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Edited version of your written advice

Authorisation Number: 1012744608808

Ruling

Subject: Non-resident withholding tax

Question and Answer

Does a resident company have a non-resident withholding tax obligation in respect of interest paid on monies owed for trade credit to a non-resident company?

Yes

This ruling applies for the following period

Year ended 31 December 2014

The scheme commences on

1 January 2014

Relevant facts and circumstances

The resident company was incorporated in Australia.

The resident company is wholly owned by the non-resident company.

The board of directors of the resident company is comprised of one Australian resident and two non-residents.

The non-resident company was incorporated outside Australia and distributes their product to various subsidiaries worldwide.

The non-resident company sells their product to resident company who on sells these products to mostly local customers.

The resident company owes the non-resident money for products supplied but not paid for under a 'trade credit'.

The non-resident company charges the resident company interest on the 'trade credit'.

Relevant legislative provisions

Section 26C of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936

Section 128A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936

Section 128B of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936

Reasons for decision

Interest derived by a non-resident

Under section 128B(2) of the ITAA 1936, interest derived by a non-resident is subject to withholding tax, if it is:

Under subsection 128A(1AB) of the ITAA 1936 interest is defined as follows:

but does not include an amount to the extent to which it is a return on an equity interest in a company.

The above definition includes the ordinary meaning of interest. On the ordinary meaning of interest, Hill J in Macquarie Finance Ltd v. FC of T said the following:

This represents 'a charge for the use of a credit facility or borrowed money; such a charge expressed as a percentage of the sum borrowed or used' to use the words of Cooper J in Century Yuasa Batteries Thus the Additional Amount is compensation to the Investors for being kept out of the Additional Payment and is interest under its ordinary meaning.

What these descriptions make clear is that there must be a borrowing before what is paid can be regarded as interest. At least ordinarily the concept of borrowing presupposes that the lender is entitled to a return of the money. Trade credit amounts paid on monies owed to the non-resident company by the resident company satisfy the definition of interest amounts payable to a non-resident.

Liability to non-resident withholding tax

A non-resident is liable to pay interest withholding tax under s 128B(5) ITAA 1936 and 128B(2)(b)(i) ITAA 1936 where:

    (a) income to which section 128B applies consists of interest and is paid to the person by whom it is derived by a person to whom this section applies; and

    (b) the interest is, in part only, an outgoing incurred by that person to whom this section applies in carrying on business in a country outside Australia at or through a permanent establishment of that person to whom this section applies in that country;


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