sykes Indigenous Education Foundation have been extended indefinitely.

Proposal announced : The listing of United Way Australia was announced on 14 May 2013 as part of the 2013-14 Budget. The listings of Australian Neighbourhood Houses & Centres Association (ANHCA) Inc., the Australia Foundation in support of Human Rights Watch Limited, Layne Beachley - Aim for the Stars Foundation Limited, Aurora Education Foundation Limited and Social Traders Ltd, and the extension of the existing listings for the Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust and Roberta Sykes Indigenous Education Foundation, have not been previously announced.

Financial impact : The revenue implications of this measure are as follows:

Organisation 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
United Way Australia Nil Nil Nil Nil
Australian Neighbourhood Houses & Centres Association (ANHCA) Inc. Nil ?$0.3m ?$0.4m ?$0.4m
The Australia Foundation in support of Human Rights Watch Limited Nil ?$0.09m ?$0.10m ?$0.11m
Layne Beachley - Aim for the Stars Foundation Limited Nil ?$0.02m ?$0.03m ?$0.03m
The Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust Nil ?$0.01m ?$0.01m ?$0.01m
Roberta Sykes Indigenous Education Foundation Nil ?$0.01m ?$0.01m ?$0.01m
Aurora Education Foundation Limited Nil ?$0.04m ?$0.045m ?$0.045m
Social Traders Ltd Nil Nil Nil Nil

Human rights implications : This Schedule does not raise any human rights issues. See Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights - Chapter 8, paragraphs 8.30 to 8.36.

Compliance cost impact : Nil.

Miscellaneous amendments

Schedule 11 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.

These amendments include: clarifying the tax treatment of native title benefits distributed through charities (Part 2); ensuring the fringe benefits tax rebate operates as intended (Part 3); and updating a number of significant taxation and superannuation thresholds to reflect reporting changes made by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (Part 4).

Date of effect : The amendments have various application dates that are explained in detail in this explanatory memorandum. While some of these amendments have retrospective application, taxpayers should not be adversely impacted.

Proposal announced : The amendments in Part 4 (indexation updates) were foreshadowed by the release of a proposals paper on the Treasury website on 17 April 2013. The amendment in Part 5 that clarifies the operation of the research and development provisions was foreshadowed on the Treasury website on 12 April 2013 as part of the consultation process for the quarterly credits exposure draft. The other amendments have not previously been announced.

Financial impact : These amendments are expected to have a minimal or nil revenue impact. However, some of the amendments are integrity measures that protect what could be substantial amounts of revenue.

Human rights implications : This Schedule does not raise any human rights issue. See Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights - Chapter 9, paragraphs 9.69 to 9.80.

Compliance cost impact : Negligible.

Monthly Pay As You Go instalments

Outline of chapter

1.1 This Schedule amends Division 45 of Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (TAA 1953) to require certain large entities to pay Pay As You Go (PAYG) instalments monthly.

1.2 All legislative references in this chapter are to Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953, unless otherwise stated.

Context of amendments

1.3 The PAYG instalment system requires entities with business or investment income to pay instalments towards their income tax liability. It is designed to ensure the efficient collection of income tax, including the Medicare levy, Higher Education Loans Program (HELP) debts, and debts under the Student Financial Supplement Scheme and the Aboriginal Study Assistance Scheme (ABSTUDY). This continues a process of reform over decades to better align the timeliness of tax collections with economic activity, better match the regular nature of Government payments and to prevent taxpayers having large debts at the end of the income year.

1.4 Currently, most entities in the PAYG instalment system are required to pay instalments on a quarterly basis. If certain criteria are met, instalments may be made annually or biannually. Many of these entities are currently required to report and pay the goods and services tax (GST) on a monthly basis.

1.5 In the 2012-13 Mid-Year Economic Financial Outlook (MYEFO), the Government announced a process to reform the timing of PAYG instalment payments by large corporate entities. The purpose of the reform is to allow PAYG instalments to be more responsive to the economic conditions faced by businesses, and to better align PAYG instalment payments with the GST payments for most large companies. In response to concerns raised in consultation on the design of this measure, the Government announced in the 2013-14 Budget that it would extend the reforms to all large entities.

1.6 On 25 March 2012 the Government announced that it has commissioned Treasury and the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) to work with interested parties on longer term reforms to improve the PAYG system. This process will provide an opportunity for a more detailed examination of proposals that were submitted in response to the February 2013 Consultation Paper on this topic. It will also provide an opportunity for non-corporate entities to identify any improvements that would assist their transition to monthly payment arrangements, which commences from 1 January 2016.

Summary of new law

1.7 These amendments require large entities to pay PAYG instalments monthly rather than quarterly or annually. Entities will be transitioned into the monthly PAYG instalment system over a four year period, depending on the size and type of the entity:

from 1 January 2014, corporate tax entities (being companies, corporate limited partnerships, corporate unit trusts or public trading trusts) that meet or exceed the $1 billion threshold will be required to pay PAYG instalments monthly;
from 1 January 2015, corporate tax entities that meet or exceed the $100 million threshold will be required to pay PAYG instalments monthly;
from 1 January 2016:

-
all other entities, including superannuation funds, trusts and individuals, that meet or exceed the $1 billion threshold will be required to pay PAYG instalments monthly; and
-
corporate tax entities that meet or exceed the $20 million threshold may be required to pay PAYG instalments monthly; and

from 1 January 2017, all other entities, including corporate tax entities, superannuation funds, trusts and individuals that meet or exceed the $20 million threshold may be required to pay PAYG instalments monthly.

1.8 Entities that are not currently required to report and pay GST monthly will not be required to move to monthly PAYG instalments if they do not meet the $100 million threshold and are not a head company of a consolidated group or a provisional head company of a multiple entry consolidated group (MEC group). This exemption better aligns the reporting of GST and PAYG instalments for those entities.

1.9 The threshold used is the amount of base assessment instalment income (BAII) that the entity has for a particular income year. The meaning of BAII is discussed further at paragraph 1.27.

1.10 To ensure the threshold applies equitably to all entities, those entities that have financial arrangements to which Division 230 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) applies (hereafter referred to as Taxation on Financial Arrangements (TOFA) entities) may be required use an 'adjusted' BAII calculation.

1.11 Therefore, under these amendments TOFA entities whose BAII provided by the Commissioner of Taxation (Commissioner) does not exceed the threshold amount, are required to do a further calculation of their BAII using the gross income of their financial arrangements (rather than net amounts). This amended calculation of the BAII is referred to throughout this Chapter as the 'adjusted' BAII.

1.12 The amount of a PAYG monthly instalment is a function of the instalment income of the entity for the relevant month. The Commissioner has the power to determine alternative methods for monthly payers to calculate their instalment income. This flexibility facilitates efficient implementation of these changes, whilst maintaining the integrity of the PAYG instalment regime.

Comparison of key features of new law and current law

New law Current law

An entity will be liable for monthly PAYG instalments if it exceeds a certain threshold.

The threshold at:

1 January 2014, for corporate tax entities is $1 billion or more;
1 January 2015, corporate tax entities is $100 million or more; and
1 January 2016:

-
for corporate tax entities is $20 million or more; or
-
for all other entities is $1 billion or more,

1 January 2017, for all other entities is $20 million.

An entity with a threshold amount of less than $100 million, who is a quarterly or annual GST reporter (or their GST representative is), and is not a head company of a consolidated group or a provisional head company of a MEC group, will not be required to pay monthly PAYG instalments.

Entities are liable for PAYG instalments quarterly, unless they are eligible to become an annual or biannual payer.

Detailed explanation of new law

1.13 These amendments introduce the monthly PAYG instalment rules. Under these rules, certain large entities will be liable for PAYG instalments on a monthly basis rather than quarterly or annually.

1.14 Generally, an entity that meets the monthly payer requirement at a particular time is a 'monthly payer' and liable for monthly PAYG instalments from the start of the first month of their next income year.

1.15 Monthly payers continue to be liable for monthly PAYG instalments until they no longer meet the monthly payer requirement and give notice to the Commissioner that they will no longer pay their monthly. Where notice has been given to the Commissioner the entity remains a monthly payer until the next income year. [ Schedule 1, items 3 to 8 and 19, sections 45-5, 45-20, 45-50 and 45-136 ]

1.16 Under the general provisions, the amount of a monthly instalment is the applicable instalment rate multiplied by the instalment income of the monthly payer for that instalment month. Instalment month means a month that starts on the first day of an income year and each subsequent month, which equates to each calendar month of the year. [ Schedule 1, items 9 and 11, section 45-65 and subsection 45-114(1 )]

1.17 The Commissioner calculates and provides the entity with an applicable instalment rate. Where the entity has chosen to use a varied instalment rate, then that is the applicable instalment rate. Furthermore, the rules that apply to the operation and administration of quarterly PAYG instalment payers also apply to monthly payers, including penalties where the varied instalment rate is too low. [ Schedule 1, items 11 and 21 to 24, sections 45-200 and 45-225 and subsection 45-114(2 )]

1.18 Instalment income for an instalment month is broadly equivalent to the entity's ordinary income derived during that calendar month (section 45-120). However, the Commissioner may determine by legislative instrument additional methods for calculating the amount of a monthly instalment. The Commissioner may also, in providing an additional method, restrict the eligibility of a certain method to a specific class of entity or circumstance and specify the period in which an entity is required to use the additional method. [ Schedule 1, item 11, subsections 45-114(3) to (6 )]

1.19 Where the Commissioner has provided additional methods for the calculation of an instalment amount, a monthly payer may choose to use an additional method (if eligible) or alternatively calculate their instalment income under the general provisions. An entity will not be restricted in changing methods for any month, unless such a restriction is prescribed by the Commissioner in the relevant instrument. [ Schedule 1, item 11, section 45-114 ]

Example 1.1

The Commissioner specifies by legislative instrument an additional method that superannuation funds may use to determine the amount of their monthly instalment. Also contained in this instrument is a requirement that, if a fund chooses to use that method, they must commence using that method at the start of a month and can choose no other method for the relevant income year.

1.20 Notification and payments of monthly PAYG instalments must be undertaken electronically on or before the 21st day of the next month, unless specified by other means by the Commissioner. If a monthly payer is a deferred Business Activity Statement (BAS) payer the payment must be made by the 28th day of the next month. [ Schedule 1, items 5, 9 and 10, sections 45-67 and 45-72 and subsection 45-20(2 )]

1.21 The payment, by a deferred BAS payer, of a December monthly PAYG instalment must be made on or before the 28th of February. [ Schedule 1, item 9, subsection 45-67(2 )]

The general monthly PAYG instalment rules

Who is required to be a monthly PAYG instalment payer?

1.22 An entity will generally be a monthly payer if its threshold amount is equal to or greater than $20 million (note that the threshold is different under the transitional rules, which are discussed at paragraph 1.45). The threshold level broadly aligns with the GST threshold for being a monthly GST reporter. [ Schedule 1, item 19, subsection 45-138(1 )]

1.23 However, if a taxpayer lodges a GST return on a quarterly or annual basis, they will only become a monthly payer if their threshold amount is equal to or exceeds $100 million. This exemption better aligns the GST reporting and PAYG instalment obligations of entities with a threshold amount of over $20 million and under $100 million. Where an entity is part of a GST group, it is the GST group representative member's GST reporting obligation that is relevant for determining eligibility for the exemption. [ Schedule 1, item 19, subsection 45-138(2 )]

1.24 A head company of a consolidated group or a provisional head company of a MEC group will be a monthly payer if their threshold amount is equal to or greater than the $20 million threshold, regardless of their GST reporting requirements. [ Schedule 1, item 19, paragraph 45-138(2)(b )]

What is the threshold?

1.25 The threshold is a measure of an entity's economic activity, designed to identify large entities required to pay PAYG instalments monthly. The threshold is measured by reference to an entity's BAII.

1.26 For most entities, the threshold will be their BAII as provided by the Commissioner. For TOFA entities, whose BAII given by the Commissioner does not exceed the threshold; their threshold amount is their 'adjusted' BAII.

1.27 Broadly speaking, the BAII of an entity is so much of the entity's assessable income for a year (base year), as worked out for the purposes of the base assessment, as the Commissioner determines is instalment income (subsection 45-320(2)). In general, instalment income is the amount of ordinary income less exempt and non-assessable non-exempt income. Some entities have statutory income included in their instalment income. The Commissioner calculates the BAII when producing an instalment rate for an entity.

Special rules for calculating BAII for some TOFA entities

1.28 TOFA entities, whose BAII given by the Commissioner does not exceed the threshold, must calculate their 'adjusted' BAII disregarding the impact of being a TOFA entity on the calculation. This 'adjusted' BAII is relevant for both determining if the entity exceeds the threshold and if it is eligible for the exemption for quarterly GST payers with a threshold amount under $100 million. [ Schedule 1, item 19, subsections 45-138(5) to (7 )]

1.29 For TOFA entities, the BAII given to them by the Commissioner may use net calculations for their TOFA arrangements rather than gross figures (subsection 45-120(2C)). Using the net amount of income from financial arrangements significantly reduces the BAII of TOFA entities. Requiring TOFA entities to test their 'adjusted' BAII ensues that the threshold is applied equitably to both TOFA and non-TOFA entities.

1.30 However, unlike the BAII that is provided by the Commissioner, this 'adjusted' BAII amount will need to be determined by the entity.

1.31 TOFA entities, that do not have a BAII exceeding the threshold but are monthly payers because of their 'adjusted' BAII, are required to notify the Commissioner that they are a monthly payer.

1.32 If the TOFA entity was already a PAYG instalment payer, it must notify the Commissioner before the start of its next income year. [ Schedule 1, item 19, paragraph 45-138(2)(b )]

1.33 If the TOFA entity was not already a PAYG instalment payer, it must notify the Commissioner on or before the end of the entity's starting instalment month. That is, by the end of the month after the month in which the rate is given to the entity by the Commissioner.

1.34 Failure to notify the Commissioner as required may result in the imposition of penalties. [ Schedule 1, item 19, paragraph 45-138(2)(a )]

Monthly Payer Requirement Test Day

1.35 For the purposes of meeting the monthly payer requirement, the threshold amount and GST reporting status of the taxpayer are tested at a particular point in time - which is the start of the entity's monthly payer requirement test day (MPR test day). When a MPR test day occurs will depend on whether or not the entity is already paying PAYG instalments.

1.36 The status of the entity on the MPR test day is absolute. Retrospective changes in the treatment of an entity that affect the monthly payer criteria, such as backdating of a GST registration, are disregarded. [ Schedule 1, item 19, subsection 45-138(3 )]

MPR test day - Entities already paying PAYG instalments

1.37 The MPR test day, for an entity already in the PAYG instalment regime, is the first day at the start of the third last month of the previous income year. Essentially, the test to be a monthly payer for a particular year is conducted at a point in time in an earlier year. The intervening three months between the test time and the start of the next income year allows the entity to prepare to be a monthly payer. [ Schedule 1, item 19, paragraph 45-138(4)(b )]

1.38 For a standard balancer (income year ending 30 June), the MPR test day for the 2017-18 income year will be 1 April 2017. For entities that are on substituted accounting periods, the MPR test day will depend on when their income year ends.

Example 1.2

In 2018, King Ltd is a quarterly PAYG instalment payer and a standard (30 June) balancer. When testing whether King Ltd is required to be a monthly payer for the 2018-19 income year, the MPR test day is 1 April 2018. This allows King Ltd three months to modify its accounting and payment systems in order to cater for the change to monthly instalments from the 1 July 2018.

MPR test day - Entities not currently paying PAYG instalments

1.39 For entities entering the PAYG instalment regime (those given an instalment rate by the Commissioner for the first time), the MPR test day is the last day of the month in which the Commissioner has given them the instalment rate. The MPR test day is the last day of the month to allow for all of the criteria for determining if the entity is to be a monthly payer to be considered, including the entity's GST reporting cycle. [ Schedule 1, item 19, paragraph 45-138(4)(a )]

Example 1.3

Lalvey Ltd is given an instalment rate by the Commissioner on 10 February 2018. The MPR test day for Lalvey Ltd is 28 February 2018, being the last day of the month in which the instalment rate was given to Lalvey Ltd by the Commissioner.

When you become a monthly PAYG instalment payer

1.40 An entity currently paying PAYG instalments that satisfies the monthly payer requirement on a MPR test day becomes a monthly payer from the commencement of its next income year (the last day of the starting instalment month). That is, the income year commencing immediately after the MPR test day. If you are a PAYG payer on the last day of the month making you are liable to pay a PAYG instalment for that month. [ Schedule 1, item 19, subsection 45-136(3) and paragraph 45-136(2)(b )]

Example 1.4 .

From Example 1.2, if King Ltd satisfies the monthly payer requirement on 1 April 2018, then it will become a monthly payer from 31 July 2018 (the last day of the starting instalment month in its next income year). The effect of this is that King Ltd will have an instalment for the month of July which is payable in the following month of August.

1.41 Entities not currently paying PAYG instalments, that satisfy the monthly payer requirement at the relevant time, will become monthly payers from the last day of the month (the starting instalment month) after the month in which the Commissioner gives the entity their first instalment rate. This is the first month commencing immediately after the MPR test day. The entity may have to pay an instalment for that month. [ Schedule 1, item 19, paragraph 45-136(2)(a )]

Example 1.5

From Example 1.3, if Lalvey Ltd satisfies the monthly payer requirement on 28 February 2018, then it will become a monthly payer from 31 March 2018. The effect of this is that Lalvey Ltd will have a PAYG instalment liability for the month of March which is payable in the following month of April.

1.42 Once an entity is a monthly payer, they continue to be a monthly payer until such a time that they provide the Commissioner with a valid MP stop notice, as discussed at paragraph 1.43. [ Schedule 1, item 19, paragraph 45-136(4)(b )]

Example 1.6

XYZ is a non-TOFA entity with an income year that ends on 30 June. On 1 March the Commissioner gives XYZ its latest BAII relevant to its latest income tax year assessment. The BAII is above the $20 million threshold. Therefore XYZ is a monthly payer from the start of its next income year.
Example 1.7
ABC is a TOFA entity and a monthly GST reporter with an income year that ends on 30 June. On 1 March the Commissioner gives ABC its latest BAII for its latest income tax year assessment, which is below the $20 million threshold. ABC must consider the effect of its TOFA income on its instalment income for the last income tax return to which the Commissioner's BAII relates. ABC calculates it 'adjusted' BAII by disregarding the rules in subsection 45-120(2C) concerning the treatment of TOFA income for instalment income purposes.
ABC's 'adjusted' BAII exceeds the $20 million threshold. ABC notifies the Commissioner on 1 June that it is a monthly payer with effect from the start of its next income year.
If ABC was a quarterly GST reporter and its 'adjusted' BAII was under $100 million, then it would not be a monthly payer from the start of its next income year. Nor would it be required to notify the Commissioner.

How and when you stop being a monthly PAYG instalment payer

1.43 Where a monthly payer no longer meets the monthly payer requirement on a MPR test day, it may elect to stop paying monthly PAYG instalments. This election is made by notifying the Commissioner in the approved form. [ Schedule 1, item 19, subsection 45-136(4 )]

1.44 This notification (referred to as a MP stop notice) must be provided to the Commissioner prior to the commencement of the next income year. Where an MP stop notice is not provided, the entity will remain a monthly payer for the next income year. The entity will again need to satisfy the relevant criteria for giving a MP stop notice in the next year (re-test) before it can validly notify the Commissioner they elect to stop being a monthly payer.

Example 1.8 : Non-TOFA entities

Catleap Enterprises is a corporate tax entity that has a substituted accounting period ending on 31 July. It is not a TOFA entity and is a monthly payer. At 1 May 2018 (the MPR test day), Catleap Enterprises has a BAII of $18 million and therefore does not meet the monthly payer requirement. Catleap Enterprises notifies the Commissioner that it no longer wishes to be a monthly payer on 18 May 2018 and subsequently becomes a quarterly payer from 31 August 2018 (the last day of the starting instalment month for quarterly payers in the next income year). However, the month of August will form part of the first instalment quarter for Catleap Enterprises.
If Catleap Enterprises had not notified the Commissioner by way of MP stop notice or notifies the Commissioner on or after 1 August 2018, it would remain a monthly payer for the 2018-19 income year.
Example 1.9 : TOFA entity
Assume Catleap Enterprises in Example 1.8 is a TOFA entity. Although Catleap Enterprises has a BAII under $20 million, it must determine its 'adjusted' BAII amount as it is a TOFA entity.
Catleap Enterprises determines that for the base year of its most recent BAII provided by the Commissioner, its 'adjusted' BAII amount is $60 million. Therefore, Catleap Enterprises is not eligible to issue the Commissioner with an MP stop notice and must continue to be a monthly payer for the 2018-19 income year.

The transitional rules

Who is required to be a monthly PAYG instalment payer during the transitional period

1.45 As announced by the Government in the 2013-14 Budget, the measure will be phased in over four years (the transitional period).

from 1 January 2014, all corporate tax entities with a threshold amount of $1 billion or more will be required to pay PAYG instalments monthly;
from 1 January 2015, all corporate tax entities with a threshold amount of $100 million or more will be required pay PAYG instalments monthly;
from 1 January 2016:

-
all corporate tax entities with a threshold amount of $20 million or more will be required pay PAYG instalments monthly (subject to the GST reporting exemption discussed in paragraph 1.23); and
-
all non-corporate tax entities with a threshold amount of $1 billion or more will be required pay PAYG instalments monthly; and

from 1 January 2017, all non-corporate tax entities with a threshold amount of $20 million or more will be required to pay PAYG instalments monthly (subject to the GST reporting exemption).

[Schedule 1, item 45 and subitem 47(1)]

1.46 During the transitional period, entities that meet the monthly payer requirement may become monthly payers by either of two MPR test day rules:

a MPR test day under the general monthly PAYG instalment rules - the start of the third last month of the income year, or the last day of the month in which the Commissioner gives the entity its first instalment rate; or
an additional (transitional) MPR test day - as set out in paragraph 1.47 which tests whether an entity is required to become a monthly payer, from either 1 January 2014, 1 January 2015, 1 January 2016 and 1 January 2017.

Additional MPR test day

1.47 To ensure that, during the transitional period, an entity that meets the monthly payer requirement becomes a monthly payer from the relevant 1 January, rather than at the commencement of the next income year, there is an additional MPR test day for each stage in the transition period. These additional MPR test days are aligned with the phase in of the measure and occur on:

1 October 2013;
1 October 2014;
1 October 2015; and
1 October 2016.

[Schedule 1, subitems 48(1) and (2)]

1.48 The phase in of the transitional threshold applies the additional MPR test days as follows:

1 October 2013 - corporate tax entities with a threshold amount equal to or exceeding $1 billion will be required to be monthly payers from 1 January 2014;
1 October 2014 - corporate tax entities with a threshold amount equal to or exceeding $100 million will be required to be monthly payers from 1 January 2015;
1 October 2015 - corporate tax entities with a threshold amount equal to or exceeding $20 million, and all other entities with a threshold equal to or exceeding $1 billion, will be required to be monthly payers from 1 January 2016 (subject to the GST reporting exemption); and
1 October 2016 -all entities with a threshold equal to or exceeding $20 million will be required to be monthly payers from 1 January 2017 (subject to the GST reporting exemption ).

[Schedule 1, item 48, and subitem 47(1)]

1.49 Where a MPR test day (under the general monthly PAYG instalment rules) occurs between the additional MPR test days, the threshold applied at the earlier date is relevant.

1.50 For instance, the general MPR test day of a corporate tax entity falls on 1 August 2014. The threshold amount for a corporate tax entity to become a monthly payer on or after 1 October 2013 is $1 billion. The $100 million threshold only applies from the additional MPR test day on or after 1 October 2014.

1.51 TOFA entities that satisfy the monthly payer requirement on an additional MPR test day because of their 'adjusted' BAII (where the BAII given to them by the Commissioner does not exceed the threshold), commence being a monthly payer and are required to notify the Commissioner before 1 January. This is similar to the notification requirement under the general provisions. [Schedule 1, subitem 49(2)]

How and when you become a monthly PAYG instalment payer during the transitional period

1.52 Where an entity satisfies the monthly payer requirement on a MPR test day, it will commence being a monthly payer in accordance with the general monthly PAYG instalment rules.

1.53 If an entity is not already a monthly payer and it satisfies the monthly payer requirement on an additional MPR test day, it will start being a monthly payer from the last day of its first instalment month commencing after 1 January. However, entities will not be required to start monthly instalments partway through an instalment quarter.

For standard 30 June balancers, this means that they will be liable for monthly instalments from January of the following year and each subsequent month. This is because their previous instalment quarter ends on 31 December.
Entities with substituted accounting periods, with an instalment quarter that does not commence on one of the specified application days (that is, with an instalment quarter of 1 November to 31 January), will begin paying monthly instalments once their current instalment quarter has ended.
For annual instalment payers, they will commence being a monthly payer from the start of their next income year.

[Schedule 1, subitems 48(3) and (4)]

Example 1.10 : Standard 30 June balancer

Wishart Co. is a corporate tax entity, a quarterly PAYG instalment payer, not a TOFA entity and is a standard 30 June balancer. On 1 October 2013, Wishart Co. has a BAII of $1.2 billion. As Wishart Co.'s BAII exceeds $1 billion and its PAYG instalment quarter ends on 31 December 2013 (the next instalment quarter commences on 1 January 2014). It will be a monthly payer from 31 January 2014 and be liable for a PAYG instalment for the month of January, being its starting instalment month.
Example 1.11 : Substituted accounting period balancer
Assume Wishart Co. in Example 1.10 has a substituted accounting period with an income year ending on 30 August. Consequently, Wishart Co. has an instalment quarter that ends on 28 February 2014. As Wishart Co. satisfied the requirements on 1 October 2013 to be a monthly payer, it will have monthly PAYG instalments from 1 March 2014 instead of 1 January 2014. This is because it does not commence being a monthly payer until the end of its instalment quarter.
Example 1.12 : Annual payer
Assume Wishart Co. in Example 1.10 is an annual PAYG instalment payer. On 1 October 2013, Wishart Co. has a BAII of $1.2 billion. As Wishart Co.'s BAII exceeds $1 billion and is an annual PAYG instalment payer, it will have monthly instalments from 1 July 2014.

1.54 The following examples demonstrate how the monthly payer rules will apply during the transitional period.

Example 1.13 : Standard 30 June balancer

TBlack is a corporate tax entity that is the head company of a consolidated group. TBlack pays its PAYG instalments quarterly and is a standard 30 June balancer. At 1 January 2013 TBlack's BAII, as provided by the Commissioner, is $18 million.
TBlack has an additional MPR test day on 1 October 2013. As TBlack's BAII is under $1 billion it is not a monthly payer from 1 January 2014.
On 20 January 2014, TBlack is provided by the Commissioner with a BAII of $21 million.
On 1 April 2014, which is three months before the end of its current income year, TBlack has a MPR test day to determine whether it is a monthly payer for the 2014-15 income year. As TBlack's BAII is under $1 billion, it is not required to be a monthly payer from the commencement of the 2014-15 income year.
TBlack has an additional MPR test day on 1 October 2014. As TBlack's BAII is under $100 million it is not a monthly payer from 1 January 2015.
On 25 January 2015, TBlack is provided by the Commissioner with a BAII of $18 million.
On 1 April 2015, TBlack has a MPR test day to determine whether it is a monthly payer for the 2015-16 income year. As TBlack's BAII is under $100 million, it is not required to be a monthly payer from the commencement of the 2015-16 income year.
TBlack has an additional MPR test day on 1 October 2015. As TBlack's BAII is under $20 million it is not a monthly payer from 1 January 2016.
On 25 January 2016, TBlack is provided by the Commissioner with a BAII of $21 million.
On 1 April 2016, TBlack has a MPR test day to determine whether it is a monthly payer for the next income year (2016-2017). As TBlack's BAII is over $20 million and it is the head company of a consolidated group, it is not eligible for the exemption relating to GST reporting. Therefore, TBlack is required to be a monthly payer from the commencement of the 2016-17 income year.
TBlack's starting instalment month is July 2016. TBlack will be liable for its first monthly PAYG instalment (for the month of July 2016) on 21 August 2016 or if it is a deferred BAS payer, the 28 August 2016.
Example 1.14 : Standard 30 June balancer (TOFA entity)
Peter Potts is a high wealth sole trader who pays PAYG instalments and pays GST quarterly. Peter is a TOFA entity whose income year ends on 30 June. On 1 January 2015 Peter is provided by the Commissioner with a BAII of $18 million, based on his 2013-14 income year.
On 1 October 2015, Peter has an additional MPR test day. Peter's BAII has remained $18 million. As Peter is a TOFA entity he must determine his 'adjusted' BAII. As Peter has a substantial amount of financial arrangements subject to Division 230 of the ITAA 1997, his 'adjusted' BAII is determined by him to be $70 million for the base year of 2013-14. As both Peter's BAII as provided by the Commissioner and his 'adjusted' BAII (because he is a TOFA entity) as determined by him are under $1 billion, he is not a monthly payer from 1 January 2016.
On 15 February 2016, the Commissioner provides Peter with a new BAII of $17 million, based on his 2014-15 income year.
On 1 April 2016, Peter has a MPR test day to determine whether he is a monthly payer for the 2016-17 income year. Although Peter's has a BAII under $1 billion, he must still determine whether his 'adjusted' BAII amount exceeds $20 million. Peter determines that his 'adjusted' BAII amount is $60 million. As both his BAII as provided by the Commissioner and 'adjusted' BAII amounts are under $1 billion, he is not required to be a monthly payer from the commencement of his 2016-17 income year.
On 1 October 2016, Peter has an additional MPR test day. Peter's BAII is still $17 million and his 'adjusted' BAII amount remains $60 million. Although Peter's 'adjusted' BAII amount exceeds $20 million, Peter is a quarterly GST reporter and payer and he is not required to be a monthly payer from 1 January 2017.
If Peter was a monthly GST reporter and payer on 1 October 2016, he would be required to become a monthly payer from 1 January 2017. He would also be required, as a TOFA entity, before 1 January 2017, to provide the Commissioner with notification that that he is required to be a monthly payer. This is because his 'adjusted' BAII amount exceeds the threshold test of $20 million (and his BAII from the Commissioner was under $20 million).
Example 1.15 : Substituted accounting period balancer
Adam Co. is a corporate tax entity, pays PAYG instalments quarterly, is not part of a consolidated group, is not a TOFA entity and reports and pays GST monthly. Adam Co. is on a substituted accounting period and its income year ends on 30 April. At 1 January 2013 Adam Co.'s BAII as provided by the Commissioner is $25 million.
Adam Co. has an additional MPR test day on 1 October 2013. As Adam Co.'s BAII is under $1 billion it is not a monthly payer from 1 January 2014.
On 20 November 2013, Adam Co. is provided by the Commissioner with a BAII of $21 million.
On 1 February 2014, being Adam Co.'s third month before the end of its current income year, Adam Co. has a MPR test day to determine whether it is a monthly payer for the 2014-15 next income year (2014-2015). As Adam Co.'s BAII is under $1 billion, it is not required to be a monthly payer from the commencement of the 2014-15 income year.
Adam Co. has an additional MPR test day on 1 October 2014. As Adam Co.'s BAII is under $100 million it is not a monthly payer from 1 January 2015.
On 19 November 2014, Adam Co. is provided by the Commissioner with a BAII of $28 million.
On 1 February 2015, Adam Co. has a MPR test day to test whether it is a monthly payer for the 2015-2016. As Adam Co.'s BAII is under $100 million, it is not required to be a monthly payer from the commencement of the 2015-16 income year.
Adam Co. has an additional MPR test day on 1 October 2015. As Adam Co.'s is a monthly GST reporter and payer, it is not eligible for exemption from being a monthly payer. Therefore, because Adam Co.'s BAII is over $20 million it will, at first instance, be treated as a monthly payer from 1 January 2016.
However, Adam Co.'s starting instalment month is February 2016. This is because Adam Co. has an instalment quarter that includes 1 January 2016 but does not start on that day (the quarter runs from 1 November to 31 January).
Adam Co. will be liable for its first monthly instalment payment (for the month of February 2016) on 21 March 2016, or if it is a deferred BAS payer, the 28 March 2016.
Example 1.16 : Annual payer
Assume Adam Co. in Example 1.15 is an annual instalment payer with its income year ending on 30 April.
Adam Co. has an additional MPR test day on 1 October 2015. As Adam Co.'s BAII as provided by the Commissioner is over $20 million and it is a monthly GST reporter and payer, it is not eligible for the exemption from being a monthly payer. Adam Co. will be, at first instance, a monthly payer for from 1 January 2016.
However, because Adam Co. is an annual instalment payer, its starting instalment month is May 2016 (which is the commencement of its next income year).
Adam Co. will be liable for its first monthly instalment payment (for the month of May 2016) on 21 June 2016 or if it is a deferred BAS payer, on 28 June 2016.

How and when you stop being a monthly PAYG instalment payer - additional MPR

1.55 Entities will not be able to give the Commissioner a MP stop notice as a result of the operation of any one of the additional MPR test days. Entities that are monthly payers will only be able to give the Commissioner a MP stop notice because they did not satisfy the monthly payer requirement on the relevant MPR test day under the general monthly instalment rules. [Schedule 1, subitem 47(5)]

1.56 The higher transitional period thresholds are not relevant to the giving of a MP stop notice at any time. Entities can only give the Commissioner a MP stop notice where their threshold amount falls below $20 million at the specified test time, or alternatively, they qualify for the additional exemption. The additional exemption applies if an entity, at the relevant test time, is a quarterly (or annual) GST reporter and payer with a threshold amount that is under $100 million. [Schedule 1, subitem 47(4)]

Example 1.17

Kemp Consulting is a corporate tax entity, a PAYG quarterly payer, not a TOFA entity and also pays GST monthly. Kemp Consulting has an income year commencing on 1 July. On 1 October 2014 (the additional MPR test day), Kemp Consulting has been given a BAII of $105 million. Therefore, Kemp Consulting is required to be a monthly payer from 1 January 2015 (because it is a 30 June balancer, its last quarterly tax period ends on 31 December 2014).
On 25 January 2015, Kemp Consulting is provided by the Commissioner with a BAII of $98 million.
On 1 April 2015 (the MPR test day being the first day of the third month before the end of the income year), Kemp Consulting has a BAII that is over $20 million. As Kemp Consulting is a monthly GST reporter and payer it will remain a monthly payer for the next income year.
If Kemp Consulting, at 1 April 2015, was a quarterly GST reporter and payer, then it could give the Commissioner an MP stop notice (prior to the commencement of the next income year on 1 July 2015). The effect of the notice is that it is no longer a monthly payer from the commencement of the next income year.
Example 1.18
Assume Kemp Consulting was a TOFA entity and a quarterly GST payer. On 1 April 2015, it is required to also calculate its 'adjusted' BAII amount. The 'adjusted' BAII is determined by reference to the TOFA income relevant to its last tax return that corresponds to the BAII provided by the Commissioner. This amount is determined to be $200 million. As Kemp Consulting has an 'adjusted' BAII that exceeds $100 million, it is required to remain a monthly payer for the 2015-16 income year.

1.57 Only allowing an MP stop notice where the $20 million threshold is not met ensures that entities that become monthly payers in the transition period do not change back to quarterly instalments because they no longer meet the transitional threshold, only to be required once again to become a monthly payer when the $20 million threshold applies.

Application and transitional provisions

1.58 The amendments apply to corporate tax entities from 1 January 2014. [Schedule 1, subitem 46 ]

1.59 The amendments apply to all other entities from 1 January 2016. [Schedule 1, subitem 46 ]

Consequential amendments

1.60 Consequential amendments are made to:

update the relevant guide provisions in Division 45;
update the definitions in the ITAA 1997;
update liability for payment of tax provisions in Division 721 of the ITAA 1997;
modify the current provisions to ensure monthly PAYG payers cannot also be quarterly or annual PAYG payers; and
update the PAYG instalment provisions to give the same effect as they would a quarterly payer in relation to a quarter, for a monthly payer in relation to a month for:

-
variation of instalment rates (Subdivision 45-F);
-
the application of the general interest charge to instalment shortfalls (Subdivision 45-G);
-
the anti-avoidance rules (Subdivision 45-P);
-
the general and special consolidations rules (Subdivisions 45-Q and 45-R); and
-
the MEC group rules (Subdivision 45-S).

[Schedule 1, items 1 to 2, 11 to 17 and 18 to 44, sections 45-1, 45-125, 45-130, 45-200, 45-205, 45-225, 45-597, 45-703, 45-715 and 45-870, subsections 45-132(4 ), 45-200(2 ), 45-705(4) and 45-915 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953, and sections 721-10 and 995-1 of the ITAA 1997 ]

STATEMENT OF COMPATIBILITY WITH HUMAN RIGHTS

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

Monthly Pay as You Go instalments

1.61 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

1.62 Schedule 1 to this Bill amends Division 45 of Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 to require certain large entities to pay Pay As You Go instalments monthly.

1.63 The PAYG instalment system requires entities with business or investment income to pay instalments towards their income tax liability. It is designed to ensure the efficient collection of income tax, including the Medicare levy, Higher Education Loans Program (HELP) debts, and debts under the Student Financial Supplement Scheme and the Aboriginal Study Assistance Scheme (ABSTUDY). This change does not increase the overall tax liability of an entity. Rather it makes PAYG instalments more responsive to the economic position of an entity and better aligns the timing of PAYG instalments with Government payments. This reduces the risk of an entity accumulating large tax debts.

1.64 Schedule 1 to this Bill requires large entities to pay PAYG instalments monthly rather than quarterly or annually. Entities will be transitioned into the monthly PAYG instalment system over a four year period:

from 1 January 2014, corporate tax entities (being companies, corporate limited partnerships, corporate unit trusts or public trading trusts) that meet or exceed the $1 billion threshold will be required to pay PAYG instalments monthly;
from 1 January 2015, corporate tax entities that meet or exceed the $100 million threshold will be required to pay PAYG instalments monthly;
from 1 January 2016:

-
all entities, including superannuation funds, trusts and individuals, that meet or exceed the $1 billion threshold will be required to pay PAYG instalments monthly;
-
corporate tax entities that meet or exceed the $20 million threshold may be required to pay PAYG instalments monthly; and

from 1 January 2017, all entities, including corporate tax entities, superannuation funds, trusts and individuals that meet or exceed the $20 million threshold may be required to pay PAYG instalments monthly.

1.65 Entities that are not currently required to report and pay GST monthly will not be required to move to monthly PAYG instalments if they do not meet the $100 million threshold and are not a head company of a consolidated group or a provisional head company of a multiple entry consolidated group (MEC group). This exemption better aligns the reporting of GST and PAYG instalments for those entities.

Human rights implications

1.66 The Schedule does not engage any of the applicable rights or freedoms.

Conclusion

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

Assistant Treasurer, the Hon David Bradbury

Tax loss incentive for designated infrastructure projects

Outline of chapter

2.1 Schedule 2 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) to provide a tax incentive for entities that carry on a nationally significant infrastructure project that has been designated by the Infrastructure Coordinator (Coordinator).

2.2 The tax incentive:

uplifts the value of such entities' carry forward tax losses by the long-term bond rate;
exempts such entities that are companies from the continuity of ownership and same business tests; and
exempts such entities that are fixed trusts from the trust loss and bad debt deduction tests.

2.3 All references to legislative provisions in this chapter are to the ITAA 1997, unless otherwise stated.

Context of amendments

2.4 Investment in high quality infrastructure projects is critical to improving national productivity and underpinning economic growth. The Government is investing a record $60 billion in nationally significant land transport infrastructure projects under the Nation Building Program.

2.5 Infrastructure projects often experience long lead times between incurring deductible expenditure in the construction phase and earning assessable income in the operational phase. Tax losses are therefore accumulated and carried forward to later income years awaiting the receipt of income.

2.6 As such, the present value of losses may be eroded over time, disadvantaging infrastructure investment compared to other types of investment.

2.7 Furthermore, infrastructure projects may move through a number of phases as they move from the construction phase to the operational phase, and the entity may have different owners as it moves through its different phases.

2.8 These changes could result in the entity no longer being able to use its tax losses to offset against future income, eroding the value of the losses altogether. Broadly, existing integrity rules in the income tax laws only allow the use of past tax losses where an entity maintains the same majority ownership (the continuity of ownership test) or is carrying on the same business (the same business test).

2.9 This measure will encourage private investment in nationally significant infrastructure projects by:

ensuring that investors are not discouraged from investing in infrastructure because of the reduction in the present value of losses over time; and
increasing the likelihood that the losses can be used to offset future earnings and benefit investors in the project, whether the original investors or new investors in the project.

Summary of new law

2.10 This Schedule allows an entity that is carried on exclusively for the purpose of a 'designated infrastructure project' (DIP) to:

uplift tax losses by the long-term government bond rate; and
carry forward tax losses and claim bad debt deductions even though it does not satisfy the continuity of ownership and same business tests for companies and equivalent tests for trusts.

2.11 This Schedule allows the Coordinator to designate an infrastructure project of national significance to be a DIP on or before 30 June 2017 where:

the project satisfies any requirements prescribed by the Minister; or
if there are no prescribed requirements:

-
the project must be nationally significant; and
-
the financing arrangements for the project must have been made or be imminent.

2.12 The Coordinator can only designate a project if the total capital expenditure of all designated projects (including provisionally designated projects) would not exceed $25 billion (or a higher prescribed amount).

Comparison of key features of new law and current law

New law Current law

A company or fixed trust that solely carries on a single project designated by the Coordinator as a DIP can utilise prior year losses and deduct bad debts without needing to satisfy the continuity of ownership (including the 50 per cent stake test for trusts), the control test or same business test (if applicable).

The Coordinator may designate a project as a DIP in prescribed circumstances or, if none are prescribed, where it is nationally significant and financial close has happened or is imminent and granting the project DIP status will not cause the estimated global expenditure cap to be exceeded.

An entity must satisfy a continuity of ownership test (including the 50 per cent stake test for trusts) or the same business test (if applicable) before it can utilise losses from past years or deduct bad debts.
The value of losses carried forward by an entity is uplifted by the long-term Government bond rate if the entity solely carries on a single DIP. The value of carried forward losses is based on their nominal value.

Detailed explanation of new law

2.13 This Schedule allows an entity that is carried on exclusively for the purpose of a DIP to:

uplift tax losses by the long-term government bond rate (paragraphs 2.15 to 2.30); and
carry forward tax losses and claim bad debt deductions even though it does not satisfy the continuity of ownership and same business tests for companies and equivalent tests for trusts (paragraphs 2.31 to 2.69).

2.14 These concessions are available to certain entities known as DIP entities (paragraphs 2.70 to 2.76). A DIP entity must carry on a project that has been designated by the Coordinator as a DIP (paragraphs 2.77 to 2.100). The Coordinator can only designate projects up to a certain capital expenditure cap (paragraphs 2.101 to 2.110).

Tax benefits for designated infrastructure project entities

2.15 Companies and fixed trusts that carry on a DIP are able to uplift their tax losses from earlier years. These companies can also deduct those tax losses and their bad debts even if they do not satisfy the 'continuity of ownership' and 'same business' tests. These trusts can also deduct their tax losses and bad debts even if they do not satisfy the trust equivalent of those tests.

Uplifting losses

2.16 A company or a fixed trust that is a DIP entity in an income year uplifts its unutilised tax losses from the 2012-13 and later income years before deducting them. [Schedule 2, items 4, 47 and 48, subsection 415-15(1 ), paragraph 415-20(1)(a) and section 415-10 of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 ]

2.17 Losses are 'utilised' when they are deducted against assessable income or exempt income (see subsection 707-110(2)). For the purposes of this measure, they are also utilised when the amount of forgiven commercial debts is applied to reduce them. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-15(6)]

2.18 This measure is intended to promote investment in new infrastructure. As such, the uplift is not available for losses incurred before the 2012-13 income year or for projects that commenced before making an application for designation. [Schedule 2, items 4, 47 and 48, subsection 415-55(1) and section 415-10 of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 ]

2.19 An entity will not be a DIP entity and will therefore not be able to uplift its losses if it carries on activities that are not for the purpose of the DIP. This single entity - single project approach is simpler for entities because they will not have some losses that are able to be uplifted and some that are not. [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraphs 415-20(1)(b ), ( c) and (d)]

2.20 An entity may qualify as a DIP entity when the project has not yet been designated, or the entity has not yet begun carrying on the project, as long as the project becomes designated and the entity begins carrying it on. That means that an entity is able to uplift losses in relation to past years once it has qualified as a DIP entity. These entities would not need their past assessments amended (unless they have already utilised some of the losses), but should notify the Australian Taxation Office of the revised carry forward amounts. [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraphs 415-20(1)(b) and (2)(a)]

2.21 Those losses will continue being uplifted in future years until the entity either fully deducts them or stops being a DIP entity. After the entity stops being a DIP entity, the previous uplifts are retained; they are just not uplifted further. [Schedule 2, items 39 and 40, subsection 995-1(1) paragraphs (a) and (d) of the definition of tax loss ]

2.22 The losses are uplifted by the income year's long-term bond rate, which is the year's average yield for 10-year non-rebate Australian Treasury bonds. This rate is chosen, rather than, say, the Consumer Price Index rate, to compensate the infrastructure entity for the cost of not being able to invest the tax saved from its loss in the most profitable investment available, adjusted for risk. In other words, the treatment is equivalent to the entity lending the money represented by the tax loss to the government for a long term. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-15(1)]

Example 2.19 : Uplifting tax losses

Wolf Transport Projects carries on a project that is designated as a DIP on 1 January 2016. The entity has no other business activities and qualifies as a DIP entity. The entity first incurred a loss of $6 million in the 2013-14 income year.
In the 2014-15 income year it made a small profit that utilised $1.5 million of its 2013-14 tax loss. The long term bond rate for 2014-15 is 5.5 per cent.
In the 2015-16 income year, the entity makes a loss of $76 million and the long term bond rate is 5.8 per cent.
Wolf Transport Projects calculates its carry forward loss from the 2013-14 income year by uplifting it for the 2014-15 income year and then reducing it by the utilised amount (that is, $6 million × 1.055 ? $1.5 million = $4,830,000). The unutilised portion is then uplifted again for the 2015-16 income year ($4,830,000 × 1.058 = $5,110,140).
The 2015-16 loss was only incurred that year and so is not uplifted. The unutilised losses of $5,110,140 and $76 million will be uplifted before being applied against any taxable income and any net exempt income in the next income year.

2.23 If an entity is a DIP entity only for part of an income year in which the uplift occurs, the uplift is apportioned according to the number of days in the year for which it was such an entity. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-15(1)]

Example 2.20 : Apportioning the uplift

In the previous example, if Wolf Transport Projects was only a DIP entity for 100 days during 2015-16, the uplift is adjusted according to the eligible portion of the income year ($4,830,000 x 0.058 x 100/366 = $76,541), so the uplifted amount is $4,906,541 (= $76,541 + 4,830,000).

The uplift and consolidated groups

2.24 When an entity joins a consolidated group, the part of the income year that ends just before the entity joins (the non-membership period) is usually treated as a whole income year (paragraph 701-30(3)(a)). The provisions ensure that a joining entity cannot get a full year's uplift for only part of an income year. Instead, the joining entity must pro rata the uplift as though it was only a DIP entity for that part (the non-membership period) of the income year. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-15(4)]

2.25 Usually, losses transferred from a joining entity to a head company are treated as being incurred by the head company in the transfer year (section 707-140). If this rule applied, then the head company would not be able to uplift losses in the transfer year even though the joining entity would have been able to uplift them if it had not joined the consolidated group. To avoid that, this measure allows the head company to treat previous years losses transferred from the joining entity as prior year losses. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-15(5)]

2.26 However, the head company must also apportion the uplift so that the transferred loss is only uplifted for the part of the income year after the transfer occurs. [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraph 415-10(5)(b)]

Example 2.21 : Tax losses transferred to the head company of a consolidated group

Joseph Co (a DIP entity) is the head company of a consolidated group ('the Joseph Co consolidated group'). Alan Co is a DIP entity in relation to the same project as Joseph Co. On 1 January 2015 Alan Co becomes a member of the Joseph Co consolidated group.
In the 2013-14 income year, Alan Co made a tax loss of $10 million and in the period from 1 July 2014 to 31 December 2014 (its non-membership period), it made a tax loss of $4 million.
In the 2014-15 income year, the long-term bond rate is 5.5 per cent.
Alan Co uplifts its 2013-14 loss at the end of its non-membership period (which is treated as an income year). The uplift is pro-rated having regard to the number of days in the non-membership period. The uplift is calculated as $10 million x 5.5% x 184/365 = $277,260.
Therefore, when Alan Co becomes a member of the Joseph Co consolidated group, the following tax losses are transferred (noting that their subsequent utilisation by Joseph Co will not be subject to an available fraction):

$10,277,260 (from the 2013-2014 income year)
$4 million (from the non-membership period ending on 31 December 2014).

Example 2.22 : Subsequent uplift of transferred tax loss
Continuing the previous example, at the end of the 2014-15 income year, Joseph Co (which remains a designated infrastructure project entity), uplifts the transferred tax loss actually made by Alan Co in the 2013-14 income year. The uplift is pro-rated having regard to the number of days from the time the loss is transferred. The uplift is calculated as $10,277,260 x 5.5% x 181/365 = 280,302.
The tax loss is increased to $10,557,562 (before any utilisation in the 2014-15 income year).
The transferred tax loss of $4 million was actually made by Alan Co in its non-membership period just before the transfer to Joseph Co. Therefore Joseph Co does not uplift this transferred loss at the end of the 2014-15 income year.
Joseph Co does not have any net exempt income or taxable income in the 2014-15 income year. The unutilised transferred tax losses from Alan Co of $10,557,562 and $4 million are carried forward and will be uplifted at the end of the 2015-16 income year before any utilisation of the losses in that year.
Any group losses made by Joseph Co have been ignored in this example in order to illustrate how the transferred tax losses are uplifted when the joining entity joins partway through the income year of the head company.

Notifying the Commissioner

2.27 In order to access the uplift, the entity must notify the Commissioner of Taxation (Commissioner), in the approved form, that it is a DIP entity. There are a number of things that must happen before an entity will know that it is a DIP entity and these things may happen in a different order depending on the particular circumstances. The day that notice must be provided by accommodate these different circumstances. The entity will be able to access the uplift as long as it provides notice before the latest day listed. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-15(2) and (3)]

2.28 Notice will generally be due by the time the entity first lodges a tax return seeking to uplift a loss. If the entity was not required to lodge a tax return then the entity must notify the Commissioner by the time it would have been required to lodge it. However, if the entity does not receive notification that a project has been designated as a DIP until after it lodged its tax return with the Commissioner, notice may be provided up to 28 days after the project has been designated as a DIP. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-15(2) and paragraphs 415-15(3)(a) and (c)]

2.29 In addition, an entity cannot be sure that it is eligible for the uplift until it commences carrying on activities for the purposes of the DIP. As such, if there is a gap between the entity incurring costs, in relation to applying for designation for example, and commencing carrying on activities in relation to the DIP, notice does not need to be provided until up to 28 days after the activities have commenced. [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraph 415-15(3)(b)]

2.30 In addition, the Commissioner may allow the notice to be lodged at a later time. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-15(2) and paragraph 415-15(3)(d)]

Utilising past losses

Continuity of ownership test

2.31 Companies are normally prevented from deducting a tax loss for an income year if they have not maintained a sufficient continuity of ownership from the start of the year the loss arose until the end of the year they want to deduct it. There will be a sufficient continuity of ownership if the same persons hold more than 50 per cent of the voting power in the company, and rights to more than 50 per cent of its dividends and capital distributions, throughout that period.

2.32 The amendments ensure that a DIP entity does not have to satisfy this test in order to deduct its tax losses from the 2012-13 and later income years as long as it remains a DIP entity. [Schedule 2, items 4 and 47, subsection 415-35(3) and paragraph 415-10(a) of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 ]

2.33 The amendments also do this by adjusting the test period used to work out whether the company has failed the continuity of ownership test. Instead of the period running from the start of the loss year until the end of the deduction income year, the period runs from:

the first time in or after the loss year that the company stopped being a DIP entity; or
the end of the deduction year if it has not stopped being such an entity.

In either case, the period ends at the end of the deduction year. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-35(2)]

2.34 In the first case, the entity would only fail the continuity of ownership test if there was the necessary 50 per cent or greater change in rights after the entity stopped being a DIP entity. Changes before that time would be ignored.

2.35 In the second case, the test period would start and stop at the same moment, so the continuity of ownership test would always be passed. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-35(2) and (3)]

Example 2.23 : Adjusted continuity of ownership test period

Brine Enterprises Pty Ltd (Brine), a DIP entity has carry forward losses from the 2013-14 income year. On 15 May 2014, the shareholders of Brine sell all their shares. Brine seeks to utilise some of the uplifted losses (after applying the uplift) at the end of the 2014-15 income year.
Brine would normally have failed the continuity of ownership test in 2014-15 because there was not a 50 per cent or greater maintenance in continuity of interest from the start of the loss years until the end of 2014-15. However, because it was a DIP entity, the test period collapses into a single point at the end of 2014-15 and Brine is deemed to satisfy the continuity of ownership test.
On 9 November 2015, Brine stops being a DIP entity. On 15 January 2016, the shareholders sell a 60 per cent stake in Brine.
In 2015-16, Brine again seeks to utilise some of the unutilised losses. Brine stopped being a DIP entity on 9 November 2015, so the ownership test period runs from that day until the end of 2015-16 (30 June 2016). Since there was a 60 per cent change in ownership during that reduced test period, Brine fails the continuity of ownership test in 2015-16 and can only utilise the losses if the same business test is satisfied.

2.36 Widely held companies and eligible Division 166 companies (companies in which more than a 50 per cent interest is held, directly or indirectly, by widely held companies, non-profit companies, charities, or complying superannuation funds and similar entities) apply the continuity of ownership test in a modified way. Division 166 makes it easier for them to pass the test by only testing for continuity of ownership at the start of the loss year, at the end of each year up to the end of the deduction income year, and at each intervening time there is a substantial corporate change. Unlike other companies, these companies do not have to test for all intervening points.

2.37 The measure adjusts the start of the test period for these companies if they are DIP entities in the same way it adjusts it for other companies that are DIP entities. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-35(2)]

Same business test

2.38 If a company does not satisfy the continuity of ownership test or it is not practicable to demonstrate that the company meets the continuity of ownership test, it may still be able to deduct the tax loss if it passes the same business test by carrying on the same business throughout the deduction income year that it carried on just before it failed the continuity of ownership test.

2.39 The measure also adjusts the period used to test whether the company passes the same business test if it stopped being a DIP entity in the deduction year. Instead of testing for the whole of the deduction year, a company only has to test for the part of the year that it was not a DIP entity until the end of the income year in which it seeks to utilise the loss. It needs to be carrying on the same business that it carried on just before it stopped being a DIP entity if that time is later than the test time would otherwise occur. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-35(4) and (5 )

Example 2.24 : Same business test

Following on from the previous example, to satisfy the same business test, Brine would need to show that it carried on the same business for the period from when it stopped being a DIP entity to the end of the income year (the same business test period) because, apart from the modification, the test would apply from an earlier time (the start of the income year). This business would need to be the same as the business carried on just before the ownership change on 15 January 2016 (the test time) because, apart from the modification, the test times would be just before the ownership change on 15 May 2014. So Brine would need to carry on the same business during the period 9 November 2015 to 30 June 2016 as it carried on just before the ownership change on 15 January 2016.

Special control test

2.40 Even if a company passes the continuity of ownership test or the same business test, it still might not be able to deduct a tax loss if someone who did not, and could not, directly or indirectly control the voting power in the company during the loss year began to so control it, or became able to control it on or after the end of the loss year for the purpose of getting an income tax benefit (subsection 165-15(1)). In such a case, the entity must to satisfy a modified same business test in order to deduct the loss (subsections 165-15(2) and (3)).

2.41 This special control test will also be reduced to a single point in time where the entity stays a DIP entity from the loss year to the end of the deduction year. In these circumstances the test will always be satisfied. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-35(6)]

2.42 Where the entity stops being a DIP entity between the loss year and the deduction year then not only are the ownership test period, same business test period and test times modified, but the loss year is also treated as modified to ensure that the test applies in relation to losses incurred while it was a DIP entity after it stops being a DIP entity. In particular, the loss year is treated as starting after the entity stopped being a DIP entity and as ending at the end of that income year. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-35(4) to (6)]

Application of tests during year of ownership change

2.43 The income tax law provides special rules for working out the taxable income or loss of a company that changes ownership during the income year. That year is divided into periods, each of which ends when there is a sufficient change of ownership. Broadly, the loss or gain for each period is worked out as if the period was a separate income year (but periods are treated as a single period if the same business is carried on throughout those periods). The company's taxable income for the year does not include deductions for the tax losses of any of those periods (see Subdivision 165-B).

2.44 However, if the company is a DIP entity from the start of that year, the first period cannot end before the company stops being a DIP entity. If it does not stop being such an entity during the year, the year would be treated as a single period and the normal rules would apply to work out its taxable income. [Schedule 2, items 2 to 4, paragraphs 165-35(b) and (c ), and subsection 415-35(7)]

Example 2.25 : Application of tests during year of ownership change

Tiny Town Pty Ltd is a DIP entity from the start of the income year (1 July 2013) to 10 April 2014. During the income year, Tiny Town changes ownership on 12 August 2013, 10 December 2013, and 5 June 2014. Tiny Town would need to divide its year up into parts and apply the continuity of ownership test (COT) and same business test (SBT) to each of those. The first period would start on 1 July 2013 and would end on 5 June 2014 and the second period would go from 6 June to 30 June 2014.

Company losses and income injection

2.45 The tax law includes anti-avoidance provisions that allow the Commissioner to disallow deductions for losses against income that the company would not have received but for a tax benefit unless the company satisfies the same business test or the benefit is received by the shareholders that allowed the entity to satisfy the continuity of ownership test (see Subdivision 175-A). This measure does not adjust those rules for DIP entities. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-35(8)]

Capital losses and companies

2.46 Rules similar to the rules for tax losses apply to the use of net capital losses by a company when there is a sufficient change in its ownership (see Subdivisions 165-CA, 165-CB and 175-CA). This measure only provides concessions in relation to tax losses and does not adjust those rules for DIP entities. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-35(8)]

Deducting bad debts

2.47 A taxpayer that derives an amount of assessable income because a debt is owed to the taxpayer can generally claim a deduction if it is unable to collect the amount it is owed. This deduction for a 'bad debt' reverses the original inclusion of the amount in the taxpayer's assessable income. However, a company can only get the deduction if it satisfies continuity of ownership and same business tests similar to those that apply for deducting its tax losses.

2.48 If the debt goes bad in the same year the amount was derived, the company must satisfy the continuity of ownership test for the whole year. If the amount was derived in an earlier year, it must satisfy the test from the time the amount was derived until the end of the deduction year. If it fails that continuity of ownership test (or cannot work out if it can satisfy the continuity of ownership test), it can still deduct the bad debt if it satisfies the same business test. (See Subdivision 165-C.)

2.49 The measure provides that an entity that was a DIP entity when it derived the original amount does not normally have to satisfy this test in order to deduct its bad debts for so long as it remains a DIP entity. It does that by adjusting the rules that limit a company's capacity to deduct a bad debt in a similar way to the way it adjusts its capacity to deduct tax losses. [Schedule 2, item 4, section 415-40 ]

2.50 For the purposes of the continuity of ownership test, the start of the test period is delayed until the company stops being a DIP entity. If it has not stopped being such an entity, the start of the test period merges with the end of the deduction income year, so that the test is passed. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-40(2) and (3)]

2.51 For the purposes of the same business test, the same business test period and test time are modified so that they cannot commence until the entity stopped being a DIP entity. The same business test period and the test time have their normal application if they would not otherwise overlap with a period when the entity was a DIP entity. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-40(4) and (5)]

Example 2.26 : Bad debts and the same business test

Roary Co is a DIP entity for the 2013-14 income year. On 30 June 2013, Roary Co included an amount of $1 million in its assessable income that was owed to it by another entity, Lightning Trust. On 15 July 2014, Roary Co included an amount of $2 million in its assessable income that is owed to it by Lightning Trust. On 10 December 2014 Roary Co stops being a DIP entity. On 12 December Roary Co has a change of ownership. On 20 December 2014, Roary Co includes an amount of $4 million in its assessable income because of a debt owed by Lightning Trust. Lightning Trust subsequently becomes bankrupts and Roary Co writes the three debts owed to it off on 30 June 2015.
In relation to the $1 million and $2 million debts, Roary Co must demonstrate that it carried on the same business during the period from 10 December 2014 to 30 June 2015 as it carried on just before the change of ownership on 12 December 2014.
In relation to the $4 million debt, Roary needs to show that it carried on the same business in the period from when it stopped being a DIP entity on 10 December 2014 to the end of the income year as it carried on just before the change of ownership on 12 December 2014.

2.52 If a company deducts a bad debt only because it passes the same business test, and that deduction creates or increases a tax loss, then the tax loss (or the increase) can only be deducted in a later year if the company passes the same business test again for that later year (see section 165-132). The measure adjusts the test period used for that purpose in the same way. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-40(4)]

Example 2.27 : Bad debts that become losses

Following on from the previous example, Roary Co made a loss of $6 million in the 2014-15 income year as a result of the bad debt deductions. Roary Co seeks to utilise some of those losses in the 2015-16 income year. Roary Co must show that it carried on the same business during the 2015-16 income year that it carried on just before the change of ownership on 12 December 2014 before it can utilise the losses.

2.53 The operation of the continuity of ownership test and the same business test for widely held companies and eligible Division 166 companies, which is modified for DIP entities that are deducting a tax loss, is modified in the same way if they seek to deduct a bad debt. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-40(2 ), ( 4) and (5)]

2.54 Companies that are DIP entities are still subject to the integrity rules in Subdivision 175-C. These rules allow the Commissioner to disallow a deduction for a debt if income was injected in to the company that would not have been injected if the deduction was not available. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-40(8)]

Bad debts and the special control test

2.55 The special control test that can prevent a company deducting a tax loss even if it passes the continuity of ownership test or the same business test also applies for a company deducting bad debts (see section 165-129). The special control test usually looks at whether the people who controlled the voting power in the company, either when the debt was incurred (if the debt was incurred in the deduction year) or at the end of the year the debt was incurred (if it was incurred in an earlier year), also control it at the end of the deduction year.

2.56 This test is modified to ensure that the test is always satisfied if the entity is a DIP entity from when the debt is incurred until the deduction year. However, it is also modified to ensure that it will begin to apply to an entity that stops being a DIP entity before the deduction year. In such a case, the special control test can prevent the entity from deducting the debt if the people that control the entity at the end of the income year did not control it immediately after it stopped being a DIP entity. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-40(6)]

2.57 If the entity did not have the same controllers it may still be able to deduct the debt if it carries on the same business at the end of the deduction year (or the whole deduction year if the debt was incurred in an earlier year) as it was carrying on either just before the person started to control the entity or just before the entity stopped being a DIP entity, whichever is earlier. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-40(2) and (3)]

2.58 The tax law also has anti-avoidance provisions which permit the Commissioner to disallow a deduction for a bad debt if it is to be used against a capital gain or income that the company would not have derived if the deduction, loss or net capital loss was not available or where there was a scheme to receive a tax benefit (Division 175). The Commissioner cannot disallow the deduction where the company satisfies the same business test. These income injection tests continue to apply to DIP entities. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-35(8)]

Tax losses and bad debts of trusts

2.59 Trusts that are not 'excepted trusts' for the whole income year also need to pass certain tests relating to ownership and control or abnormal trading in its units set out in Schedule 2F to the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936) before deducting prior year losses and debt deductions. The measure ensures that a DIP entity that is a trust does not need to satisfy these tests by making the entity an 'excepted trust'. [Schedule 2, item 1, section 272-100 in Schedule 2F to the ITAA 1936 ]

2.60 However, a trust may stop being a DIP entity because, for example, it has stopped being a fixed trust, has stopped carrying on a DIP or has commenced other activities. If a trust stops being a DIP entity during the income year, then it will need to satisfy the tests relating to continuity of ownership (the '50 per cent stake test') or abnormal trading in its units because it is not an excepted trust for the whole income year.

2.61 These tests are modified in a similar way to the modifications to the tests for companies. That is, generally, the test period starts just after the entity stops being a DIP entity. The test period is not changed if it would usually start after the entity stopped being a DIP entity. For example, if the test period was in the year after the entity stopped being a DIP entity because the loss was incurred in a later year. [Schedule 2, item 4, sections 415-25 and 415-30 ]

Consolidated groups

2.62 The head company of a consolidated group may be a DIP entity only if none of the members of the consolidated group carries on, or has ever carried on, activities that do not relate to the same DIP. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-20(1)]

2.63 When an entity joins a consolidated group the head company is usually taken as having done everything that the joining member did at that time (see section 701-5). That means that, usually, activities done by the joining entity before it joined the group would affect whether the head company was a DIP entity in those years (that is, before the entity joined the group).

2.64 This measure ensures that the activities carried on by a joining member before it joined the group do not stop the head company from being a DIP entity before the entity joined the group. However, consistent with the policy that the entity has only ever engaged in activities that relate to a single DIP, the head company will stop being a DIP entity from the joining time if the joining entity carried on activities that did not relate to the head company's DIP. The head company will not stop being a DIP entity if the joining entity has only carried on activities that relate to the same DIP as the head company. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-20(5)]

2.65 When an entity joins a consolidated group it generally transfers its tax losses, film losses and net capital losses to the group's head company but only to the extent that the joining entity could have used the loss itself if its income year had ended just after the joining time (and assuming it had enough income or gains against which to offset the loss).

2.66 Under the consolidation rules, it is possible for the head company to choose to cancel the transfer of a loss. A loss that is not transferred to the head company cannot be utilised by any entity for an income year ending after the joining time.

2.67 If a DIP entity joins a consolidated group then the joining entity's tax losses (including any uplifted amount) can be transferred to the head company without having to consider whether the joining entity could otherwise have used the losses itself. [Schedule 2, items 5 and 6, subsections 707-120(5) and 719-265(3A)]

2.68 The fact that a non-fixed trust joins a consolidated group will also not stop the head company from being a DIP entity provided that the trust has only carried on activities in relation to the same DIP. However, any losses of the trust will be subject to the ordinary transfer rules. As such, they can only be uplifted from the joining time and the head company will only be able to use the losses to the extent that the trust could otherwise have used the losses itself.

2.69 An entity that leaves a consolidated group can be a DIP entity even though it carried on activities that did not relate to the entity's DIP while it was a member of the consolidated group. Activities carried on by other members of the consolidated group will also not affect whether the leaving entity can be a DIP entity. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-20(6)]

What is a designated infrastructure project entity?

2.70 A company or a fixed trust can be a designated infrastructure project entity (a DIP entity) if it carries on, or later begins to carry on, a single DIP. [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraphs 415-20(1)(a) and (b)]

2.71 The project does not need to have been designated at the time the entity engages in activities in relation to it as long as the project becomes designated. This ensures that an entity can access the uplift, for example, in relation to deductible expenses incurred in applying for designation. However, designation can only apply in relation to a proposed project (that is, a project that has not yet commenced). This ensures that the tax concessions are only available for new projects. [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraph 415-20(2)(a) and subsection 415-55(1)]

2.72 Each DIP entity can only carry on one single DIP. This is consistent with industry practice in which entities that carry on a DIP are generally special purposes vehicles set up to carry on a single project, and offers greater simplicity for taxpayers. However, some projects are conducted in stages. An entity may carry on more than one stage of a single infrastructure project that is listed on an Infrastructure Priority List made under paragraph 5(2)(b) of the Infrastructure Australia Act 2008. [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraphs 415-20(2)(b ), ( c) and (d)]

Example 2.28 : Single projects

A motorway between two major cities is placed on an Infrastructure Priority List in July 2012. Road Co successfully tenders to construct the regional city bypass stage of the motorway in September 2013. The bypass stage of the motorway is then designated by the Coordinator as a DIP. Road Co engages Bridge Co to build a bridge in relation to the bypass. Bridge Co and Road Co are each carrying on part of a DIP.
After completing the regional city bypass, Road Co commences work on another stage of the motorway: the road joining the bypass to one of the major cities. This stage of the project is also designated as a DIP. Because the bypass and the road are both part of the motorway, which is listed on an Infrastructure Priority List, they will be treated as a single project and Road Co can still be a DIP entity as long as it does not carry on any other activities.

2.73 To ensure that the entity is not able to benefit from the uplift and modifications to the loss utilisation rules for activities that do not relate to the DIP, an entity cannot be a DIP entity if it has previously carried on activities that do not relate to the single DIP and the entity will stop being a DIP entity as soon as it starts carrying on other activities. [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraph 415-20(1)(d)]

2.74 This restriction reflects the fact that the concessional treatment of the entity's losses is only intended to encourage investment in infrastructure projects. If the entity were able to carry on other activities, it would be necessary to partition the entity's tax affairs into an infrastructure component and a residual component. That would create additional complexity and increase compliance costs, which is avoided by the 'single activity' approach. It would also be risky for the DIP entity because, if an entity could carry on more than one project and one project stopped being a DIP, then the entity would lose its access to the tax concessions. The chosen approach is also consistent with usual industry practice in which infrastructure projects are typically conducted by special purpose vehicles.

2.75 Exactly what activities the entity can engage in will depend on the scope of the project designated by the Coordinator. The Coordinator may amend a designation in accordance with the infrastructure project designation rules. The Coordinator may make the amendment take effect retrospectively, for example where the applicant had assumed that the activities would be seen as carrying on the project and the Coordinator agrees. Alternatively, it may apply prospectively, for example, where the project needs to be carried on in a different way because of an unexpected change of circumstances. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-65(3) and (4 ), and 415-70(4) to (6)]

Example 2.29 : Designated infrastructure project entities

The Victorian State Government has applied for a major upgrade to an Interstate Highway to be designated as a DIP. The Coordinator provisionally designates the Interstate Highway Project. Kit Co successfully tenders for the project and applies to the Coordinator to finally designate the project. The Coordinator designates the project as set out in Kit Co's application for designation, including the design, construction, project management, holding assets for use in the design and construction of the upgrade to the Interstate Highway, financing through a related special purpose finance entity that will borrow money from a syndicate of third party banks, generating revenue through advertising along the road and operation and maintenance of the upgrade to the Interstate Highway as a designated infrastructure project.
Kit Co is responsible for the project management. Kit Co has secured finance from a number of lenders, including the Victorian Government and Farmer's Bank. Kit Co arranges for the loans to be made to a special purposes vehicle, Fin Co, which is set up to manage finance for the project, including applying for loans and on-lending to entities in the group and managing ongoing compliance with the requirements of the lenders under relevant facility documents (which Fin Co may arrange to be undertaken through the appointment of powers of attorney to other group entities). From time to time, Fin Co receives interest on the monies it holds prior to on lending the funds. Earning interest, while not a specifically listed activity in the project description, is incidental to the project's finance activities. Fin Co lends money to Kat Trust, which is stapled to Kit Co, to construct or purchase assets for the project and to lease them to Kit Co for the purpose of carrying on the project. During the course of the project, Kat Trust also engages a number of subcontractors to design and construct the project.
Kit Co earns revenue from the collection of tolls and engages Toll Co to collect tolls as agent on Kit Co's behalf. Kit Co also enters into a subcontract with Toll Co to operate and maintain the road. Kit Co earns income to partially fund its operating activities by placing advertising billboards on the side of the road.

Kit Co and Kat Trust will both be DIP entities (as long as they do not carry on any other activities) because they are each carrying on the project as designated by the Coordinator, that is (1) the project management, operation and maintenance, and (2) the design and construction, and holding and leasing of assets respectively. The fact that Kit Co earns income from advertising along the road does not prevent it from being a DIP entity because that activity has been designated by the Coordinator as being a relevant activity in carrying on the project (as set out in the business case put forward in Kit Co's application for designation). The entities that pay Kit Co to advertise their products, however, will not be DIP entities because they are not carrying on the project or a part of it as designated by the Coordinator.
Fin Co will also be a DIP entity as Fin Co's activities amount to carrying on the project as designated by the Coordinator. In particular, it is a special purpose vehicle established to source project finance for the group and to manage ongoing finance obligations. The fact that Fin Co may do so through the appointment of powers of attorney to other group entities does not affect this position.
The shareholders of Kit Co and unitholders of Kat Trust, who are also effectively providing finance for the project, do not qualify as DIP entities because they are not carrying on the DIP as designated by the Coordinator. The mere holding of shares/units is not carrying on an activity for the purposes of the project.
The banks that lend to Fin Co are also not DIP entities because they are not carrying on the DIP as designated by the Coordinator.
Whether the design and construction subcontractor qualifies as a DIP entity will depend on whether the subcontractor carries on the project or part of the project or is merely acting as agent for Kit Co (in addition, it could only be a DIP entity provided it is not carrying on, and has not carried on, other activities).
Toll Co will be a DIP entity, as it delivers project operation and maintenance services as subcontractor to Kit Co, provided it does not carry on, and has not carried on, other activities. The mere collection of tolls as agent on behalf of Kit Co would not itself quality Toll Co as a DIP entity because those are legally the activities of Kit Co.
The Victorian State Government will not qualify as a DIP entity even if it is operating through a government enterprise that is a company or fixed trust because it carries on other activities and would not benefit from the concessions in any case.

Partnerships

2.76 Partnerships are not legal entities and do not have carry forward losses. As such, they cannot benefit directly from the measure. However, the measure allows the partners in a partnership to be treated as DIP entities if they can satisfy the criteria for being a DIP entity after the activities of the partnership are attributed to them in their own right. That is, the partner must be a company or fixed trust, must carry on a DIP and must not engage in any other activities. The fact that one of the other partners is not a DIP entity (because it engaged in other activities or is not a company or fixed trust) will not prevent the other partners from being DIP entities. The draft legislation ensures that the carrying on of the DIP is attributed to the individual partners. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-20(3) and (4)]

Designated infrastructure projects

2.77 A designated infrastructure project is an investment in, or enhancement to, infrastructure that is designated by the Coordinator. [Schedule 2, items 4 and 35, section 415-70 and subsection 995-1(1)]

2.78 The Coordinator is a statutory office created by section 27 of the Infrastructure Australia Act 2008.

The designation process

Applications

2.79 An entity must apply to the Coordinator to have a proposed infrastructure project designated. The application must:

be in the form the Coordinator requires;
be accompanied by any fee that has been prescribed; and
include an estimate of the infrastructure project's capital expenditure.

[Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-55(1 ), ( 2) and (4)]

2.80 The Coordinator may designate projects as provisional or final DIPs before 1 July 2017 unless a later date is prescribed. This reflects that the measure is only intended to be a short term encouragement for infrastructure investments. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-60(5)]

2.81 The Coordinator will consider applications in the order prescribed or, if no rules are made for provisional designation, the order in which the applications are made. The rules may prescribe other requirements for dealing with applications, such as how quickly applications must be dealt with and how incomplete or otherwise inadequate applications should be dealt with. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-60(1 ), ( 2) and (4)]

2.82 The designation process would normally involve two stages: provisional designation if the project satisfies the necessary conditions; and final designation if the project continues to satisfy the conditions and financial close on it has occurred or is imminent. If financial close has occurred when the Coordinator considers the application, the project could go straight to final designation. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-60(3 ), 415-65(1) and 415-70(1) and (2)]

Provisional designation

2.83 Provisional designation is a process by which a project can secure its entitlement to the tax benefits provided by the measure even though it has not yet satisfied the financial condition. It also allows the entity to advise its potential financial backers that the project will obtain the tax benefits if they provide the necessary finance. An entity cannot, however, access the concessions unless the project receives final designation.

2.84 For the project to be provisionally designated, the Coordinator must accept the capital expenditure estimate in the application and that estimate must not breach the $25 billion capital expenditure cap. The designation must be made in writing and provide prescribed details. The Coordinator may amend a provisional designation in prescribed circumstances. [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraphs 415-65(1)(a) to (c) and subsections 415-65(2) to (4)]

2.85 Any conditions prescribed by the infrastructure project designation rules must also be satisfied. If no conditions are prescribed, the Coordinator must be satisfied that the project is of 'national significance'. That is an expression from the Infrastructure Australia Act 2008 that includes a transport, energy, communications or water project that will improve national productivity. [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraph 415-65(1)(d ))]

2.86 If the project does not satisfy the required conditions, the Coordinator will refuse to designate it. The applicant can ask the Administrative Appeals Tribunal to review that refusal. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-60(2) and (3) and paragraph 415-85(a)]

2.87 The Coordinator will always revoke a project's provisional designation when the project receives final designation. This ensures that the capital expenditure estimate for a project does not count towards the cap twice (once when it is provisionally designated and once when it is finally designated). If the Coordinator decides not to finally designate a project, its provisional designation will also be revoked [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-65(2)]

2.88 A provisional designation can otherwise only be revoked in the circumstances prescribed in the infrastructure project designation rules. Those circumstances could include, for example, the entity failing to provide the Coordinator with the information it requires to make its decision about designating the project or failing to observe any conditions that attach to the project continuing to be provisionally designated. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-65(5) to (7)]

2.89 An entity can ask the Administrative Appeals Tribunal to review a decision to revoke its project's provisional designation. [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraph 415-85(b)]

Final designation

2.90 A project will get a final designation if it continues to satisfy the conditions necessary for provisional designation plus any additional conditions that are prescribed in the infrastructure project designation rules. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-70(1) and (2)]

2.91 The rules may permit the Coordinator to impose rules on a project that must be met before the project receives final designation. The Coordinator may only impose conditions in accordance with the rules. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-70(8)]

2.92 If no additional conditions have been prescribed, final designation will depend on the Coordinator being satisfied that the applicant is legally able to access the funds required for the project (called 'financial close' on the project) or that its ability to do so is imminent (for example, because its bankers or investors have committed to providing the money and only the formal execution of documents remains to be done). [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraph 415-70(2)(b)]

2.93 If the project does not satisfy the required conditions, the Coordinator will refuse to designate it. The applicant can ask the Administrative Appeals Tribunal to review that refusal. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-60(2) and (3) and paragraph 415-85(c)]

2.94 A final designation can only be revoked in circumstances prescribed in the infrastructure project designation rules. Those circumstances could include, for example, the entity failing to provide the Coordinator with any information required under the rules or breaching conditions set for the project to remain designated. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-70(6) and (7)]

2.95 When the Coordinator finally designates a project, or revokes a project's designation, the Coordinator must advise the Commissioner within 28 days. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-70(9)]

2.96 An entity can ask the Administrative Appeals Tribunal to review the Coordinator's decision to revoke its project's final designation. Section 27A of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 provides for applicants to be notified about a decision to designate, not designate, or revoke the designation of a project and their rights of review. [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraph 415-85(d)]

The infrastructure project designation rules

2.97 The infrastructure project designation rules are legislative instruments Treasury ministers can make that provide subsidiary detail affecting the scope and operation of the DIP regime. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-100(1)]

2.98 In particular, the infrastructure project designation rules can:

provide for, and set the amount of, application fees;
provide for the order in which applications for designation are to be determined;
set the conditions that must be satisfied for provisional or final designation of a project or for it to remain so designated;
permit the Coordinator to impose additional conditions and to specify what those conditions might include;
set the conditions for amendment to or revocation of a provisional or final designation;
set the conditions for the Coordinator accepting an application's estimate of a project's capital expenditure;
set the requirements for an applicant amending its capital expenditure estimate;
modify what counts towards a capital expenditure estimate;
increase the size of the capital expenditure cap; and
set the requirements for publishing information about infrastructure projects and the capital expenditure cap.

[Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-55(4 ), 415-60(1 ), 415-65(2 ), and (3 ), 415-70(4) and (8) and 415-80(1 ), ( 3 ), ( 4) and (5) and sections 415-65, 415-70 and 415-90 ]

2.99 Because the infrastructure project designation rules are legislative instruments, they are subject to the Legislative Instruments Act 2003. In particular, they only become enforceable once they are registered on the Federal Register of Legislative Instruments and they cease to apply if they are disallowed by either House of Parliament under a notice of motion made within 15 sitting days after the instrument is tabled in that House (which must occur within 6 sitting days after it is registered).

2.100 The operation of the Legislative Instruments Act 2003 is modified in one respect for the infrastructure project designation rules. The rules are permitted to incorporate other documents issued by Infrastructure Australia as they exist from time to time. The Legislative Instruments Act 2003 provides a default position that disallows the incorporation of certain documents unless the contrary intention appears. Expressly permitting that to be done provides that contrary intention. This capacity could be used, for example, to allow the rules to incorporate Infrastructure Australia's published list of nationally significant projects, which is available on the internet. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-100(2)]

The capital expenditure cap

2.101 The tax benefits available for DIPs are deliberately limited in order to contain the overall cost to the Commonwealth revenue. The Minister may prescribe rules about how projects that will qualify for the tax concessions will be selected. Otherwise, projects will be selected on a first come-first served basis. While capping total estimated capital expenditure does not directly limit the cost to Commonwealth revenue, it does so indirectly because it effectively limits the total magnitude of projects that are able to access the concessions. [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraphs 415-65(1)(c) and (d ), and 415-70(1)(c) and (d)]

2.102 In some cases, part of a project on an infrastructure priority list will be designated as a project in its own right. This might occur, for example, because financial close has occurred in relation to that part of the project while other parts of the project are not ready to commence. However, when other parts of the project are ready to commence it may be appropriate to have the whole project designated, rather than just the remaining parts. In order to ensure that the capital expenditure in relation to the same infrastructure is not counted twice, the capital expenditure estimate of the larger project is reduced by any amount that relates to the smaller project. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-75(3)]

Example 2.30 : Calculating the cap for overlapping projects

In 2013 the Coordinator grants provisional designation to an infrastructure project 'The 'East-West Corridor' that is listed on an Infrastructure Priority List. The estimated capital expenditure for the East-West Corridor at the time of the application was $4 billion. In 2014, Phoenix Company agrees to take on half of the project. Phoenix Company estimates that the capital expenditure on its part of the project will be $2.5 billion. This may happen because, by the time the projects reach financial close, the estimated capital expenditure has increased.
The total estimated capital expenditure for the three projects is $6.5 billion. However, in determining whether the capital expenditure cap has been breached, the Coordinator may disregard the part of the estimate for the listed project (that is, the East West Corridor) that relates to another designated project. In this case, the $2 billion (that is, half) of the original $4 billion can be disregarded because that is the portion of the original estimate that relates to the other project. So then, the total amount that counts towards the capital expenditure cap is $4.5 billion ( = $2 billion + $2.5 billion).

2.103 A project cannot be designated, or provisionally designated, if the designation would mean that the total estimated capital expenditure on all designated and provisionally designated projects would exceed the cap. [Schedule 2, item 4, paragraphs 415-65(1)(c) and 415-70(1)(c) and subsection 415-75(1)]

2.104 The cap is set at $25 billion but this can be increased by the infrastructure project designation rules. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-75(2)]

2.105 If a designation, or provisional designation is revoked, the expenditure estimate for that project would no longer count against the cap, freeing up an amount that could be used to designate another project.

Capital expenditure estimates

2.106 An application to have a project designated must be accompanied by an estimate of the infrastructure project's capital expenditure. This is the total expected capital expenditure on the project unless otherwise prescribed. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-55(2) and 415-75(4)]

2.107 The capital expenditure estimate does not include an amount that is paid for by an Australian government agency because the cap is intended to be limited to private investment. So, for example, a capital expenditure estimate should be reduced by an amount of a government grant or an amount that is directly paid for by a government agency (such as where the government agency pays a subcontractor to conduct part of the project). [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-55(3)]

2.108 The Coordinator must accept that estimate if it complies with the conditions in the infrastructure project designation rules (if any). If the rules contain no such conditions, the Coordinator has to be satisfied that the estimate is acceptable. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsection 415-80(1)]

2.109 Applicants can amend their estimates at any time before the project is finally designated if the Coordinator, having regard to the prescribed circumstances, requests an amendment. The Coordinator can prescribe circumstances in which it can request the applicant to amend their estimate. An amended estimate is treated as though it was the original estimate. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-80(5) and (6)]

2.110 The Coordinator can only revoke an acceptance of an estimate before the project is finally designated and only in accordance with the prescribed rules. [Schedule 2, item 4, subsections 415-80(2) to (4)]

Publishing information

2.111 The Coordinator can, and must, publish information about provisionally and finally designated infrastructure projects and about the capital expenditure cap if required to do so by the infrastructure project designation rules. [Schedule 2, item 4, section 415-90 ]

Delegating the Infrastructure Coordinator's powers

2.112 The Coordinator is empowered to execute a written delegation of his or her powers to an officer who is, or is acting as, an SES employee in the staff provided by the Department of Infrastructure and Transport to assist the Coordinator. [Schedule 2, item 4, section 415-95 ]

Application and transitional provisions

2.113 The measure applies to tax losses for the 2012-13 and later income years and to debts that were originally incurred in those years and later became bad debts of the entity. [Schedule 2, items 47 and 48, section 415-10 of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 ]

2.114 The measure uplifts unutilised tax losses and relies on the existing meaning of the term 'utilise' in doing so. It extends that meaning to include reducing losses because of forgiven commercial debts. The definition of 'utilise' is being amended in a similar way by the loss carry-back measure in the Tax and Superannuation Laws Amendment (2013 Measures No. 1) Bill 2013 (see item 34 of Schedule 6 to that Bill). When that Bill is given the Royal Assent, this Bill's extension of the meaning of the term is repealed and the term will take the meaning that then applies throughout the ITAA 1997. If that Bill were not given the Royal Assent, the extension would not be repealed. [Schedule 2, item 66 and clause 2 (table item 3)]

Consequential amendments

Definitions

2.115 A number of defined terms are created for the purposes of this measure. The Dictionary to the ITAA 1997 is amended to include references to each of those definitions. [Schedule 2, items 35 and 37, subsection 995-1(1 ) ( definitions of ' designated infrastructure project' , ' designated infrastructure project entity' , ' infrastructure project capital expenditure' , ' infrastructure project designation rules' and ' provisionally designated infrastructure project')]

2.116 The use of one of those terms in the ITAA 1936 is defined to have the same meaning as it does in the ITAA 1997. [Schedule 2, item 16, subsection 272-140(1) in Schedule 2F to the ITAA 1936 (definition of ' designated infrastructure project entity')]

2.117 Some other definitions are amended to reflect changes made by the DIP regime. [Schedule 2, items 17 and 36 and 38 to 42, subsection 272-140(1) definition of ' tax loss', subsection 995-1(1) definitions of ' ownership test period' , ' same business test period' , ' test period' , ' tax loss' and ' test time' ]

Guide material

2.118 Guide material is inserted to give readers an overview of what the provisions do. [Schedule 2, item 4, sections 415-1, 415-5, 415-10 and 415-50 ]

2.119 A number of non-operative tables, which are designed to point readers to relevant provisions, are updated to reflect the addition of this measure. [Schedule 2, items 18 to 23, tables in sections 12-5 and 36-25 ]

2.120 Notes are added to provisions about deducting tax losses, bad debts and trust losses to alert readers to the fact that the conditions for those deductions do not apply to a designated infrastructure entity. [Schedule 2, items 7 to 14, 14A, 14B, 14C, 24, 28 and 32, sections 266-15, 266-30, 266-65, 266-80, 266-100, 266-115, 266-140, 266-155, 267-15, 267-55 and 267-60 in Schedule 2F to the ITAA 1936, and sections 165-5, 165-117 and 707-300 (notes)]

The role of the Infrastructure Coordinator

2.121 The provisions of the Infrastructure Australia Act 2008 that establish the role of the Coordinator are amended to reflect that its role includes functions conferred on it by other laws. This reflects the fact that this measure relies on the Coordinator designating infrastructure projects as eligible for the special taxation treatment the measure provides for. The amendments provide that the Coordinator's role includes all legislative extensions (rather than just this particular extension) so that any future legislative extension does not require further consequential amendment of the Infrastructure Australia Act 2008. [Schedule 2, item 43, subsection 28(2) of the Infrastructure Australia Act 2008 ]

2.122 The existing power of the Minister for Infrastructure and Transport to extend the Coordinator's role by written direction is retained but is located in a differently numbered provision. The validity of those existing directions, which may refer to the provision's previous numbering, is preserved as if they had been made under the new provision. [Schedule 2, items 43 to 46, subsections 28(2) to ( 4) and 40(1) of the Infrastructure Australia Act 2008 ]

Other

2.123 Subsection 268-20(4) in Schedule 2F to the ITAA 1936 has been re-worded to clarify that, for the purposes of applying the trust loss provisions, a period that might otherwise constitute multiple periods may be treated as one period if the same business test is satisfied. This may be relevant to an entity that stops being a DIP entity during the test period. [Schedule 2, item 15, Subsection 268-20(4) in Schedule 2F to the ITAA 1936 ]

2.124 Section 707-120 has also been reworded to make the meaning clearer and to fit in with the DIP regime. Consequential amendments are made to reflect the re-numbering of the section. [Schedule 2, items 29 to 31, subsections 707-120(1 ), and 707-130(1) and paragraph 707-125(1)(b)]

2.125 Other changes are also made to insert references to new sections. [Schedule 2, items 33 and 34, paragraph 707-265(1)(a ), and subsection 719-265(7)]

2.126 The terms 'start', 'starts' and 'starting' have been replaced with the words 'begin', 'begins' and 'beginning' respectively in parts of the trust loss provisions to provide more consistent terminology across the provisions. [Schedule 2, items 49 to 65, subsections 266-185(1 ), 267-90(1 ), 268-10(2 ), 268-15(2 ), 268-20(2 ), 268-25(2 ), 268-75(1 ), 268-85(5 ), 269-65(1 ), 269-25(1) and paragraphs 269-25(1)(a ), 269-100(4)(a ), 271-80(a ), 272-80(6B)(a) and (b) and 272-85(5C)(a) and (b) and subparagraph 272-80(6A)(i) of Schedule 2F to the ITAA 1936 ]

Regulation impact statement

Introduction

2.127 This Regulation Impact Statement, which was prepared by the Department of the Treasury at the original decision-making stage, was assessed as adequate by the Office of Best Practice Regulation and publicly released on 23 May 2011.

2.128 After the RIS was published, a discussion paper 'Tax loss incentive for designated infrastructure projects' was released for six weeks consultation, closing on 9 December 2011. The exposure draft legislation and accompanying explanatory material was available for consultation from 18 April 2013 to 30 April 2013. A private consultant was engaged to advise on the design of the measure and face to face consultations were also conducted with key stakeholders.

Background

2.129 Well-targeted investment in physical infrastructure can play an important role in the economy by facilitating other productive activities. For example, port infrastructure allows Australian production to be moved around the country or exported, as well as providing a means for inputs to reach producers.

2.130 However, governments' abilities to finance new infrastructure are constrained by competing demands on public finances within the overarching constraints of desired budget outcomes.

2.131 Consequently, progress in addressing infrastructure bottlenecks will depend significantly on private financing being attracted to projects. Private financing depends on the expected commercial return from the project being sufficient relative to the risks involved.

2.132 In recent years there have been increased opportunities for private investment in infrastructure, in particular where the private sector can anticipate an acceptable return on its investment (for example, airports and ports).

2.133 Because private financing depends on the expected commercial return from the project being sufficient relative to the risks involved, it is important the government creates an environment conducive to well targeted infrastructure investment. In particular, this includes ensuring impediments - whether they are tax, regulatory, or market imperfections - do not prevent or distort private investment in infrastructure where it would otherwise have taken place.

2.134 Infrastructure projects are typically long term, highly risky investments, that can often have a long lead times between when expenditure is incurred and when a project starts earning income. One way that infrastructure projects typically deal with these risks is to allow different entities that specialise in different aspects of infrastructure (for example, construction, operation, maintenance) to deliver different stages of a project. However under current tax arrangements there is a risk that, if there is a substantial ownership change in the project and a change in business operation, then the new owners may be unable to access previous years' losses.

2.135 The private return on investment in infrastructure can also be reduced if the tax system does not adequately recognise costs. Under current arrangements the tax value of expenditures is reduced by the delay in being able to use them as tax deductions against project income, because of inflation and the time value of money.

Objectives of government action

2.136 To remove barriers to efficient private investment in public infrastructure of national significance caused by the operation of the tax system consistent with the Government's fiscal strategy.

Options that may achieve the objective

2.137 The identified problems suggest two broad approaches.

2.138 One approach would be to specifically address the problem of not being able to immediately use potential tax deductions relating to project expenditures.

2.139 The other approach would be to provide tax allowances or explicit subsidies that effectively reduce the rate of return required for a project to proceed - reducing the impact of the distortion arising from the current restrictions on loss utilisation. Although this approach would not directly address the distortion, it could provide a benefit that offsets its impact.

2.140 These approaches are overlapping, in that increasing the present value of tax deductions may improve the effective return from the project, while tax allowances and explicit subsidies could provide a benefit that may offset the impact of the current loss restrictions.

2.141 Direct Commonwealth Government subsidies to projects would not be consistent with the objective.

2.142 Within these two broad approaches there is also a question around what projects and what quantum of investment should receive the new tax treatment. To manage the potential cost to revenue and ensure that the highest value projects are supported it is proposed that measure focus on projects of national significance up to $25 billion of capital investment for five years (2012-13 to 2016-17).

2.143 Given this constraint a number of factors are important in order to maximise value for money, including that:

the absolute size of the net gain to the community from the projects is of national significance;
the benefit to the community from the new tax provision is maximised by choosing between competing projects;
projects have appropriate corporate governance arrangements in place; and
the project is available to multiple users and benefits the broader community.

2.144 In the absence of a cap, one option would be to let infrastructure projects self-assess against such criteria. However, to manage the potential cost to revenue while ensuring that the highest value projects are supported, it is proposed a decision maker be established to deem certain projects as Designated Infrastructure Projects (DIPs).

2.145 A clear and objective process for selecting DIPs will be important for the initiative to meet its objective.

2.146 To ensure that only nationally significant projects are considered a pre-condition would be that they must be listed on Infrastructure Australia's (IA) National Priority List of projects considered 'Ready to Proceed' or 'Threshold'. In addition to meeting this pre-condition a decision maker and set of criteria will be established to decide whether a project should be a granted DIP status for the purpose of the new tax treatment.

2.147 Governance arrangements for the decision maker and more detailed criteria will be developed through further consultation with industry and other stakeholders. Issues likely to be canvassed in that process include:

the relationship between the decision maker and Infrastructure Australia (in particular their ability to share information);
the process of appointing a decision maker and what skills and qualifications they should have; and
the specificity of the selection criteria (for example, should the criteria include a 'hurdle' rate of return to the economy as a whole).

New Tax Treatment Option 1 - Loss maintenance

2.148 This option directly targets the concerns that early stage tax deductions (which in the first instance feed into carry forward losses) might not ever be used due to changes of ownership, or if used will have declined in value due to inflation and the time value of money.

2.149 Under this option, DIPs would enjoy maintenance of the value of carry forward losses and increased flexibility in utilising those losses.

2.150 Before being applied to the entity's income for an income year, any prior year losses would be uplifted at the government bond rate.

2.151 Losses attributable to the DIP would be exempted from the continuity of ownership test (COT) and same business test (SBT). That is, any uplifted losses would still be deductible against future income if the entity experienced a change in ownership or business.

2.152 Although consultation will be undertaken on the design and implementation of the proposal, the simplest approach would be to require the DIP to be held by a separate entity, which would work out its income and deductions (that is, calculate its losses) under the ordinary income tax law, subject to any special rules that may be required. This would avoid the need to identify which part of the assessable income and allowable deductions for an entity (worked out under the ordinary income tax law) are directly attributable to the DIP for an income year.

2.153 The entity would (in principle) work out its income and deductions - and hence any eligible losses - under the current income tax law. Any exceptions or variations to the ordinary rules would be reflected in the enabling legislation, not subject to the decision maker's discretion.

2.154 Loss integrity rules other than the COT and SBT would still be applied. In addition, specific integrity rules may be required to ensure that the amounts taken into account are at arm's length.

2.155 Overall, this option has the potential to reduce the weighted average cost of capital for eligible projects and hence, relative to the status quo, more projects should go ahead. Compliance costs will be reduced by the removal of the COT and SBT, although there would be a cost in meeting other integrity rules and seeking DIP status. However, these costs are likely to be small relative to the size of the DIP and the sophisticated nature of the players involved. Since this option eliminates the risk that losses are trapped and maintains their value until they can be utilised, the end result is that the project will pay the intended rate of tax on its profits, which represents an appropriate cost to revenue.

New Tax Treatment Option 2 - Flow through shares

2.156 This option would allow tax losses from DIPs to flow through to Australian resident investors.

2.157 Allowing investors direct access to losses (to be used immediately to offset income from other sources) will effectively increase potential private (after tax) returns of eligible projects and hence make them more attractive to investors.

2.158 By bringing forward, rather than merely ensuring access to and preserving the value of potential deductions, this option would also have a significant, near-term revenue impact. Since the marginal tax rates of potential investors cannot be predicted with any real accuracy, the fiscal cost of a flow through shares scheme is also highly uncertain.

2.159 This option would also require strong integrity rules to prevent projects from becoming vehicles for tax avoidance. Such integrity rules are likely to make compliance costs high, particularly as some of the compliance is likely to fall on smaller investors.

2.160 The AFTS Review examined a flow through shares scheme for mining exploration. The Review found that such a scheme would be complicated and therefore likely to result in high administration and compliance costs. The Review also noted it would not assist in attracting investment from non-resident investors.

2.161 Overall, a flow through shares scheme would be expected to have a positive impact on private investment in infrastructure relative to the status quo. However, a flow through shares scheme would impose an onerous compliance burden on business and investors as well as having a significant, but highly uncertain, impact on revenue.

New Tax Treatment Option 3 - Infrastructure subsidy

2.162 This option would provide a 'bonus tax deduction' to eligible projects to increase the potential private returns and hence make them more attractive to investors.

2.163 The entity conducting a DIP would be able to claim a bonus deduction of the lesser of actual project expenditure and approved project expenditure. Approved project expenditure could be less than the expected actual project expenditure, reflecting the national priority the decision-maker attributes to the project.

2.164 In general terms, expenditure would need to be directly attributable to the DIP to be eligible for the investment allowance. Generally, eligible expenditure would be limited to capital expenditure for which a deduction is available under the income tax law. However, financing costs, such as interest payments, would be excluded.

2.165 The investment allowance would have no impact on deductions for expenditures incurred or on the timing or amount of capital allowance deductions for depreciating assets, the timing and amount of deductions for capital works, or on any balancing adjustments when such assets are sold, scrapped or abandoned.

2.166 It is expected that the bonus deduction would be claimable on completion of project milestones (such as when sections of the infrastructure come into public use) specified in the instrument conferring DIP status on the project. The relevant project milestones would be specified in the instrument approving the project as a DIP. There would be a mechanism for amending project milestones in light of unforeseen events and developments.

2.167 Overall, providing a subsidy that reduces the weighted average cost of capital for eligible projects should, relative to the status quo, mean more projects go ahead. Compliance costs would arise from meeting integrity rules and seeking DIP status. However, these costs would be relatively small compared to the size of the DIP and the sophistication of the players involved. Because this approach does not directly address the distortion arising from the current restrictions on loss utilisation it has a higher cost to revenue.

Consultation

2.168 On the broad issue of restrictions on the use of tax losses, the AFTS Review undertook extensive consultation to develop the principle that 'the treatment of business losses should reduce biases against risk taking by treating income and losses symmetrically. This must be balanced against problems arising from the mismeasurement of losses from difficulties in measuring economic income, artificial loss creation schemes or from other forms of tax avoidance.'

2.169 In the context of infrastructure, confidential consultation with selected industry stakeholders was undertaken in March and April of 2011 on the three options that were identified as potentially capable of meeting the objective of removing barriers to efficient private investment in public infrastructure of national significance caused by the operation of the tax system consistent with the Government's fiscal strategy.

2.170 This consultation suggested that industry's preference was for a flow through shares scheme that would allow tax losses from DIPs to flow through to Australian resident investors. Some stakeholders considered that if this was not possible, then their preference was for a combination of option 1 and option 3 that would deliver both certainty of losses and a subsidy for DIPs.

2.171 Eliminating uncertainty around the ability to utilise future losses (that is, removing the COT and SBT) was considered valuable. If implemented correctly, participants considered this had the potential to reduce the weighted average cost of capital for eligible projects. That is, the losses option would more clearly reduce the risks of investing in selected projects.

2.172 While uplifting losses or an investment allowance was also considered desirable, some participants expected these benefits to be competed away through the bidding process for a project, and others highlighted that without certainty around access to future losses, uplifts or allowances were of limited value.

2.173 Consultations reinforced that tax structures involved in infrastructure projects are often complex and that ongoing consultation during the development and implementation of the tax measure will be crucial.

Implementation and review

2.174 Implementation will proceed in a number of stages.

2.175 A consultation paper will be issued shortly after the measure is announced in the 2011-12 Budget.

2.176 A period of between four and six weeks will be provided for interested members of the public to make a submission on the consultation paper. Meetings with key stakeholders may also occur during the consultation period.

2.177 Responses to the consultation paper will inform further policy decisions by the Government (on issues like the decision maker and selection criteria) and the preparation of draft legislation. Subject to Government's overall drafting priorities, the draft legislation could be exposed for public comment by the end of 2011.

2.178 As with the consultation paper, interested members of the public would have between four and six weeks to make a submission on the exposure draft legislation. Meetings with key stakeholders may occur during the consultation period.

2.179 Responses to the draft legislation will determine how quickly the legislation could then be finalised for introduction in the Parliament. However, the implementation process would be undertaken with a view to the legislation being introduced in the first half of 2012.

2.180 It is expected that a post-implementation review of the measure would be conducted once the legislation has been in place for at least two years. This would provide an opportunity to review both the implementation process and the preliminary evidence on the efficacy of the legislation and the effectiveness of the measure.

Conclusion

2.181 Based on an assessment of the costs and benefits of each option, the 'loss maintenance' approach appears most like to deliver a net benefit to the Australian economy. In the current budgetary environment, it is appropriate to place a cap on the quantum of capital investment that is supported by the incentive. The decision maker will effectively be asked to construct a portfolio of infrastructure projects that will deliver the maximum possible benefits for the nation as a whole. In this way, the incentive will be focussed on ensuring that private investment in public infrastructure of national significance is not deterred by impediments in the tax system.

STATEMENT OF COMPATIBILITY WITH HUMAN RIGHTS

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

Incentives for designated infrastructure projects

2.182 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

2.183 Schedule 2 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 to provide a tax incentive for companies and fixed trusts that carry on a nationally significant infrastructure project.

2.184 The tax incentives uplift the value of such entities' carry forward tax losses by the long term bond rate; and exempt them from the loss and bad debt utilisation rules (sometimes referred to as the continuity of ownership and same business tests).

Human rights implications

2.185 This Schedule does not engage any of the applicable rights or freedoms. The measure has a concessional retrospective element.

Conclusion

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

Assistant Treasurer, the Hon David Bradbury

Improving the transparency of Australia's corporate tax system

Outline of chapter

3.1 Schedule 5 to this Bill amends the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (TAA 1953) to:

require the Commissioner of Taxation (Commissioner) to publish limited information about the tax affairs of large corporate taxpayers;
allow for the publication of certain aggregate tax information irrespective of whether the publication, in conjunction with publicly available information, may be reasonably capable of being attributed to a particular taxpayer (other than a natural person); and
allow for enhanced information sharing between Government agencies in relation to decisions under the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975 and Australia's Foreign Investment Policy.

3.2 Unless otherwise noted, all legislative references in this Chapter are to the TAA 1953.

Context of amendments

3.3 A fair, competitive and sustainable tax system is critical for the future prosperity of the nation. Australia's tax system raises the revenue that Government requires to provide the quality public goods and services needed by the community.

3.4 Tax systems that rely on voluntary compliance require strong public confidence. If the community feels that the tax system is not fair, there could be a reduction in voluntary compliance. Ultimately, this could cause a loss of confidence and undermine the tax system's sustainability.

3.5 The apparent ease with which some large corporate and multinational entities can shift taxable profits and erode a country's tax base is a shared concern for the Group of Twenty (G20) and most Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries.

3.6 The first objective of these amendments is to discourage large corporate tax entities from engaging in aggressive tax avoidance practices.

3.7 The second objective of these amendments is to provide more information to inform public debate about tax policy, particularly in relation to the corporate tax system.

3.8 The third objective is to enable better public disclosure of aggregate tax revenue collections, even when the identity of particular taxpayers (other than natural persons) could potentially be deduced. This may arise, for example, where the number of taxpayers paying tax under a particular published head of revenue is small, so one taxpayer may be able to deduce information about another from an aggregate figure.

3.9 The fourth objective is to allow improved sharing of relevant tax information between Government agencies. The amendments will ensure that the Department of the Treasury (Treasury) is better placed to consider the tax implications of applications under the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975 and Australia's Foreign Investment Policy.

3.10 The Government is committed to maintaining the confidentiality of taxpayer information of natural persons. The amendments contain express protections for natural persons.

The current taxpayer confidentiality framework

3.11 Subject to a limited range of exceptions, the TAA 1953 makes it an offence for any taxation officer (including the Commissioner) to disclose protected information (section 355-25 of Schedule 1). This offence carries a penalty of up to two years imprisonment.

3.12 Protected information is defined in subsection 355-30(1) of Schedule 1 to mean information that:

was disclosed or obtained under or for the purposes of a law that was a taxation law (other than the Tax Agent Services Act 2009) when the information was disclosed or obtained; and
relates to the affairs of an entity; and
identifies, or is reasonably capable of being used to identify, the entity.

Summary of new law

3.13 Schedule 5 contains three measures designed to improve the transparency of Australia's business tax system.

3.14 The first of these measures imposes a duty on the Commissioner to publish certain information obtained from the tax returns of those corporate tax entities that return a total income of $100 million or more for an income year.

3.15 The Commissioner will also have a separate duty to publish the final annual amount of an entity's annual Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) or Petroleum Resource Rent Tax (PRRT) payable (if any) as reported by the entity, regardless of its total income. MRRT, however, does not become payable until the miner's 'group mining profit' exceeds $75 million for an MRRT year.

3.16 The second measure amends the taxpayer confidentiality provisions to ensure that the Commonwealth can publish aggregate tax collection information for the purposes of fulfilling its financial reporting obligations. An exception is included to maintain the confidentiality of protected information that could be reasonably capable of identifying an individual (natural person).

3.17 The third measure is to enhance information sharing between Government agencies. The amendments ensure that it is not an offence for a taxation officer to disclose confidential taxpayer information to the Treasury for the purposes of decision making by the Treasurer, or an authorised officer, in relation to a decision under the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975 or Australia's Foreign Investment Policy.

Comparison of key features of new law and current law

New law Current law
The Commissioner will need to make publicly available specific information relating to the tax affairs of all corporate tax entities that have:

a reported total income of $100 million or more; or
a liability to pay an amount of MRRT or PRRT in a future MRRT year or year of tax.

No equivalent.
Publication of aggregate tax information will be permitted irrespective of whether such disclosure is reasonably capable of being attributed to a particular entity, unless the entity is an individual (natural person). Publication of aggregate tax information is prohibited where the publication is reasonably capable of being attributed to a particular entity.
A taxation officer may disclose protected information to the Secretary of the Treasury for the purposes of briefing the Treasurer, or an authorised officer within the Treasury, in relation to a decision that may be made under the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975 or Australia's Foreign Investment Policy. A taxation officer may disclose protected information to the Secretary of the Treasury for the purposes of briefing the Treasurer in relation to a decision that the Treasurer may make under the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975.

Detailed explanation of new law

Publication of tax information relating to large corporate taxpayers

3.18 Schedule 5 amends the TAA 1953 to create a duty on the Commissioner to publish limited tax return information of corporate tax entities with total incomes of $100 million or more in an income year.

3.19 'Corporate tax entity' is defined in section 950-115 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) and includes all taxpayers treated as corporations for tax purposes. These taxpayers include companies, corporate unit trusts, public trading trusts and corporate limited partnerships.

3.20 The amendments will not apply to corporate tax entities that do not lodge company tax returns. In the case of consolidated groups and multiple entry consolidated groups, the information published will be that reported by the head company in its tax return.

3.21 Specifically, for a corporate tax entity with a reported total income for the year of $100 million or more, the Commissioner will be required to publish the entity's:

name and ABN;
total income;
taxable income; and
tax payable;

as reported in its company tax return.

[Schedule 5, item 1, section 3C ]

3.22 For any entity with MRRT payable in an MRRT year, or PRRT payable in a year of tax, the Commissioner will be required to publish the entity's ABN and name, as well as the amount of MRRT and/or PRRT payable as reported in its returns. [Schedule 5, item 1, sections 3D and 3E ].

Source of information

3.23 In determining whether the Commissioner is required to publish information about a specific taxpayer, the Commissioner can only have regard to the information that the taxpayer has reported to the Commissioner in its relevant tax return. [Schedule 5, item 1, subsections 3C(1 ), 3D(1) and 3E(1)]

3.24 Furthermore, the amendments require the Commissioner to publish only amounts that the taxpayer reports in its tax returns. [Schedule 5, item 1, subsections 3C(3 ), 3D(3) and 3E(3)]

3.25 The Commissioner is not permitted to substitute his or her own assessment of a taxpayer's tax information for the purposes of applying the income or tax thresholds, or in determining the figures to be published.

Example 3.31

A42 Pty Ltd lodges a company income tax return that includes a self-assessment of total income of $110 million and a taxable income of $50 million. Subsequently, the Commissioner issues an assessment notice to A42 Pty Ltd that denies a number of the company's deductions and results in an assessment of taxable income totalling $75 million. Notwithstanding this assessment, the Commissioner is required to publish A42 Pty Ltd's taxable income as $50 million as reported by the taxpayer.

3.26 The Commissioner, however, may verify a taxpayer's identity, including its name and ABN, before publication to ensure that the correct taxpayer is identified. [Schedule 5, item 1, paragraphs 3C(3)(a ), 3D(3)(a) and 3E(3)(a)]

3.27 Sourcing information from tax returns ensures that the amendments do not impose direct compliance costs on taxpayers, and that the potential for errors and disputed publications is minimised. The administrative burden on the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) is also reduced.

Explanation of information published - company income tax

3.28 An entity's name and ABN are to be published to identify each entity with published information. [Schedule 5, item 1, paragraph 3C(3)(a)]

3.29 'Total income' is not defined in the tax law; it is based on accounting concepts, and refers to gross income. 'Total income' is currently reported at item 6(S) in the company tax return. The Commissioner will only publish income tax information of those taxpayers that report total income of $100 million or more in an income year. [Schedule 5, item 1, paragraph 3C(3)(b)]

3.30 'Taxable income' refers to the amount a taxpayer returns as its assessable income less deductions. Corporate tax entities currently report their taxable income or net income at item 7(T) in the company tax return. Corporate unit trusts and public trading trusts currently report their 'net income' at item 7(T). The Commissioner will publish the reported taxable income or net income (if any) of these entities if they report a total income of $100 million or more. [Schedule 5, item 1, paragraph 3C(3)(c)]

3.31 For an entity with a tax loss, the Commissioner will not publish the quantum of the loss. [Schedule 5, item 1, paragraph 3C(3)(c)]

3.32 'Income tax payable' refers to the amount a taxpayer returns as its income tax liability (if any) for the income year after applying the relevant tax rate to its taxable income and applying available tax offsets. Pay as You Go instalments do not affect the income tax payable amount but rather count as a prepayment against the tax payable liability. [Schedule 5, item 1, paragraph 3C(3)(d)]

Example 3.32

There are three corporate tax entities (A1 Ltd, B1 Ltd and C1 Ltd) that each have a total income of $100 million or more in the 2013-14 income year, and a fourth company (Z Ltd) that has a total income of $80 million in the same income year.
The Commissioner will make the following information publicly available in relation to that income year.
Name ABN Total income Taxable income Income tax
A1 Ltd 10 234 567 890 $500,000,000 $200,000,000 $60,000,000
B1 Ltd 97 876 543 210 $300,000,000 $150,000,000 $40,000,000
C1 Ltd 10 293 847 756 $120,000,000 ? ?
Note that C1 Ltd is reported as not having a taxable income. This could be because it has either a nil taxable income or is in a tax loss position. Note also that Z Ltd is not reported as it does not have total income of $100 million or more.

Explanation of information published - MRRT and PRRT

3.33 The Commissioner will be required to publish tax information about entities with an amount of MRRT or PRRT payable in a given MRRT year or year of tax (respectively). The Commissioner is required to publish this information regardless of the total income of the entity. [Schedule 5, item 1, sections 3D and 3E ]

3.34 MRRT does not become payable until the miner's 'group mining profit' exceeds $75 million for an MRRT year. MRRT years are the same as financial years unless an entity has a substituted accounting period for income tax purposes. The PRRT, however, has a fixed 'year of tax' that aligns to the financial year.

3.35 An amount of MRRT or PRRT payable is the amount an entity reports in its MRRT or PRRT returns.

Example 3.33

There are two entities (A2 Ltd and B2 Ltd) that each have an amount of MRRT payable for the 2013-14 MRRT year.
The Commissioner will make the following information publicly available in relation to that MRRT year.
Name ABN MRRT Payable
A2 Ltd 84 545 109 742 $20,000,000
B2 Ltd 65 743 079 112 $5,000,000

Timing and form of publication

3.36 The Commissioner must publish this information as soon as practicable after the end of the income year, MRRT year, or year of tax (as appropriate). The amendments do not prescribe a period within which the Commissioner must publish the information, allowing a flexible approach that accommodates organisational capabilities and priorities. [Schedule 5, item 1, subsections 3C(2 ), 3D(2) and 3E(2)]

3.37 It is envisaged that the Commissioner will publish one annual report encompassing all relevant taxpayers, and including all the information affecting income tax, MRRT and PRRT. This would likely be released several months after the date for the lodgement of the final company income tax returns for an income year. The Commissioner may give advance public notice of his or her intention to make the publication at a particular time.

3.38 Many companies operate under substituted accounting periods for tax purposes. This means that some companies' income years do not align with the standard 1 July to 30 June financial year.

3.39 Some taxpayers may not be required to lodge returns for the 2013-14 income year until July 2013. The first publication, therefore, could occur in late 2015 and would cover all company income tax returns for the 2013-14 income year, and the equivalent MRRT year and PRRT year of tax.

3.40 However, the exact form of these publications will be left to the Commissioner. It could, for example, be published on the ATO's website. The Commissioner may include a range of general explanatory details to provide context for the published data.

Correction of errors

3.41 Provision for the correction of errors is an important safeguard in these amendments.

3.42 The amendments allow the Commissioner to correct errors that are made in a publication in two circumstances: where the Commissioner has made an error, and on the initiative of the relevant taxpayer.

3.43 Where the Commissioner has made an error, he or she has power to publish a correction. The correction must be made from the information the taxpayer has returned. [Schedule 5, item 1, subsections 3C(6 ), 3D(6) and 3E(6)]

3.44 The Commissioner may also make information publicly available that corrects an error that the taxpayer has brought to the Commissioner's attention. This may cover a range of circumstances where a taxpayer makes a further, special or amended tax return. [Schedule 5, item 1, subsections 3C(4 )-( 5 ), 3D(4 )-( 5) and 3E(4 )-( 5)]

3.45 The Commissioner may not substitute, for the purposes of these amendments, his or her own assessment about an entity's tax affairs for the information the entity has returned.

3.46 The Commissioner has a discretion in deciding whether to publish a correction, including a discretion as to the time and form of the publication.

Interaction with taxpayer confidentiality provisions

3.47 Imposing a statutory duty on the Commissioner to publish this information will ensure that the publications do not contravene the existing taxpayer confidentiality provisions. This is because the publications will fall within an existing exception (in subsection 355-50(1) of Schedule 1) for disclosures in the performance of a taxation officer's duties. [Schedule 5, items 3 and 4, note to section 355-50 of Schedule 1 ]

Publishing aggregate collections for each Commonwealth tax.

3.48 Schedule 5 amends Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953 to create exceptions to the taxpayer confidentiality offence provisions for disclosure or on-disclosure of periodic aggregate tax information.

3.49 The objective of this proposal is to enable better public disclosure of aggregate tax revenue collections, even when the identity of particular entities is apparent or could potentially be deduced. This may arise, for example, where the number of taxpayers paying tax under a particular published head of revenue is small, so one taxpayer may be able to deduce information about another from an aggregate figure.

3.50 The amendments ensure that the offence provisions do not apply if the information is periodic aggregate tax information , which is defined to include actual or estimated collections and assessments of a specific tax, excise duty or customs duty over a period. Collections and assessments include amounts such as interest and penalties imposed in relation to a tax or duty. [Schedule 5, item 2, paragraph 355-47(2)(a) of Schedule 1 ]

3.51 The first exception ensures that the offence provision in section 355-25 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953, which makes it an offence for a taxation officer to make a record of or otherwise disclose protected information, does not apply if the information recorded or disclosed is 'periodic aggregate tax information'. [Schedule 5, item 2, subsection 355-47(1) of Schedule 1 ]

3.52 The second exception ensures that the offence provision in section 355-155 to Schedule 1, which makes it an offence for an entity to on-disclose information which was only received through another exception to the tax confidentiality provisions, does not apply if the information recorded or disclosed is 'periodic aggregate tax information'. [Schedule 5, item 6, section 355-172 of Schedule 1 ]

3.53 The definition of 'periodic aggregate tax information' refers to a tax imposed under a particular Act, to reflect the constitutional requirement that laws imposing taxes may only impose one tax. This is a convenient way to distinguish taxes.

3.54 The definition of 'periodic aggregate tax information' recognises that excise and customs duties are under no such constitutional requirement and a law may impose multiple excise or customs duties. For this reason, the meanings of 'duties of excise' and 'duties of customs' are intended to share their constitutional meaning.

3.55 The meaning of a 'type' of duty is intended to be broad enough to allow publications to distinguish between duties imposed on different goods and duties imposed at differing rates, such as those listed in the Schedule to the Excise Tariff Act 1921.

3.56 These amendments ensure that aggregate information about the amounts collected or assessed by the Commissioner under a particular Act, or in respect of a type of duty, can be published. They also ensure the offence provisions do not preclude the publication of forecasts of the amount of a tax or duty to be collected or assessed, or of policy costings in respect of a tax or type of duty.

3.57 These amendments will ensure, for example, that the Government is not restricted from publishing aggregate tax figures for its financial reporting purposes.

Ensuring that no individual's tax affairs are made public

3.58 Aggregate information that is capable of identifying an individual (natural person) taxpayer will continue to be protected information and will not be able to be published under the amendments. This ensures that individuals' privacy is not infringed. [Schedule 5, item 2, paragraph 355-47(2)(b) of Schedule 1 ]

Example 3.34

Lower Ltd and Larger Ltd are listed companies and the only entities subject to paying an excise on beer in April 2014. This is public knowledge. Disclosing the aggregate amount of beer excise collected in April 2014 is reasonably capable of identifying the amount of excise paid by each company, at least to the other company and potentially more broadly based on public data on market shares. Nevertheless, the information may be disclosed, for example, for publication in the Government's financial reports.
If Larger Ltd exits the beer industry in December 2014, leaving Lower Ltd as the sole entity subject to the beer excise, it would still be possible to publish the total amount of excise collected or assessed in April 2015.
Example 3.35
Further to Example 3.34, Aaron purchases Lower Ltd's beer business as a going concern in April 2015, operating it as a sole trader. If the Government published the amount of beer excise collected in July 2015, the information is reasonably capable of being attributed to Aaron. The amendments do not permit the disclosure of the aggregate amount of beer excise collected in this period. The amount of beer excise collected, however, may be aggregated into a broader revenue head, such as alcohol excise, that could be disclosed.

Enhanced information sharing between Government agencies

3.59 These amendments extend the existing information sharing arrangements between the ATO and the Treasury with respect to foreign acquisition and investment decisions affecting Australia.

3.60 This is achieved by amending the current exception to the taxpayer confidentiality provisions for disclosures to the Treasury for the purpose of briefing the Treasurer in relation to a decision under the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975 - this is provided at item 7 in table 3 to subsection 355-65(4).

3.61 The amendment ensures that taxation officers can disclose confidential taxpayer information for the purpose of briefing the Treasurer or an authorised Treasury officer, in relation to a decision that may be made under the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975 or in accordance with Australia's Foreign Investment Policy. [Schedule 5, item 5, subsection 355-65(4)]

3.62 Before this amendment, such information could only be disclosed for the purposes of briefing the Treasurer (but not an authorised Treasury officer) in relation to decisions made under the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975 only, and not Australia's Foreign Investment Policy.

3.63 The amendment enhances the ability of the Government to assess the national interest implications of foreign investment proposals by allowing more detailed information on the impact a proposal may have on Australia's revenue base, to be disclosed.

3.64 However, such information can only be used to assess the national interest implications of a foreign investment proposal. The information must not be used or disclosed for other purposes, or otherwise provided to the public.

Application and transitional provisions

3.65 All of the amendments in Schedule 5 commence on Royal Assent.

3.66 However, the amendments concerning the publication of tax information relating to large corporate taxpayers and entities with resource rent tax liabilities apply from either (as appropriate): the 2013-14 income year, the 2013-14 MRRT year, or the year of tax starting on 1 July 2013. [Schedule 5, subitem 8(1)]

3.67 The amendments will apply to entities with substituted accounting periods for income tax and MRRT purposes as if the entities operated on an accounting period aligned to the financial year. Information returned with respect to a substituted accounting period in lieu of a financial year will be treated as a return for that financial year.

3.68 The amendments concerning the enhanced information sharing between Government agencies apply to records and disclosures made on or after Royal Assent, irrespective of when the information was obtained. [Schedule 5, subitem 8(2)]

Consequential amendments

3.69 Consequential amendments amend the notes to subsection 355-50(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953. [Schedule 5, items 3 and 4, note to section 355-50 of Schedule 1 ]

STATEMENT OF COMPATIBILITY WITH HUMAN RIGHTS

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

Tax secrecy and transparency

3.70 Schedule 5 to this Bill 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.

Publication of tax information relating to large corporate taxpayers

3.71 Item 1 of Schedule 5 amends the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (TAA 1953) to require the Commissioner to make limited information about the tax affairs of large corporate taxpayers public.

3.72 As these amendments apply only to companies and other non-individual entities, they do not engage any human rights.

Publishing aggregate collections for each Commonwealth tax

3.73 Items 2 and 6 of Schedule 5 amend the TAA 1953 to ensure that aggregate information about the amounts collected or assessed by the Commissioner under a particular Act, or in respect of a type of duty of excise, is not protected information.

3.74 However, this does not apply if the information is capable of being used to identify an individual (natural person). By ensuring that personal information about individuals cannot be discerned from this information, these amendments recognise the importance of affording privacy to individuals' personal affairs. As such, these amendments promote the prohibition on interference with privacy under article 17 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

Enhanced information sharing between Government agencies

3.75 Item 5 of Schedule 5 extends an exception to the taxpayer confidentiality provisions to enhance information sharing between Government agencies.

3.76 The extended exception will ensure that a taxation officer does not commit an offence in providing the Secretary of the Treasury with taxpayer information in relation to a decision the Treasurer may make in accordance with Australia's Foreign Investment Policy, or by an authorised Treasury officer making a decision under either the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975 or in accordance with Australia's Foreign Investment Policy.

3.77 Taxpayers affected by disclosures made under the current foreign investment exception are generally not individuals. Nevertheless, there may be some individual taxpayers whose information may be disclosed to the Secretary under the amendments. Therefore, the amendment may engage the prohibition on interference with privacy under article 17 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

3.78 The effect of the amendment is to increase the situations in which a taxation officer can disclose information to the Secretary. However, such information can only be used by the Secretary to assess the national interest implications of a foreign investment proposal. The information must not be used or disclosed for other purposes, or provided to the public.

3.79 The amendment enhances the ability of the Government to assess the national interest implications of foreign investment proposals by allowing more detailed information on the impact a proposal may have on Australia's revenue base to be disclosed.

3.80 Accordingly, any interference with a person's right not to be subject to arbitrary or unlawful interference with their private life is reasonable, necessary and proportionate when considered against the very important national interest objective.

Conclusion

3.81 Schedule 5 engages the prohibition on interference with privacy, but does so in a reasonable, necessary and proportionate way. This Schedule also (separately) promotes the prohibition on interference with privacy, but does not engage any other rights or freedoms. As such, this Schedule is compatible with human rights.

Assistant Treasurer, the Hon David Bradbury

Petroleum Resource Rent Tax

Outline of chapter

4.1 Schedule 6 to the Bill amends the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment Act 1987 (PRRTAA) to address the unintended impacts arising from the decision of the Full Federal Court in Esso Australia Resources Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation [2012] FCAFC 5 (Esso).

4.2 The amendments ensure that taxpayers can apportion payments for the purposes of determining deductible expenditure under the petroleum resource rent tax (PRRT) law. The amendments ensure that, where a taxpayer:

incurs expenditure which was not solely incurred in relation to a petroleum project, the expenditure can be apportioned with that portion of expenditure incurred in relation to the project being deductible; or
makes a payment to procure the carrying out of activities by a third party where that payment is not solely related to a petroleum project, the payment is able to be apportioned to determine the portion which is deductible.

4.3 The amendments also ensure that, where a PRRT taxpayer makes a payment to procure an unrelated third party to undertake project operations, activities or things on their behalf, they are not required to 'look-through' to the character and nature of the expenditure incurred by the third party to determine the extent to which the payment is deductible.

4.4 However, where the third party is related to the PRRT taxpayer, the amendments require that a look-through approach generally be applied, consistent with the decision of the Full Federal Court.

Context of amendments

Overview of the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax

4.5 The PRRT is a project-based resource profits tax of 40 per cent of certain taxable profits derived from the extraction and processing of petroleum recovered in Commonwealth waters. The PRRT was extended to apply to the North West Shelf project and onshore petroleum projects from 1 July 2012. The PRRT is imposed under the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment Act 1987 (PRRTAA). All legislative references in this Chapter are to the PRRTAA unless otherwise specified.

4.6 The PRRT is assessed on a petroleum project basis and is levied on the 'taxable profit' derived by a taxpayer in a financial year from a petroleum project. Taxable profit is calculated by deducting from project assessable receipts the person's eligible real expenditure, together with any expenditure transferred to the project from other projects.

4.7 Deductible expenditure broadly includes those expenditures, whether capital or revenue in nature, which are incurred in carrying on or providing the operations, facilities or other things related to the project ('project activities'). The deductible expenditure provisions of the PRRTAA cover three main expenditure types:

exploration expenditure (section 37);
general project expenditure (section 38); and
closing down expenditure (section 39).

4.8 However, section 44 provides that certain types of expenditure, such as administrative costs or other work costs indirectly incurred, are not deductible, notwithstanding that they were incurred in relation to a petroleum project. Such costs are referred to as 'excluded expenditure'.

4.9 A taxpayer may carry on or provide operations, facilities or other things ('project activities related to their project themselves (including through their employees or agents), or alternatively pay a third party to carry on or provide those project activities on their behalf.

4.10 Where a PRRT taxpayer incurs a liability to make a payment to a third party to carry on or provide project activities, section 41 currently operates to treat:

the PRRT taxpayer as having carried on those activities; and
the liability to have been incurred by the PRRT taxpayer in undertaking those activities.

Application of the PRRT law prior to the Esso decision

Deductible expenditure provisions treated as self-apportioning

4.11 Prior to the decision in Esso, the Commissioner of Taxation (the Commissioner) applied the PRRT law on the basis that the deductible expenditure provisions of the PRRT were self-apportioning. That is, if a PRRT taxpayer incurred expenditure not solely related to a petroleum project ('mixed expenditure'), the mixed expenditure could be apportioned, with that portion incurred in relation to the project being deductible (provided it was not excluded expenditure).

4.12 Similarly, payments made to a third party to procure project activities in addition to non-project related activities could also be apportioned, with that portion related to the provision of project activities treated as having been incurred by the taxpayer under section 41 and deductible by the taxpayer, subject to the deductible expenditure provisions.

Deductibility of third party payments for project activities

4.13 Where a taxpayer had made a payment to procure project activities to be carried out by a third party, the taxpayer was generally not required to look-through to the nature of the expenditure incurred by a third party in undertaking the activities to determine the extent to which the payment was deductible. Rather, the deductibility of the payment was dependent on the nature and character of the activities procured and how they related to the project.

4.14 If the third party only carried out or provided project activities, then that expenditure (which would have been deductible had the activities procured been undertaken by the PRRT taxpayer) was taken to be of the same character and nature as the activities procured and the taxpayer's payment was treated as deductible in full. This was notwithstanding that the payment may have taken into account expenditure by the third party that would have been excluded expenditure had it been directly incurred by the PRRT taxpayer.

4.15 However, if the third party was contracted by the taxpayer to provide services which would constitute excluded expenditure under section 44 if incurred directly by the taxpayer (such as indirect administrative activities, for instance), then the payment for those services was excluded expenditure and was not therefore deductible under section 37, 38 or 39.

Impact of the decision in Esso

Deductibility of third party payments for project activities

4.16 The deductibility of third party payments under section 41 was considered by the Full Federal Court in Esso.

4.17 In its decision, the Court held that, under section 41, payments made by a PRRT taxpayer to a third party for project activities are taken to have the same characteristics as the actual expenditure incurred by the third party in undertaking or providing the activity. The Court noted that:

'...s 41 achieves the unsurprising result that the eligible person is in the same position to claim deductions from assessable receipts...as it would have been if it had carried on the activities comprising the project itself. Where an eligible person incurs a liability to make a payment to procure the carrying on or providing of operations, facilities or things of a kind referred to in s 37, 38 or 39 by another person, the deeming worked by paras (a) and (b) of s 41 makes the liability of the eligible person a liability to pay for those operations, facilities and things, including...things which are "excluded expenditure" as designated by s 44.'

4.18 The practical effect of applying this look-through interpretation is that, if part of the third party's expenditure is excluded expenditure under section 44, then it will also be excluded expenditure for the PRRT taxpayer and consequently not deductible.

4.19 Requiring PRRT taxpayers to apply a look-through approach to third party payments would require the third party to provide details of all the expenditure incurred in providing the service, including commercial-in-confidence information, in order for the taxpayer to determine the extent to which the payment was deductible.

4.20 A third party who is unrelated to the taxpayer is likely to be unwilling to provide the required information and, in its absence, the Commissioner will be unable to determine what proportion of the payment for services was deductible, potentially resulting in the entire payment being non-deductible.

4.21 In contrast, where parties are related there are not the same issues concerning providing information between the parties. Accordingly, requiring PRRT taxpayers to apply a look-through approach for payments made to related contractors protects the integrity of the PRRT. In these circumstances, the look-through requirement ensures that excluded costs and related party profit margins are not taken into account in working out the deduction available to the PRRT taxpayer.

Scope to apportion expenditure under the deductible expenditure provisions

4.22 In its decision, the Court also made the observation that the deductible expenditure provisions of the PRRTAA relating to exploration expenditure, general expenditure, and closing down expenditure (sections 37, 38 and 39 respectively) do not allow for payments to be apportioned.

4.23 The effect of this is that, where a taxpayer incurs mixed expenditure, none of the expenditure will be deductible. This is notwithstanding that a portion of it was legitimately incurred in relation to a petroleum project. The same outcome will also occur under section 41 where a payment was made to a third party which was not made solely to procure the carrying on or provision of project activities.

4.24 The Commissioner's longstanding administrative practice in relation to the PRRT has been to treat the relevant sections as self-apportioning.

Summary of new law

Scope to apportion expenditure

4.25 The amendments ensure that PRRT taxpayers can apportion 'mixed' expenditure that is only partly incurred in relation to a particular petroleum project for the purposes of determining deductible expenditure under sections 37, 38 and 39. To the extent a payment or part of a payment is made in relation to a project, it is able to be deducted provided it is not excluded expenditure.

4.26 Similarly, the amendments ensure that payments made to procure the carrying on of project activities, as well as other things, by a third party can be apportioned for the purposes of the PRRT law.

Look-through requirement limited to payments to related parties

4.27 Where a PRRT taxpayer makes a payment to an unrelated third party to procure project activities, the amendments ensure that the Commissioner's longstanding application of section 41 applies. That is, to the extent the payment is made to procure the carrying on or provision of project activities, it is treated as having been incurred by the taxpayer in carrying on or providing those things in determining its deductibility.

4.28 However, consistent with the decision of the Full Federal Court, where a PRRT taxpayer pays a related contractor to carry on or provide project activities (excluding those related to capital), the requirement that the taxpayer look-through the payment is preserved. That is, the character, nature and amount of the payment reflects that of the actual expenditure incurred by the related contractor in carrying on the project activities procured for the purposes of determining the extent to which it is deductible under sections 37, 38, 39 and 44.

4.29 Where a payment or part of a payment to a related contractor is made for the use of property (on which capital expenditure was incurred), the payment or part of the payment is not looked-through, but instead is deemed to have the same character and nature as the project activity procured.

Comparison of key features of new law and current law

New law Current law
Apportionment of expenditure
PRRT taxpayers can apportion mixed expenditure to determine the portion which constitutes exploration, general project or closing down expenditure and which is deductible. No apportionment of mixed expenditure is possible. Consequently, where expenditure is only partly incurred in relation to a petroleum project, none of the expenditure may be deductible.
Application of the ' look-through' approach

Look-through is not required in relation to payments to unrelated third parties for project activities. Whether the payment is deductible depends on the character and nature of the activity procured.

Where a PRRT taxpayer makes a payment to a related contractor for the provision of project activities, 'look-through' is required, except in relation to payments related to the use of property. The extent to which the payment is deductible is limited to the expenditure incurred by the related contractor in providing the service, and the character and nature of that expenditure.

A PRRT taxpayer must 'look-through' a payment made to a third party for project services to determine the extent to which the payment is deductible.

That is, the character and nature of the contractor's expenditure, rather than that of the service or activity procured, is used to determine the extent to which the payment is deductible. The proportion of the payment that relates to excluded expenditure incurred by the contractor is not deductible by the taxpayer.

Detailed explanation of new law

Scope to apportion expenditure

4.30 These amendments ensure that 'mixed' expenditure incurred by a taxpayer only partly in relation to a petroleum project can be apportioned to determine deductibility.

4.31 Where a PRRT taxpayer incurs expenditure in relation to both project activities (section 37, 38 or 39), as well as in relation to other things, the amendments confirm that expenditure can be apportioned to determine the amount and type of deductible expenditure under the PRRT law.

4.32 This is achieved by replacing the reference to payments 'liable to be made' and 'liable to be paid' in the deductible expenditure provisions relating to exploration, general project and closing-down expenditure, with the terms, 'to the extent that they are made', and 'paid by the person, to the extent that the payment relates to'. The words, 'to the extent' which are commonly used in the income tax law, support the apportionment of expenditure.

4.33 Only the part of the payment that was incurred in relation to project activities, and which does not constitute excluded expenditure is able to be deducted. [Schedule 6, items 1 and 2, subsection 37(1) of the PRRTAA, items 4 and 5, subsection 38(1) of the PRRTAA and Schedule 6, item 7, subsection 39(1) of the PRRTAA ]

Example 4.36 : Apportionment between types of deductible expenditure

Chan Resources holds an interest in a petroleum project and, on 1 July 2015, purchases a drill for $5 million to recover petroleum from the licence area as well as to carry on exploration for new petroleum pools in the licence area.
Drilling records confirm the drill was used in carrying on the recovery of petroleum and in carrying on the exploration for other petroleum pools in the production licence area.
Chan Resources incurs exploration expenditure to the extent the payment is made in carrying on the operations, facilities and other things required in section 34. Chan Resources also incurs an amount of general project expenditure to the extent the payment is made in carrying on the operations, facilities and other things in section 38.
The method of apportionment adopted by Chan Resources is a question of fact to be determined in the circumstances, and should be supported by business records sufficient to satisfy the substantiation requirements in section 112.
Example 4.37 : Apportionment of project related expenditure between multiple petroleum projects
Colour Enterprises holds an interest in both the Green petroleum project and the White petroleum project. Brian is employed by Colour Enterprises and is the site supervisor of both projects.
To determine the amount of general project expenditure incurred by Colour Enterprises in relation to each project, the salary paid to Brian in 2013-14 is apportioned to the extent that Brian is involved in carrying on the project activities for both the Green and White projects.
Colour Enterprises chooses to apportion the payment according to the time directly spent by Brian on the activities of each project. This method of apportionment is appropriate provided it is substantiated by the business records kept by Colour Enterprises.
Example 4.38 : Apportionment between deductible expenditure and excluded expenditure
JillCo holds an interest in an exploration permit and enters a hire purchase agreement on 1 July 2014 with LukeCo to acquire a drill in order to carry on exploration activities in the permit area.
Under the terms of the agreement, which separately discloses the interest charge, JillCo makes 12 monthly payments of $110,000. The total payment is $1.32 million ($1.20 million plus $0.12 million interest).
JillCo incurs exploration expenditure of $1.20 million for the payments made in carrying on the project activities. The $0.12 million interest charge is not deductible as exploration expenditure, as it constitutes excluded expenditure under paragraph 44(1)(b).
Example 4.39 : Apportionment between eligible real expenditure and non-project expenditure
Wetgasco holds an interest in an offshore petroleum project from which natural gas is recovered for use as feedstock for an integrated LNG plant. Wetgasco owns and operates the onshore processing and liquefaction plant.
The natural gas recovered from the project's offshore recovery platform is transported via pipeline to an onshore processing facility that removes impurities to produce the marketable petroleum commodity sales gas, before it then enters the downstream liquefaction plant to be further processed into LNG.
Grant is the operations manager for Wetgasco with responsibility for supervising the overall integrated gas to liquid (GTL) operation up until the point the LNG is produced and ready for sale.
In order to determine the amount of general project expenditure for the petroleum project, the salary paid to Grant by Wetgasco must be apportioned to reflect the extent to which the payment was made in carrying on or providing project activities, noting that the project ring fence occurs at the point sales gas is produced and becomes an excluded commodity.
Westgasco chooses to apportion Grant's salary payment according to the time directly spent by Grant on the project activities. The portion of Grant's salary related to time spent managing the downstream liquefaction activities is non-project expenditure and is not deductible. This method of apportionment is appropriate provided it is substantiated by the business records kept by Westgasco.

Apportionment of payments to third parties

4.34 The amendments also confirm that a PRRT taxpayer can apportion payments that are subject to section 41 where only part of the payment is to procure another person to carry on project activities. [Schedule 6, item 9, subsection 41(1) of the PRRTAA ]

4.35 Apportionment under section 41 effectively excludes the part of the payment made to the third party that was not to procure the carrying on or provision of project activities, but does not otherwise alter the operation of section 41 as a deeming provision, as confirmed by the Full Federal Court.

4.36 The deductibility of the part of the payment made to procure project activities, and which is taken to have been incurred by the taxpayer under subsection 41(1), is determined under sections 37, 38 and 39 of the PRRTAA.

Example 4.40 : Apportionment of a third party payment

Amartya Co holds an interest in an offshore petroleum project from which natural gas is recovered for use as feedstock for an integrated LNG plant. Amartya Co owns the onshore processing and liquefaction plant, but makes payments to Alpha Engineering to operate the processing and liquefaction plant on its behalf. As activities related to the liquefaction fall beyond the PRRT ring fence, Amartya Co apportions the payment made to Alpha Engineering to reflect that part of the payment relating to the provision of upstream project activities. Section 41 operates to deem that portion of the payment to have been incurred by Amartya Co in carrying on or providing project activities. Whether, and to what extent, the deemed payment is deductible is determined under the deductible expenditure provisions of the PRRTAA.

Deductibility of payments to third parties and the operation of section 41

4.37 The amendments repeal the current section 41, and replace it with a new section 41 which clarifies how payments made by a taxpayer to procure a third party to carry out or provide project activities are treated, depending on whether the third party is 'related' or 'unrelated' to the taxpayer. [Schedule 6, item 9, subsections 41(1) and 41(1A) of the PRRTAA ]

4.38 Where the third party is commercially or operationally related to the PRRT taxpayer, the Full Federal Court's interpretation of the operation of section 41 is largely preserved. That is, where a PRRT taxpayer makes a payment to procure project activities from another participant such as the operator, or a related contractor, the taxpayer is required to 'look-through' to the character, nature and amount of the related contractor's expenditure when determining how much of the payment is deductible under the PRRT law. [Schedule 6, item 9, paragraph 41(1)(d) of the PRRTAA ]

4.39 The amendments ensure that section 41 applies to payments made to third parties to procure project services or activities so that there is no requirement to look through to the character, nature and amount of the expenditure of the third party where the third party is not related to the PRRT taxpayer. [Schedule 6, item 9, paragraph 41(1)(b) of the PRRTAA ]

4.40 Not requiring PRRT taxpayers to look-through payments to an unrelated contractor's underlying expenditure reflects both that the parties are acting at arm's length as well as the practical difficulty of administering the arrangements under such circumstances.

When is a third party related to a PRRT taxpayer?

4.41 The amendments define what constitutes a related person for the purposes of the broader operation of section 41. [Schedule 6, item 9, subsection 41(1A) of the PRRTAA ]

4.42 A third party (referred to as the 'other person') that provides services to the PRRT taxpayer (referred to as the 'eligible person') is related to the taxpayer for the purposes of section 41 where they:

hold an interest in the same petroleum project for which they are providing the operations, facilities or other things to the taxpayer; or
are connected with the taxpayer to whom they are providing the project operations, facilities or other things.

4.43 Broadly, entities are 'connected' within the meaning of section 328-125 of the ITAA 1997 to one another if either entity controls the other, or both are controlled by the same third entity.

4.44 In addition, where the other person engages another party that is connected to the other person (referred to as the third person) to carry on or provide the activities procured on behalf of the eligible person, then the third person will be related for the purposes of section 41. [Schedule 6, item 9, subsection 41(1C) of the PRRTAA ]

Example 4.41 : Project service providers related to taxpayer RexCo holds an interest in a petroleum project and makes a payment to ProcessCo, a wholly owned subsidiary, to carry out project activities. ProcessCo contracts with ThreeCo, another wholly owned subsidiary of RexCo, to provide some of the activities in relation to the project. ProcessCo is connected to RexCo and so paragraph 41(1A)(b) applies in relation to that part of the payment relating to the project activities carried on by ProcessCo. Further, as ProcessCo and RexCo are connected and ProcessCo procured project activities from ThreeCo, which is a connected entity with ProcessCo, subsection 41(1C) will apply to that part of the payment relating to the project activities provided by ThreeCo. Example 4.42 : Third party related to taxpayer

BlackCo holds a 60 per cent interest in a petroleum project and is the joint venture operator responsible for project operations. The remaining project interest is held by RedCo. RedCo pays BlackCo for the project activities carried out in relation to its project interest.
BlackCo makes payments to WhiteCo, a wholly owned subsidiary, to carry on all the operations in relation to the project.
As BlackCo is procuring project operations from the connected entity WhiteCo on behalf of Redco; and as BlackCo holds an interest in the project, subsection 41(1C) applies in relation to the payment by RedCo to BlackCo.

Payments made to an unrelated contractor to procure project services

4.45 Where a PRRT taxpayer contracts with an unrelated contractor, to the extent the contract payments are to procure the carrying on or provision of project activities in relation to a project, the project activities procured are deemed to have been undertaken by the taxpayer and not the third party. Subsequently, the payment is deemed to have been incurred by the taxpayer in carrying on or providing those project activities. [Schedule 6, item 9, subsection 41(1) of the PRRTAA ]

4.46 For the purposes of determining the extent to which the payment constitutes deductible expenditure, the character and nature of the project activities procured is taken to be impressed upon the payment for the purposes of sections 37, 38, 39 and 44. That is, where a payment or part of a payment is solely for project activities which do not constitute excluded expenditure, that payment is taken to have been incurred in carrying on or providing those activities and is deductible in full. The taxpayer is not required to look-through the payment to what the contractor incurred expenditure on in providing the service. [Schedule 6, item 9, paragraph 41(1)(b) of the PRRTAA ]

Example 4.43 : Application of section 41 to an unrelated party - single operating expense PetroSarah holds an interest in an onshore petroleum project. PetroSarah enters into a service agreement with Lee Co to provide staff to operate a drill rig for the recovery of petroleum from the production licence area. The agreement is for a 12 month period for the fixed payment of $2 million. Lee Co incurs $1.9 million of expenditure in operating the drill rig. Lee Co does not hold an interest in the project and is not connected with PetroSarah and so subsection 41(1A) does not apply. Since subsection 41(1A) does not apply to Lee Co, the $2 million payment by PetroSarah is taken for the purposes of sections 37, 38, 39 and 44 to have the same character and nature as the operations, facilities or other things procured. The payment to Lee Co was incurred to procure a 'project activity' which is not itself an excluded expenditure type under section 44. Consequently, PetroSarah can deduct the full $2 million as general project expenditure (despite Lee Co only incurring $1.9 million of expenditure). Example 4.44 : Application of section 41 to an unrelated party - project activity procured is excluded expenditure

A PRRT taxpayer, Bayside Oil, incurs a liability to pay $100,000 to obtain office space for its administrative employees from an unrelated third party that does not hold an interest in the project. The office building is located at a site some distance from the project site which is not adjacent to the project operations.
Subsection 41(1A) does not apply as the person providing the office facilities to Bayside Oil is not a related party.
Therefore, the payment is deemed to have been incurred by Bayside Oil and is taken to have the same character and nature as the project activity procured.
Payments in respect of land and buildings for use in connection with administration, which are not adjacent to the project operations, are excluded expenditure under paragraph 44(1)(k). Consequently, the payment is an item of excluded expenditure when section 37, 38 or 39 is applied and is not deductible to Bayside Oil.

Payments made to a related contractor to procure project services: look-through

4.47 Where a PRRT taxpayer makes a payment to a related contractor to procure the carrying on or provision of project activities, the activities procured are treated as having been undertaken by the taxpayer. To the extent the payment relates to procuring those activities, it is deemed to have been made by the taxpayer in carrying on or providing those activities.

4.48 The PRRT taxpayer is required to look-through to the expenditure incurred by the related contractor in providing the service to determine the extent to which the payment constitutes deductible expenditure.

4.49 The payment deemed to have been made by the PRRT taxpayer under subparagraph 41(1)(a)(ii) is, except where it relates to the use of property (on which capital expenditure was incurred), taken to be of the same character, nature and amount as the expenditure incurred by the third party in providing the project activity. Where the third party incurs expenditure in providing the project activity that would be excluded expenditure had it been directly incurred by the PRRT taxpayer, then that expenditure is excluded expenditure when deemed to have been made by the PRRT taxpayer. [Schedule 6, item 9, paragraph 41(1)(d) of the PRRTAA ]

4.50 As the amount of the payment deemed to have been made by the PRRT taxpayer is also limited to the amount of expenditure incurred by the related party in providing this service, any mark-up is also effectively precluded from deduction by the PRRT taxpayer. This ensures that a PRRT taxpayer cannot artificially increase its deductible expenditure by establishing a related service company rather than undertaking project activities directly. [Schedule 6, item 9, subparagraph 41(1)(d) of the PRRTAA ]

Example 4.45 : Application of section 41 to related party - single expense

Nomis Co holds an interest in an offshore petroleum project. Nomis Co enters into a service agreement with Semaj Co, a wholly owned subsidiary, to provide maintenance services for the project's oil platform. The agreement is for a 12 month period for a fixed payment of $3 million.
Semaj Co incurs $2.75 million of expenditure in maintaining the platform.
Subsection 41(1A) applies as Semaj Co is connected to Nomis Co. Therefore, the payment that is deemed to have been made by Nomis Co under subparagraph 41(1)(a)(ii) is taken to be of the same character, nature and amount as the expenditure incurred by Semaj Co for the purposes of determining deductible expenditure under sections 37, 38, 39 and 44.
In this example, Nomis Co is taken to have incurred $2.75 million in expenditure, which is deductible as general project expenditure under section 38 of the PRRTAA.
Example 4.46 : Application of section 41 to related party - expenditure includes excluded expenditure
Assume the same facts as Example 6.10, except in this case, as well as incurring $2.75 million expenditure on maintaining the oil platform, Semaj Co also incurs an additional $10,000 in indirect head office administration expenses.
As subsection 41(1A) applies to Semaj Co, the payment deemed to have been incurred by Nomis Co is taken to be $2.76 million, being the same amount as the expenditure Semaj Co incurred in carrying on or providing the project service procured.
The payment is also taken to have the same character and nature as the $2.76 million expenditure incurred by Semaj Co for the purposes of determining its deductibility under sections 37, 38, 39 and 44. As indirect administrative or accounting costs are excluded expenditure under paragraph 44(1)(j) of the PRRTAA, Nomis Co is only able to deduct $2.75 million as general project expenditure under section 38.

Payments made to a related party concerning property

4.51 There is an exception to the look-through requirement where the payment or part of the payment relates to the use of property (on which the related party incurred capital expenditure) by the related party to provide the project activities procured by the PRRT taxpayer. To the extent the payment relates to the use of property on which the related party has incurred capital expenditure, that payment is treated like payments made to unrelated contractors for the purposes of determining the deductibility of the payment or part of the payment. [Schedule 6, item 9, paragraph 41(1)(c) of the PRRTAA ]

Example 4.47 : Payments to a related party in relation to property

LuckyLuke holds an interest in an onshore petroleum project and enters into an agreement with a wholly owned subsidiary, AnnaBella Co to provide and operate a drilling rig for the project. The agreement is for a 12 month period for a fixed payment of $10.15 million. The amount charged by AnnaBella Co includes an amount of $7 million which, consistent with normal commercial practice, takes into account a return of, and a return on, the capital cost of the drilling rig. The payment also includes $3 million to cover the operating expenses and labour costs incurred by AnnaBella Co to operate the rig, and a five per cent mark-up on the operating expenses to cover indirect costs, totalling $150,000.
As AnnaBella Co is wholly owned by LuckyLuke, they are connected and subsection 41(1A) applies. Paragraph 41(1)(c) applies to the part of the payment relating to the use of the drill rig (that is, $7 million) which is taken to have the same character and nature as the project activity procured for the purposes of sections 37, 38, 39 and 44. Paragraph 41(1)(d) applies to the extent the payment by LuckyLuke does not relate to the use of property, namely the operating costs and the mark-up. As this portion of the payment is taken to be of the same amount, character and nature as the expenditure incurred by AnnaBella Co, LuckyLuke is taken to have only made a payment of $3 million (subsection 41(1)). The $150,000 mark-up is not taken to have been made by LuckyLuke as it was not expenditure AnnaBella Co incurred in relation to the project.
Determining that part of the payment that relates to the use of property is a question of fact to be determined based on the circumstances. The method LuckyLuke uses to determine the extent the payment relates to the use of property is supported by the business records provided by AnnaBella Co.

A payment deemed under section 41 cannot exceed actual payment

4.52 As noted, where a PRRT taxpayer makes a payment to procure the carrying on or provision of project activities by a related contractor, the amount of the payment deemed under subparagraph 41(1)(a)(ii) to have been made by the taxpayer for the purposes of sections 37, 38, 39 and 44 is taken to be of the same character, nature and amount as the expenditure incurred by the related contractor in providing the activities procured.

4.53 Where the expenditure incurred by the related contractor in carrying on the project activities exceeds the payment made by the PRRT taxpayer, the related contractor's expenditure is taken to be proportionately reduced so as to ensure the taxpayer cannot deduct expenditure it did not incur. [Schedule 6, item 9, subsections 41(1B) and 41(1D) of the PRRTAA ]

Example 4.48 : Related party expenditure exceeds payment for project services

A related service provider, Company C, charges the eligible PRRT taxpayer $100,000 for the provision of project activities. However, the expenditure the related third party incurred in carrying on or providing the activities procured is $150,000 of which $50,000 is excluded expenditure. Under subsection 41(1B) the amount of the payment taken to be made by the eligible PRRT taxpayer is $100,000. Under subsection 41(1D), the character and nature of the payment reflects the proportionate reduction in the payment - that is, of the $100,000 one third (50,000/150,000) is excluded expenditure for the purposes of sections 37, 38, 39 and 44.

When deductible expenditure is taken to be incurred

4.54 The PRRT is intended to recognise expenditure at the time the liability for such expenditure arises, rather than when the amount is actually paid. This is consistent with the approach taken under the income tax law.

4.55 Amendments are made to exploration expenditure, general project expenditure and closing-down expenditure provisions to clarify the time at which the payment is taken to be incurred. This is when the taxpayer is liable to make the payment. [Schedule 6, items 3, 6, and 8, subsections 37(3 ), 38(3) and 39(5) of the PRRTAA ]

4.56 A similar amendment is made to section 41 in relation to payments made to a third party, which also provides that the payment is taken to have been incurred at the time it is liable to be paid. [Schedule 6, item 10, subsection 41(3) of the PRRTAA ]

4.57 When a person becomes liable to make a payment is determined by taking into consideration all the relevant facts surrounding the payment, including any contractual terms between the parties.

4.58 A contract that provides that payment is to be made on the issue of an invoice after delivery of the contract services, could give rise to a liability to make a payment when the invoice is issued. However, this depends on the terms of the arrangement.

Application of the PRRTAA anti-avoidance provisions

4.59 The anti-avoidance provisions in Part V of Division 6 continue to apply to arrangements, including those to which section 41 applies.

4.60 If a taxpayer enters into an arrangement, including transferring assets or restructures creating a tax benefit, the general anti-avoidance provisions contained in Division 6 of Part V may apply, if the requirements of the Division are satisfied.

4.61 If a payment made by a person is one to which deeming under section 41 applies, section 58 may apply so that the amount of the deemed expenditure may be reduced to what it would have been had the parties been dealing at arm's length in relation to the transaction.

4.62 Section 58 may also apply when apportioning the payment made by the eligible person between the part that relates to the use of property (on which the other person has incurred capital expenditure) and the other components.

Application provisions

4.63 The amendments generally apply from the applicable commencement date of the petroleum project. For projects located in Commonwealth waters (except the North West Shelf, and Bass Strait), the applicable commencement date is 1 July 1986. The applicable commencement date for the Bass Strait project is 1 July 1990. [Schedule 6, paragraph 11(1)(a)]

4.64 However, in relation to interests in onshore projects and the North West Shelf project, to which the PRRT was extended from 1 July 2012, the amendments apply from the relevant starting base date of the project interest, as outlined in section 45. For those petroleum project interests where the PRRT taxpayer has chosen the look-back approach to value its starting base, the relevant starting base date is 1 July 2002. Similarly, for project interests where the PRRT taxpayer has chosen the market or book value approach to value its starting base, these amendments will commence from the time the interim expenditure period relating to the interest commences. [Schedule 6, paragraphs 11(1)(b) and 11(1)(c)]

4.65 The retrospective application of the amendments benefits PRRT taxpayers. Without retrospective application, taxpayers would be denied deductions for past project expenditures where they were incurred as 'mixed expenditure' or alternatively where the taxpayer is unable to sufficiently substantiate the character and nature of expenditure incurred by contractors paid for undertaking past project activities.

4.66 The ability to apportion expenditure is consistent with the intended profits-based operation of the PRRT and with its administration since commencement. By providing that apportionment applies from the commencement date of projects, the amendments ensure that PRRT taxpayers holding interests in offshore petroleum projects, particularly those who are yet to submit a PRRT return, are able to deduct past expenditures legitimately incurred in relation to a project.

4.67 Similarly, in relation to onshore projects and the North West Shelf project, the application of these amendments from the relevant starting base date ensures that taxpayers are not denied the ability to take into account legitimate past project expenditure in determining the starting base amount for those project interests existing as at 2 May 2010, under the 'look-back', market value or book value approaches.

4.68 The amendments relating to the deductibility of contractor payments under section 41 apply to contractor payments made by PRRT taxpayers who have not been required to furnish an annual PRRT return in relation to their project interest prior to 14 December 2012 (the date the amendments were announced) as if the contractor was unrelated to the taxpayer for payments incurred prior to 1 July 2013. This ensures that past payments made by these PRRT taxpayers to contractors, and for which the taxpayer is unlikely to have sufficient records to apply a look-through approach, are treated consistently with the application of the PRRT law prior to the decision in Esso. [Schedule 6, subitem 11(3)]

4.69 The section 41 amendments will, however, apply from 1 July 2012 for those PRRT taxpayers who have been required to furnish an annual PRRT return prior to 14 December 2012. [Schedule 6, subitem 11(2)]

4.70 This recognises that, following the Esso decision, the Commissioner released a Decision Impact Statement acknowledging that the past administration of the PRRTAA differed from the Court's interpretation. The Statement advised that the ATO would not seek to disturb assessments for the 2011-12 and earlier years, provided the taxpayer self-assessed consistent with the ATO's general administrative practice in this area or where taxpayers choose to amend past assessments consistent with the ATO's general administrative practice.

4.71 Some taxpayers may not have the necessary records to substantiate their claims for payments made prior to the introduction of these amendments, particularly given the considered views expressed by the Full Federal Court in the Esso case on the application of section 41. It is expected that the Commissioner, in consultation with industry, will adopt a reasonable approach to substantiation and apportionment where a past assessment is amended, or found not to have complied with the past general administrative practice, in these circumstances.

4.72 The amendments also clarify for the purposes of the application provisions that a reference to payment takes the same meaning as that used in sections 37, 38, 39 and 41. This ensures consistency between the application provisions and the deductible expenditure provisions in the PRRTAA. [Schedule 6, subitem 11(4)]

STATEMENT OF COMPATIBILITY WITH HUMAN RIGHTS

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

Petroleum Resource Rent Tax (PRRT) - Esso

4.73 Schedule 6 to this Bill 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

4.74 Schedule 6 to this Bill amends the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax 1987 to address issues arising out of the Full Federal Court decision in Esso Australia Resources Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation [2012] FCAFC 5.

Human rights implications

4.75 This Schedule does not engage any of the applicable rights or freedoms.

Conclusion

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

Assistant Treasurer, the Hon David Bradbury

Removing the Capital Gains Tax Discount for Foreign Individuals

Outline of chapter

5.1 Schedule 7 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 ( ITAA 1997) to remove the capital gains tax (CGT) discount on discount capital gains accrued after 8 May 2012 for foreign resident and temporary resident individuals.

5.2 All legislative references are to the ITAA 1997 unless otherwise stated.

Context of amendments

5.3 Currently, discount capital gains that are made by individuals may be reduced by a discount percentage before being included in assessable income. A CGT discount of 50 per cent is available to individuals regardless of tax residency status.

5.4 Generally, foreign and temporary resident individuals are only subject to CGT on taxable Australian property, which includes residential and commercial real estate and mining assets.

5.5 These assets are immobile and produce location specific returns. A reduction in the effective tax rate (by way of the CGT discount) is not necessary to attract foreign investment in these assets. Removing the CGT discount for foreign and temporary residents increases the return to Australia from gains made through foreign investment in Australian land.

5.6 As part of the 2012-13 Budget, the Government announced that the CGT discount would not apply to discount capital gains made by a foreign resident. However, the CGT discount will still apply to the portion of the discount capital gain of a foreign resident individual that accrued up until the date of announcement (8 May 2012).

5.7 As temporary residents are subject to CGT on the same basis as foreign residents, they will also be ineligible for the CGT discount.

5.8 These amendments will apportion the discount percentage applied to reduce discount capital gains to ensure that the full 50 per cent CGT discount is only available for periods in which an CGT asset was held:

prior to 9 May 2012; and
after 8 May 2012 during which the individual was an Australian resident.

Summary of new law

5.9 These amendments apply where:

an individual was a foreign resident or a temporary resident at any time on or after 8 May 2012; and
that individual makes a discount capital gain directly or indirectly as a beneficiary of a trust, from a CGT event that occurred after 8 May 2012; or
a trustee who is taxed under section 98 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936) in respect of an individual beneficiary, makes a discount capital gain from a CGT event that occurred after 8 May 2012.

5.10 The effect of the measure is to:

retain access to the full CGT discount for discount capital gains of foreign and temporary resident individuals in respect of the increase in value of a CGT asset that occurred prior to 9 May 2012;
remove the CGT discount for discount capital gains of foreign and temporary resident individuals that arise after 8 May 2012; and
apportion the CGT discount for discount capital gains where an individual has been both an Australian resident and a foreign or temporary resident during the period after 8 May 2012.

-
The discount percentage is apportioned to ensure the full discount (50 per cent) applies to periods when the individual was an Australian resident.

5.11 Where an Australian individual changes tax residency, the amendments will only apply to CGT assets that are taxable Australian property. This includes property characterised as taxable Australian property because an individual has chosen to disregard the CGT event triggered by their change in residency status (CGT event I1 may be disregarded under section 104-165).

5.12 Capital losses will continue to be offset against capital gains and net capital losses may still be carried forward.

5.13 These amendments are only intended to affect the discount percentage applied to a discount capital gain. These amendments do not affect other rules in the CGT regime, such as the application of the main residence exemption.

Comparison of key features of new law and current law

New law Current law

The discount percentage of 50 per cent applicable to a discount capital gain of an individual is reduced:

if the CGT event from which the capital gain arises occurs after 8 May 2012; and
the individual was a foreign resident or a temporary resident at any time in the period between 8 May 2012 and the time of the CGT event.

The discount percentage of 50 per cent applicable to discount capital gains assessed to a trustee that is taxed under section 98 of the ITAA 1936 in respect of an individual beneficiary is reduced:

if the CGT event from which the capital gain arises occurs after 8 May 2012; and
the beneficiary was a foreign resident or a temporary resident at any time in the period between 8 May 2012 and the time of the CGT event.

The 50 per cent discount percentage applicable to a discount capital gain of individual is available irrespective of the residency of the individual.

Detailed explanation of new law

5.14 These amendments reduce the discount percentage applicable to a discount capital gain of an individual where the individual was a foreign resident or temporary resident for some or all of the period that the CGT asset was held after 8 May 2012. [Schedule 7, item 6, subsection 115-105(1)]

5.15 The amendments also reduce the discount percentage applicable to a discount capital gain made by a trustee that is taxed under section 98 of the ITAA 1936 in respect of an individual beneficiary who was a foreign resident or temporary resident for some or all of the period that the CGT asset was held after 8 May 2012. This ensures comparable treatment for beneficiaries, regardless of whether they are taxed directly or the trustee is taxed on their behalf. [Schedule 7, item 6, subsection 115-120)]

5.16 The amendments apply to discount capital gains included in the assessable income of an individual irrespective of whether the CGT asset producing the gain was owned directly by the individual or held indirectly by a trust.

5.17 The amendments do not apply to reduce the discount percentage:

where the CGT event occurred on or before 8 May 2012; or
where an individual is an Australian resident at all times on or after 8 May 2012.

5.18 For CGT events occurring after 8 May 2012, the discount percentage applying to a discount capital gain from that event will depend on:

whether the CGT asset was held on, or was acquired after, 8 May 2012;
if the CGT asset was held on 8 May 2012, whether or not the individual was a resident on that date;
whether a choice is made by an individual who was a foreign or temporary resident on 8 May 2012 to use the market value method to determine the part of the discount capital gain that accrued on and prior to that date; and
the residency of the individual during so much of the period the CGT asset was held after 8 May 2012.

5.19 For CGT assets acquired after 8 May 2012 by an individual who was a foreign or temporary resident for the entire period the CGT asset was held, the discount percentage will be zero. This is because such individuals are no longer eligible for the CGT discount.

5.20 For CGT assets acquired prior to 9 May 2012, and CGT assets acquired after 8 May 2012 where the residency status of the individual owner changes during the time the CGT asset was held, the discount percentage is reduced to reflect the periods the individual was eligible for the CGT discount. This is achieved through several mechanisms outlined below (generally by pro-rating the discount percentage). [Schedule 7, item 6, section 115-115 ]

5.21 Individuals who were foreign or temporary residents on 8 May 2012 can receive the CGT discount for the gains from a CGT asset that accrued prior to the announcement of the measure. The market value of the CGT asset at 8 May 2012 is required to quantify the gain attributable to that earlier period. Individuals who do not have a market valuation will be ineligible for the CGT discount on pre-announcement gains. This is regardless of whether the individual made the discount capital gain directly or as a result of being a beneficiary of a trust. [Schedule 7, item 6, subsections 115-115(3) to (6)]

5.22 In circumstances where a trustee is taxed under section 98 of the ITAA 1997 in respect of an individual beneficiary, the discount percentage will be worked out on the basis the individual made the gain.

5.23 In order for an individual (or a trustee taxed under section 98 of the ITAA 1936) to determine their reduced discount percentage, they will need to determine the following:

the 'discount testing period' applicable to the discount capital gain; and
which discount percentage formula from section 115-115 applies to that discount capital gain.

Determining the discount testing period

5.24 The discount testing period is the period over which the CGT discount is apportioned in order to take account of a relevant individual's tax residency status.

5.25 The start and end of the discount testing period depends on whether the individual made the discount capital gain directly or indirectly, and if the latter, on the type of trust and who is taxed.

Individuals with direct gains

5.26 For CGT assets that are directly disposed of by an individual, the discount testing period commences on the day the individual acquired the CGT asset and ends on the day the CGT event happens. [Schedule 7, item 6, paragraph 115-105(2)(d)]

5.27 CGT assets to which these amendments apply may be subject to CGT roll-overs or acquired as a result of the death of an individual. Special rules about the time of acquisition are prescribed in the current law (in section 115-30). The discount testing period commences in accordance with the date of acquisition as prescribed in those rules.

5.28 In general, an individual is treated as having acquired the CGT asset when the earlier owner of the CGT asset acquired it. The individual is also treated as having the same residency status as that of the first individual during the relevant period. [Schedule 7 item 6, subsection 115-105(3)]

Example 5.49

Dominic is a resident of France. On 1 January 2011 he entered into a contract to purchase a new property in Sydney. On 1 July 2012 Dominic entered into a contract to sell the property.
Dominic's discount testing period commences on 1 January 2011 and ends on 1 July 2012.
Example 5.50
Samantha is an Australian resident. On 1 July 2012, Samantha's grandmother died and Samantha inherited land in Victoria's Yarra Valley that was purchased by her grandmother under a contract entered into on 1 January 2011. Samantha's grandmother was a tax resident of the United Kingdom. On 1 January 2013 Samantha sold the land.
Samantha's discount testing period commences on 1 January 2011 and ends of 1 January 2013.
Example 5.51
Renee is a resident of South Africa and is a partner of Partnership ABC. On 1 January 2011, Partnership ABC entered a contract to purchase a new property in Sydney. On 1 July 2012 Partnership ABC entered a contract to sell the property.
Section 106-5 deems that any capital gain arising from a partnership asset is made by the partners. Renee's discount testing period commences on 1 January 2011 and ends on 1 July 2012.

Individuals with gains as a result of an interest in a fixed trust

5.29 Where an individual has a discount capital gain as a result of an interest it held in a fixed trust, the discount testing period commences on the most recent day the individual became a beneficiary of the trust and ends on the day the individual made the gain. [Schedule 7, item 6, table item 1 in subsection 115-110(2)]

5.30 This discount testing period applies regardless of whether the trustee of the fixed trust held the CGT asset directly or received the capital gains indirectly as a result of an interest in another trust.

5.31 This approach overcomes difficulties that individuals may face in identifying the date of acquisition and disposal of a CGT asset where the CGT asset is held through a trust or a chain of trusts. It also reflects the decision of the individual to participate in the investment providing the capital gain.

5.32 The discount testing period commences on the 'most recent day you became a beneficiary'. Where an individual ceases to be a beneficiary of a fixed trust for a period of time, and later reacquires an interest in the same trust, the later date is the relevant start date for the discount testing period.

5.33 However, where an individual has an interest in the fixed trust and acquires a further interest at a later day, the discount testing period commences from the earlier acquisition date. This outcome is appropriate because the entity did not cease to be a beneficiary during the period, regardless of the fact its interest in the fixed trust increased.

Example 5.52

Dominic is a resident of France. On 19 May 2010, Dominic acquired an interest in a fixed trust. He acquired further units on 30 July 2012.
The trust owns various properties that it acquired between 1987 and 2009. On 1 July 2012, the fixed trust disposed of a property that it acquired in 2011. The trustee makes a capital gain from the property, which is included in the net income of the trust.
Dominic is presently entitled to income of the fixed trust for the 2012-13 income year and is assessable on a share of the net income of the trust that includes a discount capital gain relating to the sold property.
Dominic's discount testing period commences on 19 May 2010 and ends on 30 June 2013.
Example 5.53
Peter is a resident of Turkey. On 1 January 2011, he purchased an interest in a property trust in Australia that is not a managed investment trust (an indirect Australian real property interest).
On 30 June 2012, Peter is presently entitled to the income of the trust for the 2011-12 income year and is assessable on a share of the net income of the trust that includes a discount capital gain.
Peter's discount testing period for that discount capital gain commences on 1 January 2011 and ends on 30 June 2012.
On 30 June 2013, Peter is presently entitled to income of the trust for the 2012-13 income year and is assessable on a share of the net income of the trust that includes a discount capital gain. His discount testing period for that discount capital gain commences on 1 January 2011 and ends on 30 June 2013.

5.34 Where an interest in a fixed trust is acquired as a result of a CGT roll-over or the death of an individual, the rules in section 115-30 apply. These rules prescribe the time the interest was deemed to have been acquired as the time the earlier owner of the interest acquired it. The beneficiary is treated as having the same residency status as that of the first individual during the relevant period.

5.35 However, in the case where an individual held an interest in a fixed trust and then received another interest in that fixed trust as a result of the death of an individual, the earliest acquisition date is the relevant date for the discount testing period.

Example 5.54

Renee is a resident of Spain. On 19 May 2010, Renee acquired an interest in a fixed trust. On 1 August 2012, Renee inherits, as part of a deceased estate, another interest in the fixed trust. Renee's mother-in-law (deceased) acquired the interest in the fixed trust (first became a beneficiary) on 1 April 2005,
On 1 July 2012, fixed trust X disposed of a property that it acquired in 2011. The trustee makes a capital gain from the property, which is included in the net income of the trust. Renee is presently entitled to income of fixed trust X for the 2012-13 income year and is assessable on a share of the net income of the trust that includes a discount capital gain relating to the sold property.
Renee's discount testing period for that discount capital gain commences on 1 April 2005 and ends on 30 June 2013. Renee is also deemed to have the same residency status as her mother-in-law, for the purposes of section 115-115, for the period of 1 April 2005 until 1 August 2012.
Example 5.55
Using the example above, except Renee's mother-in-law acquired the interest in the fixed trust (first became a beneficiary) on 1 April 2011. On 19 May 2010, Renee acquired an interest in the fixed trust.
Renee's discount testing period commences on 19 May 2010 and ends on 30 June 2013. This is because Renee first became of beneficiary of the fixed trust on 19 May 2010. The deemed acquisition of her mother in law's interest (as a result of the deceased estate) increased the size of her interest in the fixed trust and does not extend the discount testing period. The residency status of Renee's mother in law during the discount testing period is also irrelevant.

Individuals with gains as a result of an interest in a non-fixed trust

5.36 Generally, an individual beneficiary of a non-fixed trust (for example a discretionary trust) does not hold a quantifiable interest in the trust. Consequently, special discount testing period rules apply to identify when the discount testing period commences for these beneficiaries. These rules effectively disregard the non-fixed trust and treat the individual beneficiary as though it held the CGT asset or interest in a fixed trust (held by the trustee of the non-fixed trust) directly.

5.37 Where the trustee of a non-fixed trust directly held the CGT asset, the discount testing period for the beneficiary commences on the day the trustee of the non-fixed trust acquired that CGT asset. The same applies for an interest in a fixed trust, with the discount testing period commencing on the day the non-fixed trust trustee acquired the interest in the fixed trust. [Schedule 7, item 6, table item 2 in subsection 115-110(2)]

5.38 The discount testing period will always end on the day the individual beneficiary made the gain. Generally, this will be the end of the income year.

Example 5.56 Dominic is a resident of France. On 1 January 2011 non-fixed trust purchased a new property in Sydney. On 1 July 2012, the non-fixed trust sold the property. Dominic is presently entitled to income of the fixed trust for the 2012-13 income year and is assessable on a share of the net income of the trust that includes a discount capital gain relating to the sold property. Dominic's discount testing period commences on 1 January 2011 and ends on 30 June 2013.

5.39 Where an individual is a beneficiary through a chain of non-fixed trusts, the discount testing period is determined by reference to the first trustee in the chain that holds either an interest in a fixed trust or a direct interest in the CGT asset itself.

5.40 The discount testing period commences at the time that the non-fixed trust trustee acquired the relevant fixed trust interest or relevant CGT asset. If the CGT asset is directly held by a fixed trust, it is the interest in that fixed trust that is relevant for the purposes of the discount testing period of the beneficiary of the non-fixed trust.

Example 5.57

Dominic is a resident of France. On 1 January 2011 non-fixed trust X purchased a new property in Sydney. On 1 July 2012, non-fixed trust X sold the property.
On 1 January 2013, non-fixed trust X makes non-fixed trust Y 'specifically entitled' to the capital gain relating to the sold property.
Dominic is presently entitled to the income of non-fixed trust Y for the 2012-13 income year and is assessable on a share of the net income of the trust that includes a discount capital gain relating to the sold property.
Dominic's discount testing period commences on 1 January 2011 and ends on 30 June 2013.
In instances where a trustee does not distribute the income the normal trust rules apply.

5.41 The discount testing period commences on the most recent day the non-fixed trust trustee became a beneficiary of the fixed trust. 'The most recent day' is discussed in detail at paragraphs 7.32 and 7.33. [Schedule 7, item 6, table item 3 in subsection 115 - 110(2)]

Example 5.58

Non-fixed trust X purchased an interest in fixed trust Y on 1 January 2011. On 1 August 2012, fixed trust Y sells an Australian real property asset acquired in 2008.
On 1 September 2012, non-fixed trust X is made 'specially entitled' to the capital gain made by fixed trust Y.
Dominic is presently entitled to the income of non-fixed trust X for the 2012-13 income year and is assessable on a share of the net income of the trust that includes a discount capital gain relating to the sold property.
Dominic's discount testing period commences on 1 January 2011 and ends on 30 June 2013.
Example 5.59
Non-fixed trust X purchased an interest in fixed trust Y on 1 January 2011. On 1 September 2012, non-fixed trust X was made 'specifically entitled' to the capital gain made by fixed trust Y.
On 1 January 2013, non-fixed trust X makes non-fixed trust Z 'specifically entitled' to the capital gain.
Dominic is presently entitled to the income of non-fixed trust Z for the 2012 income year and is assessable on a share of the net income of the trust that includes a discount capital gain relating to the sold property.
Dominic's discount testing period commences on 1 January 2011 and ends on 30 June 2013.

Individual beneficiary - Trustee taxed under section 98

5.42 Where a trustee is assessed on a discount capital gain under section 98 of the ITAA 1936 in respect of an individual beneficiary, the trustee will reduce the discount percentage to reflect only the period that the individual beneficiary was an Australian tax resident. [Schedule 7, item 6, section 115-120)]

5.43 The discount testing period applied to the trustee is determined as if the beneficiary had made the discount capital gain.

Example 5.60

Dominic is a resident of France. On 1 January 2011, he purchased an interest in a fixed trust.
Dominic is presently entitled to income of the fixed trust for the 2012-13 income year and is assessable on a share of the net income of the trust that includes a discount capital gain relating to the sold property. Because Dominic is a foreign resident at the end of the income year, subsection 98(2A) of the ITAA 1936 applies and the trustee is assessed in accordance with section 115-220 of the ITAA 1997.
The trustee's discount testing period commences on 1 January 2011 and ends on 30 June 2013.
Example 5.61
Dominic is a resident of France. On 1 January 2011, a non-fixed trust purchased a property in Sydney. On 1 May 2014, the non-fixed trust sells the property.
Dominic is presently entitled to income of the non-fixed trust for the 2012-13 income year and is assessable on a share of the net income of the trust that includes a discount capital gain relating to the sold property. Because Dominic is a foreign resident at the end of the income year, subsection 98(2A) of the ITAA 1936 applies and the trustee is assessed in accordance with section 115-220 of the ITAA 1997.
The trustee's discount testing period commences on 1 January 2011 and ends on 1 May 2014.

Calculating the discount percentage

Assets acquired after 8 May 2012

5.44 Individuals that are an Australian resident and acquire CGT assets after 8 May 2012 and do not change their tax residency are not subject to these amendments. The full discount percentage of 50 per cent applies.

5.45 Where the discount testing period commences after 8 May 2012 and the individual is a foreign or temporary resident for some or all of that period, then they are subject to these amendments. The discount percentage will be adjusted to reflect only that proportion of the discount testing period that the individual was an Australian resident. [Schedule 7, item 6, subsection 115-115(2)]

5.46 The discount percentage is calculated under the following formula:

5.47 If the individual was a foreign resident or temporary resident for the entire discount testing period the discount percentage will be zero.

Example 5.62 : Asset acquired after 8 May 2012 and the individual is a foreign resident during part of the discount testing period

XYZ fixed trust acquires a taxable Australian property asset on 1 January 2014 for $10,000. XYZ fixed trust then sells the asset on 1 January 2016 for $20,000. XYZ fixed trust makes a distribution including the discount capital gain to its beneficiaries on 30 June 2016 (assume this is when those beneficiaries become presently entitled for the 2015-16 income year).
There are two beneficiaries of XYZ trust, each holding a 50 per cent interest in the trust. The first is Lucas, who has been a beneficiary of the trust since 1 January 2013 and has been an Australian resident for the entire period.
The other beneficiary is Lachlan. Lachlan has also been a beneficiary of the trust since 1 January 2013. Lachlan was a foreign resident individual until 1 January 2015, when he became an Australian resident.
The capital gains of the XYZ trust is $10,000 against which it applies the full discount percentage (50 per cent). Lucas and Lachlan are both presently entitled to $2,500 each.
Applying the rules in Subdivision 115-C, both Lachlan's and Lucas's capital gains are grossed up so that they have a discount capital gain of $5,000 each.
Lucas' discount testing period commences 1 January 2013 and ended on 30 June 2016. As Lucas has not been a foreign or temporary resident during any of the discount testing period, the amendments do not apply to his share of the gain. Therefore, he is entitled to the full discount percentage of 50 per cent.
Lachlan's discount testing period also commences 1 January 2013 and ended on 30 June 2016. Lachlan has been a foreign resident during the discount testing period and therefore is subject to sections 115-110 and 115-115.
As Lachlan's interest in the fixed trust was acquired after 8 May 2012, Lachlan must calculate the discount percentage under the formula in subsection 115-115(2). Therefore, Lachlan's discount percentage is,

Assets acquired prior to 9 May 2012

5.48 Individuals that were Australian residents on 8 May 2012 and at all times after 8 May 2012 are not subject to these amendments. The full discount percentage of 50 per cent applies.

5.49 Individuals that were foreign or temporary residents on 8 May 2012 (being the date of announcement) retain access to the full CGT discount for gains accrued up to that date. Such individuals must choose to use the market value to quantify the gain (the market value method is explained in further detail below).

5.50 The discount percentage that applies to gains accrued after 8 May 2012 is calculated on an apportionment basis taking into account the relevant individual's residency during the discount testing period. The discount percentage will reflect the proportion of the period after 8 May 2012 until the gain was made that the individual was an Australian resident.

5.51 Similarly, where the individual makes a discount capital gain as a beneficiary of a fixed trust, the discount percentage will be adjusted to reflect the proportion of the period after 8 May 2012 until the gain was made that the individual was an Australian resident.

Foreign or temporary resident on 8 May 2012 and the individual has chosen market value

5.52 To ensure gains accrued on the CGT asset prior to 9 May 2012 remain eligible for the full CGT discount, an individual who was a foreign or temporary resident on 8 May 2012 may obtain a market valuation of that asset.

5.53 The balance of any gain on the CGT asset accrued after 8 May 2012 will be subject to a discount percentage that is apportioned to reflect the period after 8 May 2012 that the individual was an Australian resident.

5.54 The market value method can only be used in respect of a discount capital gain where the gain is:

made by an individual that was a foreign or temporary resident on 8 May 2012; and
from a CGT asset acquired prior to 9 May 2012.

5.55 In addition to those requirements:

the discount testing period for the discount capital gain must have commenced prior to 9 May 2012;
the CGT asset's market value at 8 May 2012 cannot be less than its cost base (it must have increased in value); and
the individual must choose to use the market value method.

[Schedule 7, item 6, subsections 115-115(4) and (5)]

5.56 If an individual is eligible and chooses to use the market value method, the discount percentage for the discount capital gain is calculated as follows:

Step 1 - Calculate the CGT asset's 'excess'.

-
The excess is the increase in value of the asset that has accrued prior to 9 May 2012. It is calculated as the amount by which the CGT asset's market value at 8 May 2012 exceeds its cost base at 8 May 2012. [Schedule 7, item 5, paragraph 115-115(4)(d)]
-
If the excess is equal to or greater than the total discount capital gain from the CGT asset, the full discount percentage of 50 per cent applies as the total gain accrued prior to 8 May 2012. This ensures that there is no reduction in the discount percentage where the value of the CGT asset has fallen between 8 May 2012 and the end of the discount testing period. [Schedule 7, item 6, subsection 115-115(4)]

Step 2 - If the excess is less than the discount capital gain from the CGT event, that is the value of the CGT asset increased after 9 May 2012, the discount percentage is worked out using the following formula:

[Schedule 7, item 6, subsection 115-115(5)]

-
The shortfall is the net increase in the value of the CGT asset accrued after 8 May 2012. This is calculated by subtracting the excess (amount of the capital gain accrued prior to 9 May 2012) from the amount of the total discount capital gain.
-
The number of apportionable days means the number of days after 8 May 2012 during the discount testing period.
-
The number of apportionable days that you were an eligible resident is the number of days after 8 May 2012 during the discount testing period that the individual was an Australian resident (but not a temporary resident).

5.57 In circumstances where the CGT asset or an interest in a fixed trust (that the capital gain was attributable to) was subject to section 115-30 (rules regarding acquisition when the asset has been subject to a roll-over), the apportionable days and residency status of the previous owner of the asset or interest in the fixed trust will be relevant.

5.58 Where an individual chooses to apply the market value method, the general CGT record keeping requirements (see section 121-20) must be satisfied. This means that a market valuation must be undertaken and the record of that valuation must be kept. The time at which the valuation must be performed is not prescribed.

Example 5.63 : Asset acquired before 9 May 2012 and the market value method is used. However, the gain at 8 May 2012 exceeds the discount capital gain

Dominic is a resident of France. On 1 January 2011 he purchased a property in Sydney for $1,000,000. On 8 May 2012 the property was valued at $1,100,000. On 1 July 2012 Dominic sold the property for $1,050,000.
Dominic has a discount capital gain from the disposal of the property of $50,000.
As Dominic is a foreign resident, the discount percentage applicable to the gain may be adjusted by this measure.
For the purposes of determining the discount percentage, Dominic chooses to use the market value method. The discount percentage is worked out as follows:

Calculate the CGT asset's excess .

$1,100,000 ? $1,000,000 = $100,000
As the amount of the gain accrued before 9 May 2012 of $100,000 is greater than the total discount capital gain of $50,000 from the disposal of property the full discount percentage of 50 per cent applies. [Schedule 7, item 6, subsection 115-115(4)]
Example 5.64 : Asset acquired before 9 May 2012 and market value is used
Samantha is an Australian resident. On 1 July 2012, Samantha's grandmother died and Samantha inherited land in Victoria's Yarra Valley that was purchased on 1 January 2011 for $10,000,000. Samantha's grandmother was a tax resident of the United Kingdom.
On 8 May 2012, Samantha's land was valued at $11,000,000. On 1 January 2013 Samantha sold her land for $12,000,000.
Samantha has a total discount capital gain from the disposal of the land of $2,000,000.
As Samantha is a resident for part of the discount testing period, the discount percentage applicable to the gain is determined by reference to the amendments introduced in this bill.
Furthermore, because item 4 of section 115-30 applies to the CGT asset (as Samantha received the CGT asset as the beneficiary of a deceased estate), Samantha's grandmother's residency status and previous holding are relevant for determining the discount percentage. As Samantha's grandmother held the CGT asset on 8 May 2012, her residency status requires that Samantha calculate the discount percentage under subsection 115-115(4) or (6).
For the purposes of determining the discount percentage, Samantha chooses to use the market value method. The discount percentage is worked out as follows:
Step 1 Calculate the CGT asset's excess .
$11,000,000 x $10,000,000 = $1,000,000
Step 2 As the excess is less than the discount capital gain ($2,000,000) from the CGT event, the discount percentage is worked out using the following figures:

the shortfall amount is $1,000,000 ($2,000,000 less the excess );
the number of apportionable days Samantha was an eligible resident is 185 days (that is, days Samantha and her grandmother were an eligible resident);
the number of apportionable days is 238 days (that is, the number of apportionable days taking into account Samantha and her grandmother's holding of the CGT asset); and
twice the amount of discount capital gain is $4,000,000.

Therefore, Samantha's discount percentage is:

Individual is a foreign or temporary resident on 8 May 2012 and has not chosen market value

5.59 Where an individual does not choose to use the market value method in respect of a CGT asset that is acquired prior to 9 May 2012 (and which has a discount period commencing prior to that date), the discount percentage is calculated using the following formula:

[Schedule 7, item 6, subsection 115-115(6)]

5.60 The effect of not choosing the market value method is that the CGT discount is not available for gains accrued prior to 8 May 2012. The CGT discount remains available for periods after 8 May 2012 that the individual was an Australian resident. The formula achieves this affect by calculating the CGT discount as the time during the period after 8 May 2012 that the individual was an Australian resident as a proportion of the total time that the CGT asset or interest in the fixed trust was held.

Example 5.65 : Asset acquired before 9 May 2012 and market value method is not used

Applying the facts described in Example 6.15, if Dominic did not choose to apply the market value, his discount percentage applicable to the discount capital gain of $50,000 would be:

Example 5.66
Applying the facts described in Example 6.16, if Samantha did not choose to apply the market value, her discount percentage applicable to the discount capital gain of $2,000,000 would be:

Resident individual on 8 May 2012

5.61 If an individual makes a discount capital gain from a CGT event occurring after 8 May 2012 and was:

an Australian resident (but not a temporary resident) on 8 May 2012; and
a foreign or temporary resident at any time during the period after 8 May 2012,

the discount percentage is apportioned to reflect all days in the period of ownership after 8 May 2012 that the individual was an Australian resident.

5.62 This is achieved by applying the following formula:

[Schedule 7, item 6, subsection 115-115(3)]

5.63 This approach results in the discount percentage being determined on the basis that the individual was eligible for the CGT discount for the entire period it owned the asset or interest in the fixed trust prior to 9 May 2012. The discount percentage is reduced for any part of the period after 8 May 2012 in which the individual was not eligible for the CGT discount (that is, any period in which the individual was a foreign or temporary resident).

Example 5.67 : Resident individual on 8 May 2012

XYZ Trust buys an asset on 1 January 2010 for $10,000. XYZ trust then sells the asset on 1 January 2016 for $50,000.
There are two beneficiaries of the trust, each holding a 50 per cent interest in the trust. One of the beneficiaries is Lucas, who has been a beneficiary of the trust since 1 January 2011 and was an Australian resident individual until and including 31 December 2014 (after which time he became a foreign resident).
The discount capital gain of the XYZ trust is $40,000, against which it applies the full discount percentage (50 per cent). Lucas is presently entitled to $10,000 at the end of the income year. Therefore, Lucas makes the gain on 30 June 2016.
Applying the rules in Subdivision 115-C, Lucas's capital gain is grossed up so that he has a discount capital gain of $20,000.
Lucas is subject to section 115-110 and subsection 115-115(3) as he is an individual, was a resident at 8 May 2012, has been a foreign resident individual during the discount testing period and received a discount capital gain as a beneficiary of a trust.
Lucas is subject to subsection 115-115(3) because he was an Australian resident on 8 May 2012.
The relevant dates for the discount testing period are 1 January 2011 (this is the date Lucas became a beneficiary of the fixed trust) and 30 June 2016. Therefore, the following numbers are relevant:

the number of days in the discount testing period is 2008 days;
the number of apportionable days Lucas was a foreign or temporary resident is 547 days; and
two times the number of days in the discount testing period is 4016 days.

Therefore, applying subsection 115-115(3), Lucas' discount percentage is:

Application and transitional provisions

5.64 The measure applies to CGT events that occur after 8 May 2012.

5.65 Gains accrued prior to 9 May 2012 remain eligible for the full CGT discount if the individual chooses to obtain market valuation of the asset as at 8 May 2012.

Consequential amendments

5.66 Consequential amendments are required to make references to the new sections 115-105, 115-110 and 115-115 in other areas of the tax law. [Schedule 7, items 1 to 4, subsection 115-30(1) and section 115-100 ]

5.67 An amendment is also required to the main discount percentage provision to ensure the discount percentage resulting from section 115-115 applies. [Schedule 7, item 5, subsection 115-100 ]

STATEMENT OF COMPATIBILITY WITH HUMAN RIGHTS

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

Removing the Capital Gains Tax Discount for Foreign Individuals

5.68 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

5.69 This Schedule amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 to remove the CGT discount on discount capital gains accrued after 8 May 2012 for foreign resident and temporary resident individuals.

Human rights implications

5.70 In the context of this Schedule, and international taxation practice more generally, the differentiation of treatment between Australian residents and foreign residents is considered reasonable and justified.

5.71 There is a well-established body of international law and practice recognising that taxation laws of a State can differentiate between the tax treatment of residents of that State and the tax treatment of residents of other States. For example, treaties to prevent double taxation use residence status as a way to allocate taxing rights between States. At the same time, discrimination between residents of the same State on the basis of their nationality is prohibited. This Schedule does not differentiate on the basis of nationality but on residency for the purposes of tax treatment.

5.72 The different treatment applied in this measure, of taxpayers according to their residence status (as opposed to their nationality), is consistent with that body of international law and practice.

5.73 The differentiation between foreign residents and Australian residents is a feature of the existing law relating to the taxation treatment of capital gains. Foreign residents are only subject to CGT if the CGT event happens in relation to a CGT asset that is taxable Australian real property. For Australian residents, CGT applies to all CGT assets (including non-real property) held anywhere in the world.

5.74 There is no basis to conclude that the treatment accorded foreign residents in this Schedule amounts to discrimination on the basis of 'other status' under the international instruments listed in section 3 of the Human Rights (Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011.

Conclusion

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

Assistant Treasurer, the Hon David Bradbury

Tax exemption for payments under the Defence Abuse Reparation Scheme

Outline of chapter

6.1 Schedule 8 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) to exempt from income tax, payments made under the Defence Abuse Reparation Scheme (the Scheme).

Context of amendments

Payments under the Scheme

6.2 The Defence Abuse Response Taskforce (the Taskforce) was set up in response to the DLA Piper Report of the Review of allegations of sexual and other abuse in Defence. One of the functions of the Taskforce is to assess allegations concerning abuse by Defence personnel which occurred prior to 11 April 2011.

6.3 As part of this process the Taskforce has established the Scheme, which establishes a mechanism for the Department of Defence to make a monetary payment to persons who in the opinion of the Reparation Payments Assessor may have, plausibly, suffered abuse whilst employed in Defence.

6.4 A person may receive only one payment under the Scheme and the amount of any payment under the Scheme is at the discretion of the Reparation Payments Assessor, in accordance with the Defence Abuse Reparation Scheme Guidelines.

Taxable status of the payments

6.5 Whether a payment is subject to tax is determined by its character in the hands of the recipient. A payment that has the character of income according to ordinary concepts is assessable income unless a statutory exemption applies. One-off payments will generally have the character of ordinary income if they are received as a product of employment, services rendered or the carrying on of a business.

6.6 As payments made under the Scheme arise out of an employment relationship with the Department of Defence or the Australian Defence Force, it is possible that they could also be characterised as statutory income under section 15-2 of the ITAA 1997.

Summary of new law

6.7 This measure amends the ITAA 1997 to exempt from income tax, payments made under the Scheme.

Comparison of key features of new law and current law

New law Current law
Payments made to a recipient under the Scheme are exempt from income tax. Payments made under the Scheme may be subject to income tax depending on the particular circumstances of the recipient.

Detailed explanation of new law

6.8 This measure inserts a specific exemption into the ITAA 1997 to ensure that all individuals who receive a payment under the Scheme do not have to pay income tax on that payment.

6.9 Section 51-5 of the ITAA 1997 contains a table detailing defence related payments that are exempt from income tax.

6.10 Schedule 8 amends section 51-5 of the ITAA 1997 to insert a new item 1.7 into the table, exempting from income tax, payments made under the Scheme. [Schedule 8, item 2, item 1 . 7 in table in section 51-5 ]

6.11 Section 11-15 of the ITAA 1997 lists income which is exempt from income tax. Schedule 8 makes a consequential amendment to this list to include payments made under the Scheme as a category of exempt income. [Schedule 8, item 1 ]

6.12 This ensures that the payments will not be assessable income so that those who receive this payment will receive the full benefit of the payment.

Application and transitional provisions

6.13 These amendments will apply to the 2012-13 income year and later income years. [Schedule 8, item 3 ]

STATEMENT OF COMPATIBILITY WITH HUMAN RIGHTS

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

Tax exemption for payments under the Defence Abuse Reparation Scheme

6.14 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

6.15 Schedule 8 to this Bill amends the ITAA 1997 to exempt from income tax payments made under the Defence Abuse Reparation Scheme in the 2012-13 income year and later income years.

Human rights implications

6.16 This Schedule does not engage any of the applicable rights or freedoms.

Conclusion

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

Assistant Treasurer, the Hon David Bradbury

GST-free treatment for National Disability Insurance Scheme funded supports

Outline of chapter

7.1 Schedule 9 to this Bill amends the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act) to ensure that certain services and other things ('supports') supplied to a National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) participant as part of an NDIS plan under the National Disability Insurance Scheme Act 2013 (NDIS Act) are GST-free.

7.2 All legislative references in this chapter are to the GST Act unless otherwise stated.

Context of amendments

7.3 Supplies of various disability supports are GST-free under a number of provisions in Subdivision 38-B if the supplier receives government funding for the supplies. These provisions include but are not limited to the following:

section 38-40 which provides that a supply of services is GST-free if the supplier receives funding under the Disability Services Act 1986 or under a complementary State or Territory law in respect of the services;
subsection 38-30(2) which provides that a supply of care is GST-free if the supplier receives funding under the Home and Community Care Act 1985 in connection with that supply; and
subsection 38-30(4) which provides that a supply of care is GST-free if the supplier receives funding from the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in connection with the supply; and the supply is of a kind determined in writing by the Aged Care Minister.

7.4 However, the NDIS government funding for some of these disability support types is not provided to the suppliers. Instead, the NDIS funding (referred to as 'NDIS amount' in the NDIS Act) is provided to the NDIS participant (that is, the person with a disability) or another person managing the funding for the participant.

7.5 The NDIS funding may be:

managed by the participant (or a nominee of the participant) in accordance with the participant's plan for purchasing and paying for the supports;
managed by a registered plan management provider in accordance with the participant's plan for purchasing and paying for the supports required by the participant; or
managed by 'DisabilityCare Australia' (DCA) (the Agency managing the NDIS) in accordance with the participant's plan for purchasing and paying for the supports required by the participant.

7.6 A supply to an NDIS participant of a support they purchase is not GST-free under any of the current GST provisions which rely on the supplier receiving government funding for the supplies. This is because the supplier does not receive NDIS funding from the government for the supplies. However, some limited kinds of these supplies may be GST-free under other provisions in the GST Act, which do not require the supplier to be in receipt of government funding.

7.7 These amendments ensure that certain supplies to an NDIS participant of supports that are part of an NDIS plan are GST-free.

7.8 Suppliers may receive non-NDIS government funding for supplies of disability supports that are not part of an NDIS plan. These supplies will continue to be GST-free if a relevant provision in Subdivision 38-B is satisfied.

Summary of new law

7.9 Schedule 9 amends the GST Act to ensure that certain disability supports supplied to an NDIS participant as part of an NDIS plan under the NDIS Act are GST-free.

7.10 Specifically, Schedule 9 requires that for a supply to be GST-free it must be made under a written agreement between the supplier and the participant (or another person on behalf of the participant) and it must be of a kind which is included in a determination by the Disability Services Minister.

7.11 The amendments made by this Schedule apply in relation to supplies made on or after the commencement of provisions in the NDIS Act relating to participants' plans.

Comparison of key features of new law and current law

New law Current law
Providing GST-free treatment for National Disability Insurance Scheme funded supports

Certain disability supports supplied to an NDIS participant as part of an NDIS plan are GST-free.

Supplies of various disability supports may still be GST-free under certain provisions of the GST Act, where the supplier receives government funding for the supplies.

Some disability supports may be GST-free under one or more provisions of the GST Act even if the supplier is not in receipt of government funding. However, these provisions may not apply to some of the disability supports made to an NDIS participant.

Supplies of various disability supports may be GST-free under certain provisions of the GST Act, if the supplier receives government funding for the supplies.

Some disability supports may be GST-free under one or more provisions of the GST Act even if the supplier is not in receipt of government funding. However, these provisions may not apply to some of the disability supports made to an NDIS participant.

Detailed explanation of new law

Overview

7.12 The amendments require that for a supply of a disability support to be GST-free it must be a reasonable and necessary support supplied to a participant as specified in the participant's plan.

7.13 A disability support could be any support provided, by a person or entity, intended to assist people with disability to realise their potential for physical, social, emotional and intellectual development, and participate in social and economic life.

7.14 The supply must also be made under a written agreement between the supplier and the participant or another person (including a person acting on behalf of the participant). The written agreement provides supporting evidence that the appropriate GST treatment has been applied for the relevant supplies.

7.15 Also, for the supply to be GST-free, it must be of a kind determined in a legislative instrument by the Minister in charge of disability services.

Supply must be of one or more reasonable and necessary supports specified in the participant's plan

7.16 Section 33 of the NDIS Act specifies what information must be included in a participant's plan, including a statement of participant supports. This statement sets out any general supports that will be provided to, or in relation to, the participant, and any reasonable and necessary supports that will be funded under the NDIS.

7.17 In order to be GST-free, the supply of a disability support to a participant must be a supply of one or more 'reasonable and necessary supports' (as referred to in paragraph 33(2)(b) of the NDIS Act) that is specified in the statement of participant supports in the participant's plan. [Schedule 9, item 1, paragraphs 38-38(a) and (b)]

Example 7.68 : Supply must be a reasonable and necessary support specified in the participant's statement of participant supports Jason is an NDIS participant who owns his own home. The statement of participant supports in Jason's NDIS plan specifies that he is to be provided with an NDIS amount of $20,000 for home modifications to his bathroom. However, Jason identifies this as a good time to renovate his kitchen and engages the same builder. For the purposes of this example, it is assumed that home modifications is specified in a determination made by the Minister for Disability Services as a kind of support that will be GST-free if the other conditions in section 38-38 are met. However, DCA has determined that the renovation to the kitchen did not qualify as a reasonable and necessary support in Jason's particular circumstances. It is therefore not listed as a reasonable and necessary support in Jason's statement of participant supports. To determine whether the supply of the renovation to the kitchen is GST-free under section 38-38, the builder checks to see if it is listed as a reasonable and necessary support in Jason's NDIS plan. Because the kitchen renovation is not listed as a reasonable and necessary support in Jason's plan, the supply is not GST-free under section 38-38.

7.18 If required, DCA can work with a participant who is self-managing the funding for their supports to develop documentation that sets out relevant reasonable and necessary supports from their plan, for the participant to give to suppliers.

7.19 The plan must be in effect under section 37 of the NDIS Act. This requires the CEO of DCA to have approved the participant's statement of participant supports. The plan ceases to be effective when the plan is replaced by another plan, or the participant ceases to be an NDIS participant. [Schedule 9, item 1, paragraph 38-38(a)]

Written agreement requirement

7.20 To ensure that only a supply to a participant that is specified as a 'reasonable and necessary support' in a participant's NDIS plan is GST-free, the supply must be made under a written agreement between the supplier and the participant (or another person on behalf of the participant) that:

identifies the participant; and
states that the supply is a supply of one or more of the 'reasonable and necessary supports' specified in the statement of participant supports in the participant's plan.

[Schedule 9, item 1, paragraph 38-38(c)]

7.21 For the purposes of these amendments, a 'written agreement' is not limited to legally executed contracts but may include documents (including those in electronic form) which provide written evidence of a legally binding obligation on the supplier to make the supply to the participant as specified in the participant's plan. If the relevant parties can demonstrate that they have a binding agreement in written form that identifies the participant and states that the supply is a supply of one or more reasonable and necessary supports as specified in the participant's plan, the requirement for a written agreement is satisfied.

7.22 The written agreement may be a single document. Alternatively, it may be evidenced from several documents. Accordingly, correspondence between the parties and receipts or invoices issued by the supplier that are consistent with the existence of a binding agreement may be sufficient evidence of the written agreement.

Example 7.69 : Supply made under a written agreement in accordance with a self-managed participant's plan

Joe, an NDIS participant, requires five hours of support on a weekly basis which is specified as a reasonable and necessary support in his NDIS plan. He requests XYZ Co (XYZ) to supply him with the support for a period of three months based on the NDIS published price. Joe provides XYZ with a letter identifying that he is an NDIS participant, and also provides XYZ with the relevant part of his NDIS plan that specifies the type of support that he is to be provided with.
XYZ writes to Joe to confirm its agreement to provide the support, including the start date, and signs the letter. For the next three months, XYZ supplies Joe with the requested supports. These supplies are made under a 'written agreement' that identifies Joe and states that the supplies are a reasonable and necessary support specified in Joe's plan.
If all the other requirements of section 38-38 are satisfied, the supplies that XYZ makes to Joe as specified in Joe's plan are GST-free.
Example 7.70 : Supply made under a written agreement in accordance with a participant's plan managed by a plan management provider registered with DCA
ABB Co (ABB) is registered with DCA as a plan management provider for NDIS participants. A number of NDIS participants have engaged ABB to manage their NDIS plans for them.
One participant identifies that they are interested in considering Elite, a provider of disability supports, to deliver one of the reasonable and necessary supports in their plan. With the participant's consent, ABB emails Elite with the relevant requirements of the participant, including the participant's name and the number of hours of support needed as specified in the participant's plan as a reasonable and necessary support. Elite meets with the participant and they discuss arrangements for the delivery of the supports. Elite writes to the participant and ABB setting out the details of the support to be provided and the price to be paid, but makes no reference to the participant's plan. ABB replies in writing to confirm the participant's agreement to receive the supports from Elite.
The 'written agreement' requirement under section 38-38 is satisfied by the written evidence provided by the combination of ABB's email setting out the supports required in accordance with the reasonable and necessary supports specified in the participant's plan, Elite's letter confirming support arrangements and ABB's letter of acceptance.
Neither Elite's letter nor ABB's letter of acceptance, nor both together would be sufficient evidence of the written agreement. This is because these documents do not state that the supply is of a reasonable and necessary support as specified in the participant's plan. ABB's email on its own is also not sufficient evidence of the written agreement because it does not evidence a binding obligation on Elite to make the supplies to the participant.
If all the other requirements of section 38-38 are satisfied, the supplies Elite makes to the participants in accordance with their plans are GST-free.

Supply must be of a kind determined in a legislative instrument by the Minister in charge of disability services

7.23 These amendments enable the Disability Services Minister to make a determination by legislative instrument of the kinds of supports that are GST-free. [Schedule 9, items 1 and 2, paragraph 38-38(d) and subsection 177-10(5)]

7.24 This approach ensures that GST-free treatment is provided only for those kinds of supports specified in the legislative instrument. This minimises the risk of extending GST-free status in unintended circumstances. It also provides flexibility for revising the determination, if required, as circumstances change.

7.25 A legislative instrument made under this power may apply retrospectively, to align with the application date for the measure. This retrospective power deals with the possibility that the legislative instrument might not be made until after the application date for the amendments in this Schedule. [Schedule 9, item 2, subsection 177-10(6)]

7.26 This is generally to the benefit of taxpayers, as without the ability to apply the determination retrospectively, it is possible that no determination will apply at the time these amendments begin to apply. In that case, these amendments would have no effect as no supports would meet this condition for the GST-free treatment when these amendments begin to apply.

7.27 A defined term for Disability Services Minister is included in the dictionary in the GST Act. The Disability Services Minister is the Minister administering the NDIS Act. [Schedule 9, item 3, section 195-1 ]

Application provision

7.28 The amendments made by this Schedule apply in relation to supplies made on or after the commencement of section 37 of the NDIS Act. Section 37 of the NDIS Act deals with when an NDIS plan comes into effect. The application provision ensures that GST-free treatment can be provided once supplies start to be made under NDIS plans. [Schedule 9, item 4 ]

STATEMENT OF COMPATIBILITY WITH HUMAN RIGHTS

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

GST-free treatment for National Disability Insurance Scheme funded supports

7.29 Schedule 9 to this Bill 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

7.30 Schedule 9 to this Bill amends the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999.

7.31 The purpose of Schedule 9 is to ensure that certain services and other things supplied to an NDIS participant as part of an NDIS plan under the National Disability Insurance Scheme Act 2013 are GST-free.

Human rights implications

7.32 Schedule 9 to this Bill engages the following human rights.

Right to social security

7.33 Article 9 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights recognises the right to social security for all persons while Article 28 of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities requires countries to recognise the right of people with disabilities to social protection and to take appropriate steps to ensure access by people with disabilities to social protection and poverty reduction programs and to retirement benefits and programs.

7.34 The amendments to the GST Act make clear that a supply of a reasonable and necessary support to a participant in accordance with their NDIS plan is exempt from GST.

7.35 The amendments promote the right to social security by ensuring that reasonable and necessary supports that are supplied to an NDIS participant are not taxed.

Conclusion

7.36 Schedule 9 to this Bill is compatible with human rights as it promotes the right to social security.

The Assistant Treasurer, the Hon David Bradbury

Deductible gift recipients

Outline of chapter

8.1 Schedule 10 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) to update the list of specifically listed deductible gift recipients (DGRs).

Context of amendments

8.2 The income tax law allows income tax deductions for taxpayers who make gifts of $2 or more to DGRs. To be a DGR, an entity must fall within one of the general categories set out in Division 30 of the ITAA 1997 or be specifically listed by name in that Division.

8.3 DGR status helps eligible funds and entities attract public financial support for their activities.

Summary of new law

8.4 The amendments add United Way Australia, Australian Neighbourhood Houses & Centres Association (ANHCA) Inc., the Australia Foundation in support of Human Rights Watch Limited, Layne Beachley - Aim for the Stars Foundation Limited, Aurora Education Foundation Limited and Social Traders Ltd as specifically listed DGRs.

8.5 The amendments also extend the existing DGR specific listings of the Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust and Roberta Sykes Indigenous Education Foundation.

Detailed explanation of new law

Aurora Education Foundation Limited (ABN 28 158 391 363)

8.6 Taxpayers may claim a tax deduction for gifts made to Aurora Education Foundation Limited after 30 June 2013. [Schedule 10, item 1, item 2 . 2 . 5 in the table in subsection 30-25(2) of the ITAA 1997 ]

8.7 Aurora Education Foundation Limited works to promote and advance Indigenous education.

Roberta Sykes Indigenous Education Foundation (ABN 99 950 620 671)

8.8 Taxpayers may continue to claim a tax deduction for gifts made to the Roberta Sykes Indigenous Education Foundation after 1 August 2013. The current DGR specific listing for the Roberta Sykes Indigenous Education Foundation covers the period after 1 August 2010 to before 2 August 2013. The amendment removes the time limitation, allowing gifts made to Roberta Sykes Indigenous Education Foundation to be claimed as a tax deduction on an ongoing basis. [Schedule 10, item 2, item 2 . 2 . 40 in the table in subsection 30-25(2) of the ITAA 1997 ]

8.9 The Roberta Sykes Indigenous Education Foundation works to advance the education and life opportunities for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders, and provides additional assistance to female Indigenous scholars undertaking programs overseas.

United Way Australia (ABN 60 002 806 215)

8.10 Taxpayers may claim a tax deduction for gifts made to United Way Australia after 25 April 2013. [Schedule 10, item 3, item 4 . 2 . 5 in the table in subsection 30-45(2) of the ITAA 1997 ]

8.11 United Way Australia works to improve the lives of people living in disadvantaged communities, by working primarily in areas of need associated with education, income stability, health and homelessness.

Australian Neighbourhood Houses &

Centres Association (ANHCA) Inc. (

ABN 47 588 370 196)

8.12 Taxpayers may claim a tax deduction for gifts made to Australian Neighbourhood Houses & Centres Association (ANHCA) Inc. after 30 June 2013. [Schedule 10, item 4, item 4 . 2 . 8 in the table in subsection 30-45(2) of the ITAA 1997 ]

8.13 Australian Neighbourhood Houses & Centres Association (ANHCA) Inc. is the national body representing its member entities: Neighbourhood Houses, Community Houses, Learning Centres, Neighbourhood Centres and Community Centres. Providing DGR status to Australian Neighbourhood Houses & Centres Association (ANHCA) Inc. will permit them to coordinate the national fundraising efforts of their member entities.

The Australia Foundation in support of Human Rights Watch Limited (ABN 90 153 747 954)

8.14 Taxpayers may claim a tax deduction for gifts made to the Australia Foundation in support of Human Rights Watch Limited after 30 June 2013. [Schedule 10, item 5, item 9 . 2 . 11 in the table in subsection 30-80(2) of the ITAA 1997 ]

8.15 The Australia Foundation in support of Human Rights Watch Limited is the Australian branch of Human Rights Watch, and will contribute to furthering and promoting Australia's commitment to the promotion and protection of universal human rights.

Layne Beachley -

Aim for the Stars Foundation Limited (ABN 72 101 890 340)

8.16 Taxpayers may claim a tax deduction for gifts made to Layne Beachley - Aim for the Stars Foundation Limited after 30 June 2013. [Schedule 10, item 6, item 13 . 2 . 4 in the table in section 30-105 of the ITAA 1997 ]

8.17 Layne Beachley - Aim for the Stars Foundation Limited conducts programs that aim to help women and girls with the cost of participating in sporting, cultural or educational activities.

Social Traders Ltd (ABN 42 132 665 804)

8.18 Taxpayers may claim a tax deduction for gifts made to Social Traders Ltd after 30 June 2013. [Schedule 10, item 6, item 13 . 2 . 5 in the table in section 30-105 of the ITAA 1997 ]

8.19 Social Traders Ltd aims to facilitate the development of a sustainable social enterprise sector that delivers social and economic inclusion.

The Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust (ABN 22 789 846 363 - the trustee for the Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust)

8.20 Taxpayers may claim a tax deduction for gifts made to the Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust after 1 August 2010. The current DGR specific listing for the Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust covers the period after 1 August 2010 to before 2 August 2013. The amendment removes the time limitation, allowing gifts made to Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust to be claimed as a tax deduction on an ongoing basis. [Schedule 10, item 13, item 2 . 2 . 39 in the table in subsection 30-25(2) of the ITAA 1997 ]

8.21 The purpose of the Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust is to advance the education of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people through the provision of scholarships to Indigenous persons for study at overseas institutions, such as Oxford and Cambridge University.

Application and transitional provisions

8.22 The listing of United Way Australia applies to gifts made after 25 April 2013; and the listings of Australian Neighbourhood Houses & Centres Association (ANHCA) Inc., the Australia Foundation in support of Human Rights Watch Limited, Layne Beachley - Aim for the Stars Foundation Limited, Aurora Education Foundation Limited and Social Traders Ltd apply to gifts made after 30 June 2013.

8.23 The listings for the Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust and Roberta Sykes Indigenous Education Foundation apply to gifts made after 1 August 2010.

8.24 Item 2 removes the end date from the special condition of the existing listing of Roberta Sykes Indigenous Education Foundation. It commences on Royal Assent. [Schedule 10, item 2, item 2 . 2 . 40 in the table in subsection 30-25(2) of the ITAA 1997 ]

8.25 Item 12 repeals the sunsetting provisions in the Tax Laws Amendment (2011 Measures No. 2) Act 2011, which would repeal the listings of the Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust and the Roberta Sykes Indigenous Education Foundation from 1 July 2016. It commences on Royal Assent. [Schedule 10, item 12 ]

8.26 The commencement of items 13, 14 and 15 is contingent on whether Schedule 1 to the Tax Laws Amendment (Special Conditions for Not-for-profit Concessions) Bill 2012 commences. [Schedule 10, items 13 to 15 ]

8.27 Schedule 1 to the Tax Laws Amendment (Special Conditions for Not-for-profit Concessions) Bill 2012, amongst other things, amends the sunsetting provisions under the Tax Laws Amendment (2011 Measures No. 2) Act 2011 and moves the listing of the Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust from the table of education deductible gift recipients in subsection 30-25(2) to the table of international affairs deductible gift recipients in subsection 30-80(2) of the ITAA 1997.

8.28 Items 13 and 14 remove the end date from the special condition of the existing listing for the Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust. The two items reflect amendments made by Schedule 1 to the Tax Laws Amendment (Special Conditions for Not-for-profit Concessions) Bill 2012 to move the listing of the Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust. The commencement of each item depends on the date of commencement of that Schedule, which ensures the listing will be adjusted whether or not that Schedule commences. [Schedule 10, items 13 and 14, subsections 30-25(2) and 30-80(2) of the ITAA 1997 ]

Consequential amendments

8.29 A change has been made to update the index in Division 30 to add the new listings. [Schedule 10, items 7 to 11 ]

STATEMENT OF COMPATIBILITY WITH HUMAN RIGHTS

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

Deductible gift recipients

8.30 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

8.31 This Schedule amends the list of deductible gift recipients (DGR) in Division 30 of the ITAA 1997. The income tax law allows income tax deductions for taxpayers who make gifts of $2 or more to DGRs.

8.32 The amendments add United Way Australia, Australian Neighbourhood Houses & Centres Association (ANHCA) Inc., the Australia Foundation in support of Human Rights Watch Limited, Layne Beachley - Aim for the Stars Foundation Limited, Aurora Education Foundation Limited and Social Traders Ltd as specifically listed DGRs on an ongoing basis.

8.33 The amendments extend the listings of the Charlie Perkins Scholarship Trust and Roberta Sykes Indigenous Education Foundation as specifically listed DGRs to apply on an ongoing basis.

Human rights implications

8.34 This Schedule does not engage any of the applicable rights or freedoms.

8.35 The amendments in this Schedule are beneficial to taxpayers.

Conclusion

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

Assistant Treasurer, the Hon David Bradbury

Miscellaneous amendments

Outline of chapter

9.1 Schedule 11 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.

9.2 These amendments include: clarifying the tax treatment of native title benefits distributed through charities (Part 2); ensuring the fringe benefits tax rebate operates as intended (Part 3); and updating a number of significant taxation and superannuation thresholds to reflect reporting changes made by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (Part 4).

Context of amendments

9.3 Amendments to the taxation and superannuation laws, such as these, 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.

Summary of new law

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

9.5 The table below lists the various parts of this Schedule.

Part Title
1 Technical amendments to the tax law to ensure that it operates properly following the changes made by the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (Consequential and Transitional) Act 2012
2 Amendments relating to Indigenous holding entities and native title
3 Fringe benefits tax minor amendments
4 Updating indexation provisions
5 Other minor amendments (including amendments to the exempt entity provisions and clarification of the research and development concession for exempt entities)

Detailed explanation of new law

Part 1 - Technical amendments to the tax law to ensure that it operates properly following the changes made by the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (Consequential and Transitional) Act 2012

9.6 The amendments made to the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) ensure that entities which fall within the scope of the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (ACNC) are not exempt from income tax unless the entity is registered under the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission Act 2012 (ACNC Act). These amendments maintain the integrity of the tax concessions by mirroring the previous law which required entities that fell within the scope of the Commissioner's endorsement requirements to be endorsed in order to be eligible for an exemption from income tax. [Schedule 11, items 1, 2 and 3 ]

9.7 This Part also amends the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 to correct an incorrect reference in that Act. [Schedule 11, item 4 ]

Application and commencement provisions

9.8 The amendments in Part 1 commence on 3 December 2012, which was the day the ACNC Act commenced. These amendments are required to ensure that the ACNC Act operates in accordance with its policy intent. The amendments do not impact on any criminal offences. The retrospective operation of these amendments is not intended to alter any decisions that have already been made by the Commissioner of the ACNC or the Commissioner of Taxation. In effect, this amendment merely ratifies the operation of the current regime.

Part 2 - Amendments relating to Indigenous holding entities and native title

9.9 The amendments correct an issue with the application to charitable trusts of recent native title amendments to the income tax law.

9.10 Schedule 1 to the Tax Laws Amendment (2012 Measures No. 6) Bill 2012 clarifies the circumstances in which a native title benefit is not subject to income tax. In broad terms, such benefits are not taxable if they are paid, directly or indirectly, to an Indigenous person or to an Indigenous holding entity (see section 59-50 in item 3 of that bill).

9.11 Indigenous holding entities are defined to be either distributing bodies,[1] or trusts whose beneficiaries can only be Indigenous persons or distributing bodies.

9.12 It has been drawn to the Government's attention that some trusts in receipt of native title payments do not have beneficiaries at all because they are trusts with charitable objects rather than beneficiaries.

9.13 A charitable trust would not generally be taxable on the receipt of a native title payment anyway because all its income would be exempt from income tax. However, if it was not an Indigenous holding entity, the chain of payments would be broken, and subsequent payments it makes out of the native title payment could become taxable in the hands of those who receive it, even if they were Indigenous persons or Indigenous holding entities. For example, certain scholarships are not exempt income and so would be assessable to an Indigenous person even if paid by a charitable trust out of a native title payment.

9.14 That is not the intended result of the provisions in the Tax Laws Amendment (2012 Measures No. 6) Bill 2012. Accordingly, this Bill amends those provisions to include 'registered charities' in the definition of Indigenous holding entities. The result is that native title payments made by such entities are still exempt from income tax in the hands of an Indigenous person. [Schedule 11, item 6, paragraph 59-50(6)(c) of the ITAA 1997 ]

9.15 A 'registered charity' is an entity registered as a charity under the Australian Charities and Not-for profits Commission Act 2012. Such entities are exempt from income tax (see section 50-5 of the ITAA 1997).

9.16 A registered charity can be an Indigenous holding entity even if it does not confine its charitable activities to Indigenous persons. However, the native title payments it makes are only made non-assessable non-exempt income if made to an Indigenous person or to another Indigenous holding entity.

9.17 As a consequence of adding registered charities to the definition of 'Indigenous holding entity', the list of permitted beneficiaries of trusts that come within that definition is expanded to include registered charities. [Schedule 11, item 5, paragraph 59-50(6)(b) of the ITAA 1997 ]

Transitional provision

9.18 The amendment to the provisions clarifying the treatment of native title payments extends the definition of 'Indigenous holding entity' to include registered charities. However, registered charities only came into existence on 3 December 2012 with the commencement of the Australian Charities and Not-for profits Commission Act 2012. To cover earlier periods, the amendments apply to an entity before that time if it was endorsed as a tax exempt charitable entity under section 50-5 of the ITAA 1997 at that time. [Schedule 11, items 7 and 8, heading to Part 2-15 and section 59-50 of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 ]

Application and commencement provision

9.19 The amendments apply to income years starting on or after 1 July 2008. That aligns the application of the amendments with the application of the provisions they amend, so that those provisions will always apply as altered by the amendments. [Schedule 11, item 9 ]

9.20 The amendments, which can only benefit affected taxpayers, commence immediately after the commencement of Schedule 1 to the Tax Laws Amendment (2012 Measures No. 6) Bill 2012. This ensures that those amendments are only made if the provisions they amend are enacted. [Clause 2, table item 16 ]

Part 3 - Fringe benefits tax minor amendments

9.21 This Part contains minor amendments to ensure that certain provisions in the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986 (FBTAA) operate effectively and as intended by Parliament.

9.22 Section 65J of the FBTAA sets out the categories of employers that are able to access a fringe benefits tax rebate. These employers include registered charities, scientific institutions and public educational institutions.

9.23 The amendments in Part 3 of this Schedule introduce minor changes to correct anomalies that resulted from consequential amendments contained in the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (Consequential and Transitional) Act 2012 that did not entirely achieve Parliament's intention.

9.24 This Part reinserts the substantive special conditions previously contained in section 65J of the FBTAA which were unintentionally removed by the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (Consequential and Transitional) Act 2012.

9.25 Section 65J has also been rewritten to improve readability. This is achieved by inserting the substantive provisions in a table and explicitly cross referencing the income tax exempt entity provisions. These amendments will ensure consistency and will simplify the tax laws. [Schedule 11, items 13 and 14 ]

9.26 Consequential amendments are made in the FBTAA and the Taxation Administration Act 1953 to ensure that the text in the relevant sections reflects the updated text in section 65J. [Schedule 11, items 10 to 12 and 15 to 26 ]

Application provision

9.27 The amendments in Part 3 apply for the 2013-14 fringe benefit tax (FBT) year and later FBT years. [Schedule 11, subitem 27(1)]

9.28 The 2013-14 FBT year has already commenced, however, as discussed above, these amendments essentially confirm existing practice and ensure the law operates in accordance with the policy intent behind the provisions.

9.29 These amendments provide greater certainty for taxpayers by ensuring that the effect of section 65J is largely unchanged from that which existed prior to the commencement of the ACNC Act, with updates to the terminology and structure of the section.

9.30 The amendments apply prospectively in that they do not affect any existing entitlements prior to the commencement of this legislation. This is because Part 3 applies to endorsements for the FBT rebate by the Commissioner of Taxation after the commencement of this legislation, and the amendments do not adversely affect any entity which has already been endorsed by the Commissioner of Taxation.

9.31 Where an entity has been endorsed under subsection 123E(1) of the FBTAA immediately before the commencement of Part 3, the amendments apply to an entity for the 2014-15 FBT year and later FBT years. This reflects that the entity will have already been endorsed for the 2013-14 FBT year, so it would be inappropriate to change the requirements for these entities part way through an FBT year. [Schedule 11, subitem 27(2)]

9.32 A transitional provision is inserted so that an endorsement in place at the end of the 2013-14 FBT year will continue to have effect as if it were an endorsement under subsection 123E(1) of the FBTAA as amended by this Schedule. This means that an entity endorsed under the old regime of section 65J need not seek re-endorsement following these amendments. [Schedule 11, subitem 27(3)]

Part 4 - Updating indexation provisions

Why do the thresholds require updating?

9.33 In 2012, the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) announced that, instead of reporting the average weekly ordinary time earnings (AWOTE) survey for each quarter of the year (March, June, September and December), it will only do so for two quarters of the year (June and December).

9.34 This change in frequency took effect during 2012 with the June period publication being the last quarterly issue and the December period publication the first produced on a biannual basis, although still determined in respect of the December quarter.

9.35 A number of thresholds in laws administered by the Commissioner of Taxation reference the December and March quarters. No provisions reference the September or June quarters.

9.36 Therefore, as data is no longer produced for the March quarter, a number of significant thresholds become inoperative from the 2013-14 income or financial year (depending on the relevant threshold) if these provisions are not amended. The diagram below reports the timeline of ABS publications.

Diagram 9.1 : Timeline of ABS AWOTE publications

What thresholds reference the March quarter?

9.37 The following thresholds reference the March quarter.

Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992

9.38 Employers must pay into an applicable superannuation account on a quarterly basis a minimum of 9.25 per cent of their eligible employees' earnings from 1 July 2013 (increasing progressively to 12 per cent from 1 July 2019 onwards).

9.39 Section 15 limits the maximum amount of superannuation that an employer has to provide for an employee. The amount (called the 'maximum contributions base') is indexed each financial year in accordance with the AWOTE for the March quarter (see section 9).

Superannuation (Government Co-contribution for Low Income Earners) Act 2003

9.40 The Government Superannuation Co-contribution is a payment made by the Government to the superannuation accounts of eligible members. It is designed to boost any personal (after-tax) contributions made during the income year.

9.41 The maximum co-contribution is payable to individuals with incomes up to the 'lower income threshold'. The maximum amount progressively reduces when income exceeds the 'lower income threshold' until it is phased out completely at the 'higher income threshold'. These thresholds are indexed each income year in accordance with the AWOTE for the March quarter (see subsection 10A(5)).

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997

9.42 Subsection 960-275(1A) applies an indexation formula to various provisions, outlined below.

Genuine redundancy payments and early retirement scheme payments

9.43 Section 83-170 allows a taxpayer to calculate the tax-free limit of a genuine redundancy payment and an early retirement scheme payment. These payments are tax-free up to a limit worked out under that section.

9.44 Subsections 960-275(1A) and 960-280(4) index the tax-free limit for an income year in accordance with the AWOTE for the March quarter.

Pre-1 July 1988 funding credits

9.45 Since 1 July 1988, most contributions to superannuation schemes have been subject to a 15 per cent earnings tax in the hands of the fund (see Subdivision 295-C). An exception applies where there are pre-1 July 1988 funding credits (see subsection 295-265(2)).

9.46 Funding credits were granted to unfunded superannuation schemes so that contributions made after 1 July 1988 to provide for benefits that accrued prior to 1 July 1988 are not taxed. This ensures consistency with funded superannuation schemes that only pay tax on contributions from 1 July 1988.

9.47 Subsections 960-275(1A) and 960-280(4) index the amount of unused pre-1 July 1988 funding credits for an income year in accordance with the AWOTE for the March quarter.

How do these amendments resolve this issue?

9.48 These amendments ensure that income and superannuation thresholds that reference the March AWOTE quarter instead reference the preceding December AWOTE quarter. [Schedule 11, items 28 to 31, subsection 960-275(1A ) ( formula) of the ITAA 1997, subsection 10A(5 ) ( definition of current year) of the Superannuation (Government Co-contribution for Low Income Earners) Act 2003, and paragraph 9(1)(b) and subsection 9(1 ) ( note) of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 ]

Example 9.71 : Superannuation guarantee maximum contribution base for the 2013-14 financial year

The superannuation guarantee maximum contribution base for the 2012-13 financial year is $45,750 per quarter.
To determine this amount for the 2013-14 year using the December AWOTE quarter rather than the March AWOTE quarter, the following formula in section 15 of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 is used:

These amendments provide that the indexation factor for the year is determined by dividing the December 2012 AWOTE quarter (1396.00) by the December 2011 AWOTE quarter (1330.10). This results in an indexation factor for the year of 1.050 (rounded to three decimal places - see section 9).
Therefore, under these amendments, the maximum contribution base that an employer must use for the 2013-14 financial year is $48,040 per quarter (rounded up to the nearest $10 dollars as required under section 15). This amount is calculated below:

9.49 The data for determining the thresholds need to be available before the start of the relevant income year to fulfil legislative obligations (see subsection 10A(8) of the Superannuation (Government Co-contribution for Low Income Earners) Act 2003) and administrative requirements, for example, to employers. Using the preceding December quarter allows this requirement to be satisfied.

Application and commencement provision

9.50 To ensure the thresholds that rely on the AWOTE data continue to operate, these amendments apply in relation to the 2013-14 income year and later years in respect to the changes to the ITAA 1997 and the Superannuation (Government Co-contribution for Low Income Earners) Act 2003. As the threshold test in the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 is based on a financial year, these amendments apply in relation to that Act from the 2013-14 financial year and later years. [Schedule 11, item 32 ]

9.51 Schedule 7 to the Tax and Superannuation Laws Amendment (2013 Measures No. 1) Bill 2013 contains technical corrections relating to the indexation formula in subsection 960-275(1A) of the ITAA 1997 (see above in paragraphs 9.42 to 9.47 for a description of the provisions that rely on this formula). As the technical corrections do not incorporate the indexation changes described in this Part, these amendments commence at either the later of the start of the day after these amendments receive Royal Assent or immediately after the technical corrections in Schedule 7 commence. This ensures the technical corrections do not override these amendments. [Clause 2, table items 18 and 20)]

Part 5 -

Other minor amendments

Minor amendments to Division 50

9.52 Part 5 amends the ITAA 1997 to maintain the operation of minor tax integrity requirements as well as simplifying the expression of these rules.

9.53 The ITAA 1997 is also amended to reduce the reporting burden on certain environmental institutions where those institutions are registered charities.

9.54 The current law requires certain specifically listed environmental entities to report statistical information to the Environment Secretary. However, following the commencement of the ACNC, many of these entities (those which are charities registered with the ACNC) will be required to report to the ACNC.

9.55 To reduce duplicative reporting, section 30-60 of the ITAA 1997 is repealed and replaced with a new section 30-60 which requires additional information to be given to the Environment Secretary only where the entity is not a registered charity. This reflects the fact that registered charities already provide information to the ACNC. [Schedule 11, item 35 ]

9.56 Sections 50-15, 50-50, 50-55, 50-65, 50-70 and 50-72 of the ITAA 1997 are amended to standardise requirements that an entity falling within those sections must comply with all the substantive requirements in their governing rules and apply its income and assets solely for the purpose for which the entity is established. [Schedule 11, items 36, 37, 40, 41, 44, 45, 48, 49 and 52 to 54 ]

9.57 Endorsement of entities as exempt from income tax under a general category is decided by reference to the entity's stated purposes and objectives.

9.58 For established entities, some reference can be had to the entity's actual activities to determine whether those activities demonstrate the pursuit of alternative or inconsistent purposes and objectives. The operations of the entity are important and can be used to determine the purposes for which an entity is established.

9.59 However, this can create some difficulty for the Australian Taxation Office because 'inappropriate conduct' may not always manifest pursuit of an alternate purpose but nonetheless should result in an entity no longer being entitled to endorsement.

9.60 For this reason, a special condition generally imposed on exempt entities is that they operate only in a manner consistent with their substantive governing rules and purpose. Therefore, while an entity's governing rules and purposes may initially determine their eligibility for endorsement/eligibility for an income tax exemption, they are expected to operate in a manner consistent with those rules and purposes to remain eligible.

9.61 Requiring an exempt entity to comply only with their substantive governing rules and purposes allows an entity to keep its income tax exempt status for minor procedural irregularities, such as an absence of quorum at a meeting or missing a required lodgement date. Breaches of procedural irregularities will not, of themselves, affect an entity's continued entitlement to income tax exempt status.

9.62 Substantive governing rules are those rules of core importance to the operation of the entity and would include those related to an entity's object and purpose and those relating an entity's not-for-profit status.

9.63 This requirement applies equally to the income tax exempt categories that are not the subject of the endorsement rules. However, because the entity is not endorsed, the Commissioner will consider the same issues if he decides to issue an assessment for income tax payable because the entity is not considered to be income tax exempt.

9.64 The new law confirms the Court's interpretation in Commissioner of Taxation v Bargwanna [2012] HCA 11, relating to whether a charitable trust is applied for the purposes for which it was established.

9.65 Corrections are made to the references in the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 and the ITAA 1997 to give effect to the changes above. [Schedule 11, items 33, 34, 38, 39, 42, 43, 46, 47, 50 and 51 ]

Application provision

9.66 The amendments in Part 5 to this Schedule (other than item 55) apply in relation to income tax years starting on or after the commencement of Part 5, which occurs on the day after this Act receives the Royal Assent. [Schedule 11, subitem 56(1)]

Clarification of R&D concession for exempt entities

9.67 The research and development (R&D) provisions provide that R&D entities that are controlled by exempt entities are entitled to an R&D tax offset equal to 40 per cent of their relevant deductible expenditure on R&D (rather than the 45 per cent offset that otherwise applies for taxable entities whose aggregated turnover is under $20 million for the year). Questions have been raised about whether the reference to an entity being controlled by exempt entities requires the entity to have been controlled for the whole year, only at the end of the year, or at any time during the year. The amendments clarify that the provisions apply to an entity that is controlled by an exempt entity at any time during the year. [Schedule 11, item 55, table item 2 in subsection 355-100(1) of the ITAA 1997 ]

Application provision

9.68 These amendments apply to assessments for income years starting on or after 1 July 2013. For earlier periods, the existing meaning of the provision continues. However, no inference is to be drawn from the clarification that the unamended provision must have had a different meaning. [Schedule 11, subitems 56(2) and (3)]

STATEMENT OF COMPATIBILITY WITH HUMAN RIGHTS

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

Miscellaneous amendments

9.69 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

9.70 Schedule 11 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.

9.71 These amendments include: clarifying the tax treatment of native title benefits distributed through charities (Part 2); ensuring the fringe benefits tax rebate operates as intended (Part 3); and updating a number of significant taxation and superannuation thresholds to reflect reporting changes made by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (Part 4).

Human rights implications

9.72 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.

Amendments relating to Indigenous holding entities and native title

9.73 In relation to the amendments in Part 2 regarding charitable entities and native title, these amendments supplement the amendments contained in the Tax Laws Amendment (2012 Measures No. 6) Bill 2012.

9.74 These amendments promote the right to self-determination as recognised in Article 1 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and Article 1 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR). This includes individuals being free to pursue their economic, social and cultural developments. This includes the rights to and interests in land held by Indigenous persons under their traditional law and customs recognised by native title.

9.75 The amendments in Part 2 promote this principle by making clear that distributions of native title benefits to Indigenous persons or Indigenous holding entities from registered charities retain both their status as native title benefits and the tax treatment that goes with that status.

9.76 Article 2 of the ICCPR and Article 2(2) of the ICESCR require State Parties to respect and ensure all individuals the rights recognised in the Covenants without discrimination of any kind as to race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status.

9.77 Differences in treatment will not amount to prohibited discrimination (that is, they will be legitimate) if the reasons for such differentiation are reasonable and objective, and if the aim is to achieve a purpose which is legitimate (see the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, in its General Recommendation No. 32 (at paragraph 8)).

9.78 Therefore, the amendments in Part 2 engage the rights to equality and non-discrimination because they apply only to a certain group of individuals within the population and draw a distinction between individuals who have native title rights (namely, Indigenous people) and persons who do not (namely, non-Indigenous people). Although, prima facie, this Schedule provides differential treatment in favour of Indigenous people who obtain native title benefits, the purpose which the amendments aim to achieve is legitimate and the reasons for differentiation are reasonable and objective.

Conclusion

9.79 The amendments in Part 2 are compatible with human rights as it advances the protection of human rights and to the extent that it may also limit human rights, those limitations are reasonable, necessary and proportionate.

9.80 The other Parts are compatible with human rights as they do not encroach upon any applicable rights or freedoms.

Assistant Treasurer, the Hon David Bradbury

Index

Schedule 1: Monthly PAYG instalments

Bill reference Paragraph number
Items 1 to 2, 11 to 17, 18 to 44, sections 45-1, 45-125, 45-130, 45-200, 45-205, 45-225, 45-597, 45-703, 45-715, 45-870, subsections 45-132(4), 45-200(2), 45-705(4), 45-915 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953, and sections 721-10 and 995-1 of the ITAA 1997 1.60
Items 3 to 8 and 19, sections 45-5, 45-20, 45-50 and 45-136 1.15
Items 5, 9 and 10, sections 45-67, 45-72 and subsection 45-20(2) 1.20
Items 9 and 11, section 45-65 and subsection 45-114(1) 1.16
Item 9, subsection 45-67(2) 1.21
Item 11, section 45-114 1.19
Item 11, subsection 45-114(3) to (6) 1.18
Items 11 and 21 to 24, sections 45-200, 45-225 and subsection 45-114(2) 1.17
Item 19, paragraph 45-136(2)(a) 1.41
Item 19, subsection 45-136(3) and paragraph 45-136(2)(b) 1.40
Item 19, subsection 45-136(4) 1.43
Item 19, paragraph 45-136(4)(b) 1.42
Item 19, subsection 45-138(1) 1.22
Item 19, subsection 45-138(2) 1.23
Item 19, paragraph 45-138(2)(a) 1.34
Item 19, paragraph 45-138(2)(b) 1.24, 1.32
Item 19, subsection 45-138(3) 1.36
Item 19, paragraph 45-138(4)(a) 1.39
Item 19, paragraph 45-138(4)(b) 1.37
Item 19, subsections 45-138(5) to (7) 1.28
Item 45 and subitem 47(1) 1.45
Subitem 46 1.58, 1.59
Subitem 47(4) 1.56
Subitem 47(5) 1.55
Item 48, and subitem 47(1) 1.48
Subitems 48(1) and (2) 1.47
Subitems 48(3) and (4) 1.53
Subitem 49(2) 1.51

Schedule 2: Incentives for designated infrastructure projects

Bill reference Paragraph number
Item 1, section 272-100 in Schedule 2F to the ITAA 1936 2.59
Items 2 to 4, paragraphs 165-35(b) and (c), and subsection 415-35(7) 2.44
Item 4, sections 415-1, 415-5, 415-10 and 415-50 2.118
Item 4, paragraph 415-10(5)(b) 2.26
Items 4, 47 and 48, subsection 415-55(1) and section 415-10 of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 2.18
Item 4, subsection 415-15(1) 2.22, 2.23
Item 4, subsections 415-15(2) and (3) 2.27
Item 4, subsection 415-15(2) and paragraphs 415-15(3)(a) and (c) 2.28
Item 4, subsection 415-15(2) and paragraph 415-15(3)(d) 2.30
Item 4, paragraph 415-15(3)(b) 2.29
Item 4, subsection 415-15(4) 2.24
Item 4, subsection 415-15(5) 2.25
Item 4, subsection 415-15(6) 2.17
Item 4, subsection 415-20(1) 2.62
Item 4, paragraphs 415-20(1)(a) and (b) 2.70
Item 4, paragraphs 415-20(1)(b), (c) and (d) 2.19
Item 4, paragraphs 415-20(1)(b) and (2)(a) 2.20
Item 4, paragraph 415-20(1)(d) 2.73
Item 4, paragraph 415-20(2)(a) and subsection 415-55(1) 2.71
Item 4, paragraphs 415-20(2)(b), (c) and (d) 2.72
Item 4, subsections 415-20(3) and (4) 2.76
Item 4, subsection 415-20(5) 2.64
Item 4, subsection 415-20(6) 2.69
Item 4, sections 415-25 and 415-30 2.61
Items 4 and 47, subsection 415-35(3) and paragraph 415-10(a) of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 2.32
Items 4, 47 and 48, subsection 415-15(1), paragraph 415-20(1)(a) and section 415-10 of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 2.16
Item 4, subsection 415-35(2) 2.33, 2.37
Item 4, subsections 415-35(2) and (3) 2.35
Item 4, subsections 415-35(4) and (5) 2.39
Item 4, subsections 415-35(4) to (6) 2.42
Item 4, subsection 415-35(8) 2.45, 2.46, 2.58
Item 4, section 415-40 2.49
Item 4, subsections 415-40(2) and (3) 2.50, 2.57
Item 4, subsections 415-40(2), (4) and (5) 2.53
Item 4, subsection 415-40(4) 2.52
Item 4, subsections 415-40(4) and (5) 2.51
Item 4, subsection 415-40(6) 2.56
Item 4, subsection 415-40(8) 2.54
Item 4, subsections 415-55(1), (2) and (4) 2.79
Item 4, subsection 415-55(2) and 415-75(4) 2.106
Item 4, subsection 415-55(3) 2.107
Item 4, subsections 415-55(4), 415-60(1), 415-65(2), and (3), 415-70(4) and (8) and 415-80(1), (3), (4) and (5) and sections 415-65, 415-70 and 415-90 2.98
Item 4, subsections 415-60(1), (2) and (4) 2.81
Item 4, subsections 415-60(2) and (3) and paragraph 415-85(a) 2.86
Item 4, subsections 415-60(2) and (3) and paragraph 415-85(c) 2.93
Item 4, subsections 415-60(3), 415-65(1) and 415-70(1) and (2) 2.82
Item 4, subsection 415-60(5) 2.80
Item 4, subsections 415-65(3) and (4), and 415-70(4) to (6) 2.75
Item 4, paragraphs 415-65(1)(a) to (c) and subsections 415-65(2) to (4) 2.84
Item 4, paragraphs 415-65(1)(c) and 415-70(1)(c) and subsection 415-75(1) 2.103
Item 4, paragraph 415-65(1)(d)) 2.85
Item 4, subsection 415-65(2) 2.87
Item 4, paragraphs 415-65(1)(c) and (d), and 415-70(1)(c) and (d) 2.101
Item 4, subsections 415-65(5) to (7) 2.88
Items 4 and 35, section 415-70 and subsection 995-1(1) 2.77
Item 4, subsections 415-70(1) and (2) 2.90
Item 4, paragraph 415-70(2)(b) 2.92
Item 4, subsections 415-70(6) and (7) 2.94
Item 4, subsections 415-70(8) 2.91
Item 4, subsection 415-70(9) 2.95
Item 4, subsection 415-75(2) 2.104
Item 4, subsection 415-75(3) 2.102
Item 4, subsection 415-80(1) 2.108
Item 4, subsections 415-80(2) to (4) 2.110
Item 4, subsections 415-80(5) and (6) 2.109
Item 4, paragraph 415-85(b) 2.89
Item 4, paragraph 415-85(d) 2.96
Item 4, section 415-90 2.111
Item 4, section 415-95 2.112
Item 4, subsection 415-100(1) 2.97
Item 4, subsection 415-100(2) 2.100
Items 5 and 6, subsections 707-120(5) and 719-265(3A) 2.67
Items 7 to 14, 14A, 14B, 14C, 24, 28 and 32, sections 266-15, 266-30, 266-65, 266-80, 266-100, 266-115, 266-140, 266-155, 267-15, 267-55 and 267-60 in Schedule 2F to the ITAA 1936, and sections 165-5, 165-117 and 707-300 (notes) 2.120
Item 15, subsection 268-20(4) in Schedule 2F to the ITAA 1936 2.123
Item 16, subsection 272-140(1) in Schedule 2F to the ITAA 1936 (definition of 'designated infrastructure project entity') 2.116
Items 17 and 36 and 38 to 42, subsection 272-140(1) definition of 'tax loss', subsection 995-1(1) definitions of 'ownership test period', 'same business test period', 'test period', 'tax loss' and 'test time' 2.117
Items 18 to 23, tables in sections 12-5 and 36-25 2.119
Items 29 to 31, subsections 707-120(1), and 707-130(1) and paragraph 707-125(1)(b) 2.124
Items 33 and 34, paragraph 707-265(1)(a), and subsection 719-265(7) 2.125
Items 35 and 37, subsection 995-1(1) (definitions of 'designated infrastructure project', 'designated infrastructure project entity', 'infrastructure project capital expenditure', 'infrastructure project designation rules' and 'provisionally designated infrastructure project') 2.115
Items 39 and 40, subsection 995-1(1) paragraphs (a) and (d) of the definition of tax loss 2.21
Items 43 to 46, subsections 28(2) to (4) and 40(1) of the Infrastructure Australia Act 2008 2.122
Item 43, subsection 28(2) of the Infrastructure Australia Act 2008 2.121
Items 47 and 48, section 415-10 of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 2.113
Items 49 to 65, subsections 266-185(1), 267-90(1), 268-10(2), 268-15(2), 268-20(2), 268-25(2), 268-75(1), 268-85(5), 269-65(1), 269-25(1) and paragraphs 269-25(1)(a), 269-100(4)(a), 271-80(a), 272-80(6B)(a) and (b) and 272-85(5C)(a) and (b) and subparagraph 272-80(6A)(i) of Schedule 2F to the ITAA 1936 2.126
Item 66 and clause 2 (table item 3) 2.114

Schedule 5: Tax secrecy and transparency

Bill reference Paragraph number
Item 1, section 3C 3.21
Item 1, subsections 3C(1), 3D(1) and 3E(1) 3.23
Item 1, subsections 3C(3), 3D(3) and 3E(3) 3.24
Item 1, paragraph 3C(3)(a) 3.28
Item 1, paragraphs 3C(3)(a), 3D(3)(a) and 3E(3)(a) 3.26
Item 1, paragraph 3C(3)(b) 3.29
Item 1, paragraph 3C(3)(c) 3.30, 5.31
Item 1, paragraph 3C(3)(d) 3.32
Item 1, subsections 3C(2), 3D(2) and 3E(2) 3.36
Item 1, subsections 3C(4) and (5), 3D(4) and (5) and 3E(4) and (5) 3.44
Item 1, subsections 3C(6), 3D(6) and 3E(6) 3.43
Item 1, sections 3D and 3E 3.22, 3.33
Item 2, subsection 355-47(1) of Schedule 1 3.51
Item 2, paragraph 355-47(2)(a) of Schedule 1 3.50
Item 2, paragraph 355-47(2)(b) of Schedule 1 3.58
Items 3 and 4, note to section 355-50 of Schedule 1 3.47, 3.69
Item 5, subsection 355-65(4) 3.61
Item 6, section 355-172 of Schedule 1 3.52
Subitem 8(1) 3.66
Subitem 8(2) 3.68

Schedule 6: Petroleum resource rent tax

Bill reference Paragraph number
Items 1 and 2, subsection 37(1) of the PRRTAA, items 4 and 5, subsection 38(1) of the PRRTAA and Schedule 6, item 7, subsection 39(1) of the PRRTAA 4.33
Items 3, 6, and 8, subsections 37(3), 38(3) and 39(5) of the PRRTAA 4.55
Item 9, subsection 41(1) of the PRRTAA 4.34, 4.45
Item 9, subsections 41(1) and 41(1A) of the PRRTAA 4.37
Item 9, subsection 41(1A) of the PRRTAA 4.41
Item 9, subsections 41(1B) and 41(1D) of the PRRTAA 4.53
Item 9, paragraph 41(1)(b) of the PRRTAA 4.39, 4.46
Item 9, subsection 41(1C) of the PRRTAA 4.44
Item 9, paragraph 41(1)(c) of the PRRTAA 4.51
Item 9, paragraph 41(1)(d) of the PRRTAA 4.38, 4.49
Item 9, subparagraph 41(1)(d) of the PRRTAA 4.50
Item 10, subsection 41(3) of the PRRTAA 4.56
Paragraph 11(1)(a) 4.63
Paragraphs 11(1)(b) and 11(1)(c) 4.64
Subitem 11(2) 4.69
Subitem 11(3) 4.68
Subitem 11(4) 4.72

Schedule 7: Removing CGT discount for foreign individuals

Bill reference Paragraph number
Items 1 to 4, subsection 115-30(1) and section 115-100 5.66
Item 5, subsection 115-100 5.67
Item 5, paragraph 115-115(4)(d) 5.56
Item 6, subsection 115-105(1) 5.14
Item 6, paragraph 115-105(2)(d) 5.26
Subsection 115-105(3) 5.28
Item 6, table item 1 in subsection 115-110(2) 5.29
Item 6, table item 2 in subsection 115-110(2) 5.37
Item 6, table item 3 in subsection 115 -110(2) 5.41
Item 6, section 115-115 5.20
Item 6, subsection 115-115(2) 5.45
Item 6, subsection 115-115(3) 5.62
Item 6, subsections 115-115(3) to (6) 5.21
Item 6, subsection 115-115(4) 5.56
Item 6, subsections 115-115(4) and (5) 5.55
Item 6, subsection 115-115(5) 5.56, Example 5.15
Item 6, subsection 115-115(6) 5.59
Item 6, section 115-120 5.42
Item 6, subsection 115-120 5.15

Schedule 8: Tax exemption for payments under Defence Abuse Reparation Scheme

Bill reference Paragraph number
Item 1 6.11
Item 2, item 1.7 in table in section 51-5 6.10
Item 3 6.13

Schedule 9: GST-free treatment for National Disability Insurance Scheme funded supports

Bill reference Paragraph number
Item 1, paragraph 38-38(a) 7.19
Item 1, paragraphs 38-38(a) and (b) 7.17
Item 1, paragraph 38-38(c) 7.20
Items 1 and 2, paragraph 38-38(d) and subsection 177-10(5) 7.23
Item 2, subsection 177-10(6) 7.25
Item 3, section 195-1 7.27
Item 4 7.28

Schedule 10: Deductible gift recipients

Bill reference Paragraph number
Item 1, item 2.2.5 in the table in subsection 30-25(2) of the ITAA 1997 8.6
Item 2, item 2.2.40 in the table in subsection 30-25(2) of the ITAA 1997 8.8, 8.24
Item 3, item 4.2.5 in the table in subsection 30-45(2) of the ITAA 1997 8.10
Item 4, item 4.2.8 in the table in subsection 30-45(2) of the ITAA 1997 8.12
Item 5, item 9.2.11 in the table in subsection 30-80(2) of the ITAA 1997 8.14
Item 6, item 13.2.4 in the table in section 30-105 of the ITAA 1997 8.16
Item 6, item 13.2.5 in the table in section 30-105 of the ITAA 1997 8.18
Items 7 to 11 8.29
Item 12 8.25
Item 13, item 2.2.39 in the table in subsection 30-25(2) of the ITAA 1997 8.20
Items 13 to 15 8.26
Items 13 and 14, subsections 30-25(2) and 30-80(2) of the ITAA 1997 8.28

Schedule 11: Miscellaneous amendments

Bill reference Paragraph number
Items 1, 2 and 3 9.6
Item 4 9.7
Item 5, paragraph 59-50(6)(b) of the ITAA 1997 9.17
Item 6, paragraph 59-50(6)(c) of the ITAA 1997 9.14
Items 7 and 8, heading to Part 2-15 and section 59-50 of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 9.18
Item 9 9.19
Items 10 to 12, 15 to 26 9.26
Items 13 and 14 9.25
Subitem 27(1) 9.27
Subitem 27(2) 9.31
Subitem 27(3) 9.32
Items 28 to 31, subsection 960-275(1A) (formula) of the ITAA 1997, subsection 10A(5) (definition of current year) of the Superannuation (Government Co-contribution for Low Income Earners) Act 2003, and paragraph 9(1)(b) and subsection 9(1) (note) of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 9.48
Item 32 9.50
Items 33, 34, 38, 39, 42, 43, 46, 47, 50 and 51 9.65
Item 35 9.55
Items 36, 37, 40, 41, 44, 45, 48, 49 and 52 to 54 9.56
Item 55, table item 2 in subsection 355-100(1) of the ITAA 1997 9.67
Subitem 56(1) 9.66
Subitems 56(2) and (3) 9.68

Broadly, these are land councils and other bodies established under laws relating to indigenous persons.


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