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Edited version of your written advice

Authorisation Number: 1013112401925

Date of advice: 25 October 2016

Ruling

Subject: Goods and services tax (GST) and payroll services

Question

Are you entitled to claim an input tax credit (ITC) for GST charged by X where X pays the salaries to your employees pursuant to the Relevant Agreement (Agreement) and charges GST on the salary amounts?

Answer

No.

Relevant facts and circumstances

You are a XXX company with a significant number of employees.

You are using the services of an unrelated company X to provide you with administration support and payroll management. The Agreement sets out the terms and conditions of the arrangement, which is summarised as follows:

You have not been claiming ITCs on the GST charged in the salary amounts as you believe these are not subject to GST.

You have been informed that X has, and intends to continue to charge GST on the full value of your payroll as well as the per employee administration charge in the belief they are making a taxable supply.

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 11-20

Reasons for decision

Section 11-20 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act) provides that you are entitled to the ITC for any creditable acquisition that you make. Section 11-5 of the GST Act states that:

Under subsection 11-5(b) of the GST Act, the supply of payroll service under the Agreement must be a taxable supply.

A supply will be a taxable supply where the requirements of section 9-5 of the GST Act are satisfied. Section 9-5 of the GST Act states:

If X is making a supply to you when it pays the salaries to your employees, it may be a taxable supply for which you can claim an ITC. However if it is making this supply on your behalf, it cannot be a taxable supply to you because it is you who is making this supply and if so, you are not making a creditable acquisition and cannot claim ITCs.

The Agreement contains an Independent Organisations clause stating that you and X are 'acting independently of the other, are not joint venturers and that neither is an agent of the other.' However, the Agreement makes reference in the Electronic transfers clause that:

GSTR 2000/37 Goods and services tax: agency relationships and the application of the law provides guidance on whether agency relationships exist for GST purposes including where there are express references to such relationships existing or not existing. Paragraphs 32 to 34 state:

In your scenario, you pay the funds into a designated account and when cleared, X pays those funds to your employees, their superannuation funds and the Office of State Revenue. X is doing this as part of its payroll service as the vehicle for payment on your behalf. That is, it is not paying these monies from its own funds whereupon it on-charges this cost to you as part of its payroll service. If this was the case, the salaries and superannuation would lose their characters and become part of the overall taxable supply.

While no separate formal agency agreement exists, it is clear that X's role with regard to the transfer of your funds as salaries, is as your agent. Therefore X is not making any supply to you of the payment of these funds as it is you who are supplying the funds to your employees. Therefore, X cannot be making taxable supplies for the payment of these funds.

Where X charges GST on the salary amounts as part of its service supply to you, this is incorrect as no GST applies. You are not therefore entitled to claim ITCs for these GST amounts.


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