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Edited version of your private ruling

Authorisation Number: 1012506925619

Ruling

Subject: GST and supplies connected with Australia

Question

Is a supply made by ABC Co on the terms and conditions described in the ruling request a taxable supply for the purposes of section 9-5 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act)?

Answer

No.

Relevant facts and circumstances

ABC Co is a non-resident entity engaged in goods trading and is registered for Australian GST purposes.

ABC Co recently entered into a contract to supply the Product to an Australian resident entity (Buyer).

ABC Co sourced the Product from outside Australia.

ABC Co provided a copy of the Contract with the Buyer which contains the following clauses:

For the purposes of this ruling request, ABC Co has provided the above Contract. It anticipates making further supplies under the same circumstances and on the same terms and conditions. ABC Co intends to apply the treatment advised by the Commissioner to future transactions, as well as in connection with this particular Contract.

Relevant legislative provisions

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Section 9-5.

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Section 9-25.

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Subsection 9-25(1).

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Subsection 9-25(3).

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Section 13-5.

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Section 195-1.

Reasons for decision

Summary

The supply made by ABC Co on the terms and conditions described is not connected with Australia. Hence, it is not a taxable supply.

Detailed reasoning

Taxable supply:

An entity is liable to pay the GST on any taxable supply that that entity makes.

Section 9-5 of the GST Act sets out the requirements for a taxable supply:

(* denotes a term defined in section 195-1 of the GST Act.)

All of the requirements of section 9-5 of the GST Act must be satisfied for the sale of the Product by ABC Co to be a taxable supply.

ABC Co is registered for GST and the sale of the Product to the Buyer is made for consideration and in the course of an enterprise carried on by ABC Co. Therefore, ABC Co satisfies the requirements of paragraphs 9-5(a), 9-5(b) and 9-5(d) of the GST Act. Furthermore, the sale of the Product in the circumstances described is neither GST-free nor input taxed.

It remains to be determined whether the supply of the Product by ABC Co is connected with Australia under paragraph 9-5(c) of the GST Act.

Supplies connected with Australia

Section 9-25 of the GST Act sets out the circumstances in which a supply is connected with Australia. In this case, of relevance are subsections 9-25(1) and 9-25(3) of the GST Act, which state:

Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2000/31 explains when a supply is connected with Australia under section 9-25 of the GST Act and Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2003/15 explains the operation of provisions of the GST Act which apply to the importation of goods into Australia.

Subsection 9-25(3) of the GST Act:

The ruling request addressed subsection 9-25(3) of the GST Act and included a submission that as ABC Co does not complete any Customs formalities, the supply of the Product is not connected with Australia.

Paragraphs 52 to 56 of GSTR 2000/31 discuss a supply of goods to which subsection 9-25(3) applies:

Paragraph 72 of GSTR 2003/15 explains that supplies of goods to Australia are connected with Australia if the supplier imports the goods. A supplier imports goods where the supplier causes the goods to be brought to Australia for its own purposes and completes the customs formalities.

Paragraph 147 of GSTR 2003/15 states that an entity completes the customs formalities where that entity's name appears on the import entry as 'owner' and that this occurs where the entity completes the entry itself, or engages a customs broker.

Paragraph 97 of GSTR 2003/15 provides that the entity that enters goods for home consumption is the entity that makes the taxable importation and typically, this is the importing entity. Under the Customs Act 1901 (Customs Act) an entry for home consumption must be made by or on behalf of the 'owner' of the goods. The 'owner' of the goods for Customs purposes is not restricted to the legal owner. Section 4 of the Customs Act provides that the 'owner' can be:

GSTR 2000/31 contains a number of Examples where section 9-25(3) is or is not satisfied, including Example 13 where subsection 9-25(3) is not satisfied because the goods are imported by the recipient of the supply:

Clause X of the Contract provides that the Buyer or the Buyer's customer is required to act as the importer of record and be responsible for compliance with Customs and Excise entry procedures at the discharge port and is liable for all duties and taxes.

We accept that clause X means that the Buyer is named as owner of the Product in the Customs entry documents. Hence, ABC Co does not 'import the goods' for the purposes of subsection 9-25(3) of the GST Act. Nor does ABC Co install or assemble the goods in Australia.

Consequently the supply of the Product by ABC Co to the Buyer is not connected with Australia pursuant to subsection 9-25(3) of the GST Act.

Subsection 9-25(1) of the GST Act

Subsection 9-25(1) appears beneath the heading 'Supplies of goods wholly within Australia' and is discussed in paragraphs 45 to 47 of GSTR 2000/31:

Paragraphs 117 to 120 of GSTR 2000/31 explain how goods are 'delivered' or 'made available' to the recipient of the relevant supply for the purposes of subsection 9-25(1):

The 'Delivery' provision in clause Y of the Contract indicates that ABC Co makes the Product physically available, in Australia, for collection by the Buyer.

As noted above, paragraph 47 of GSTR 2000/31 states that goods which are delivered or made available in Australia to the recipient may be goods that the supplier has imported and refers to the example at paragraph 124 of GSTR 2000/31:

Example 7 states that a supply of goods that have been imported is nevertheless a supply that is 'wholly within Australia' if those goods are delivered to the recipient in Australia. Given the emphasis in GSTR 2000/31 on where the goods are physically delivered or made available, there appears to be no distinction between Example 7 (where the supplier imports the goods and then physically delivers the goods to the recipient in Australia) and the present case (where ABC Co physically makes the goods available to the Buyer in Australia and the Buyer then lodges the Customs entry documents and pays the customs duty and GST levied on importation).

However paragraph 49 of GSTR 2000/31 suggests that subsection 9-25(1) cannot apply to a supply where the recipient of the supply enters the goods for home consumption:

Paragraph 129 of GSTR 2000/31 repeats the proposition stated in paragraph 49 and paragraph 130 provides an example:

Example 8 illustrates that the seat covers must have been delivered or made available to Joe (or Joe's agent) in Italy as Joe imports the seat covers to Australia and clears them through Customs and the Australian supplier of the seat covers (Seat Co) never handles the seat covers.

The application of subsection 9-25(1) and 9-25(3) is discussed in two Examples in GSTR 2000/31 which involve the supply of goods to Australia on different Inco terms:

Paragraph 251 in GSTR 2000/31 explains FOB terms:

The FOB terms in Example 13 mean that the recipient of the supply enters the goods for home consumption in Australia.

In relation to subsection 9-25(1), paragraph 141 and Example 13 indicate that the tractor is not delivered or made available, in Australia, to the recipient of the supply because, under the FOB terms, the supplier (US Co) delivers the tractor to the recipient outside of Australia (i.e. delivers the tractor to the ship in the United States). However, the discussion in paragraph 141 and Example 13 concerning the non-application of subsection 9-25(1) does not apply to the supply of Product by ABC Co to the Buyer because clause Y obliges ABC Co to deliver the Product, in Australia, to the Buyer of the supply.

Paragraph 137 of GSTR 2003/15 states that, in the context of Division 15, importation is not achieved merely by landing the goods in Australia but also requires completion of Customs formalities and that where the parties agree to FOB, CIF (Cost Insurance Freight) or DDU (Delivered Duty Unpaid) In co terms, the buyer is responsible for customs entry formalities.

Clause Y requires ABC Co to deliver the Product to the Buyer on DES Incoterms 2000, duty unpaid at the Port of Capital City. Clause X provides that the Buyer is responsible for compliance with Customs and Excise entry procedures at the discharge port and is liable for all duties and taxes.

DDU terms is described in GSTR 2003/15 as where the parties intend for the seller to deliver goods to a named place of destination, but for the buyer to pay the GST to Customs on the entry (paragraph 145, footnote 66).

We refer to example 6 in GSTR 2003/15, particularly paragraph 182:

Applying the reasoning in paragraph 182 of GSTR 2003/15 (i.e. where the recipient of the supply enters the goods for home consumption) to the present case, we conclude that subsection 9-25(1) does not apply to make the supply of the Product to the Buyer connected with Australia because the Product is not in Australia when the arrangement for the supply is made and the agreement requires the Buyer to complete the process of importing the Product into Australia.

As the supply of the Product by ABC Co is not connected with Australia, the requirement of paragraph 9-5(c) of the GST Act is not satisfied.

Therefore, the supply made by ABC Co on the terms and conditions described in the ruling request is not a taxable supply for the purposes of section 9-5 of the GST Act.

All GST rulings and publications referred to above are available at the ATO website www.ato.gov.au


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