Unpaid Trust Distributions: ATO's Rulings vs. Recent AAT Decision and What It Means for 2023
It has long been the ATO’s practice to treat a trust’s unpaid present entitlements (“UPE”) to a company as a loan for th...
The Federal Treasurer, Dr Jim Chalmers, handed down the Labor government's first Federal Budget at 7:30 pm (AEDT) on 25 October 2022.
Despite an uncertain global economic environment, the Treasurer has lauded Australia's low unemployment and strong export prices as reason for a 3.5% growth in the current financial year, slowing to 1.5% in 2023–24. The Budget projects a deficit of $36.9 billion, lower than the forecast earlier this year of $78 billion.
Described as a sensible Budget for the current conditions, it contains various cost of living relief measures including cheaper child care, expanding paid parental leave and encouraging downsizing to free up housing stock. Key tax measures are targeted at multinationals, particularly changes to the thin capitalisation rules, and changes to deduction rules for intangibles.
Importantly, no amendments have been proposed to the already legislated Stage-3 individual tax rate cuts. Additional funding for a range of tax administration and compliance programs have also been announced. Finally, the fate of a suite of announced but unenacted tax measures, including a few that have been around for at least 10 years, has been confirmed.
The full Budget papers are available at www.budget.gov.au and the Treasury ministers’ media releases are available at ministers.treasury.gov.au. The tax, superannuation and social security highlights are set out below.
Please keep in mind that all budget measures are proposed and will require the passage of legislation to become effective.
Click here to read more about announcements for business.
Click here to read more about announcements for individuals.
Click here to read more about announcements for superannuation.
Click here to read more about announcements for multinationals.
Click here to read more about the tax administration budget announcements.
Click here to read more about the tax agents budget announcements.
Click here to read more about the budget announcements for Not-for-profits.
Electric vehicles under the luxury car tax threshold ($84,916 for 2022–23) will be exempt from fringe benefits tax and import tariffs. To qualify for the exemption, the electric vehicle must not have been held or used prior to 1 July 2022. Legislation introducing the FBT exemption is before the Senate.
The FBT exemption ultimately provides an opportunity for individuals to purchase an electric vehicle under a salary sacrifice novated lease arrangement. Without the FBT exemption, any benefit of this type of arrangement can be negligible. This is especially the case when an employee’s business use percentage is very low or nil. A salary sacrifice arrangement is effectively a saving for the user of an electric vehicle, as the payment of the vehicle will reduce their income tax. Along with the FBT savings, consumers of electric vehicle will also benefit from the removal of a 5% import tariff.
Despite the FBT exemption, an employer will still be required to report their employee’s reportable car fringe benefits in the employee’s reportable fringe benefits amount. This reportable amount is part of the payment summary reporting requirements and is used to calculate various tax rebates and thresholds.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 18.
State-based business grants handed out during the COVID-19 pandemic are assessable income to the recipient unless the government places that grant in a special exclusion category. The government has announced the following Victorian and ACT business grants to be non-assessable non-exempt income for tax purposes:
Victoria
Australian Capital Territory
This announcement is in addition to several other state-based business grants that have been give non-assessable non-exempt status since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 14.
Grants will be provided to small and medium-sized businesses to fund energy efficient equipment upgrades.
The grants will be available to support studies, planning, equipment and facility upgrade projects that improve energy efficiency, reduce emissions or improve management of power demand.
The government will provide $62.6 million over 3 years from 2022–23 for this measure.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 60; Glossy, “Building a better future”, p 39.
The tax treatment for off-market share buy-backs undertaken by listed public companies will be aligned with the treatment of on-market share buy-backs.
Under the current tax treatment for an off-market buy-back, the difference between the purchase price and the part of the purchase price in respect of the buy-back which is debited against the company's share capital account is taken to be a dividend. Franking credits may be available with respect to such a dividend. In the case of an on-market buy-back, no part of the buy-back price is treated as a dividend and the total amount received by the shareholder is treated as consideration for the share sale.
The measure will apply from 7:30pm AEDT on 25 October 2022 (Budget night).
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 13.
The 2021–22 Budget measure to allow taxpayers to self-assess the effective life of intangible depreciating assets will not proceed. A Bill introduced to implement the measure lapsed upon the proroguing of parliament.
The statutory effective lives for intangible depreciating assets set out in the table under s 40-95(7) of ITAA 1997 will continue to apply.
The measure was previously proposed to apply to certain intangible depreciating assets first held on or after 1 July 2023.
The measure has been discontinued to avoid potential integrity concerns and contribute to budget repair.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 10.
The Heavy Vehicle Road User Charge rate has been increased from 26.4 cents per litre to 27.2 cents per litre of diesel fuel, effective from 29 September 2022.
The previous rate of 26.4 cents per litre was announced in the 2021–22 Budget and commenced on 1 July 2021. The increased rate will reduce expenditure on the Fuel Tax Credit from the 2022–23 income year.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 162; Fuel Tax (Road User Charge Determination 2022 F2022L0119(2).
Australia has signed a new tax treaty with Iceland.
Once in force, the treaty will facilitate trade and investment between Australia and Iceland by relieving double taxation, reducing withholding tax rates and providing more certainty for taxpayers in both countries. It also contains integrity provisions consistent with the outcomes of the G20/OECD Base Erosion and Profit Shifting project for the prevention of tax evasion and avoidance through treaty abuse.
The Convention between Australia and Iceland for the Elimination of Double Taxation with respect to Taxes on Income and the Prevention of Tax Evasion and Avoidance was signed on 12 October 2022.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 14; Iceland tax treaty, Treasury website, 13 October 2022.
A temporary measure, imposing additional tariffs on goods imported from Russia and Belarus, will be extended by a further 12 months to 24 October 2023.
The measure continues to deny Russia and Belarus access to most favoured nation status through the application of an additional 35% tariff on goods that are the produce and manufacture of Russia and Belarus shipped to Australia on or after 25 April 2022.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 8.
Ukraine goods are exempted from import duties for a period of 12 months from 4 July 2022.
This measure applies a “Free” rate of duty to all goods that are produced or manufactured in Ukraine except for excise-equivalent goods, such as certain alcohol, fuel, tobacco and petroleum products.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 8.
Technical amendments to the taxation of financial arrangements (TOFA) rules proposed in the 2021–22 Budget will be deferred.
The proposed amendments to the TOFA rules included facilitating access to hedging rules on a portfolio hedging basis. The start date for the measure will be deferred from 1 July 2022 to the income year commencing on or after assent of enabling legislation.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 18.
Amendments to simplify the taxation of financial arrangements (TOFA) rules proposed in the 2016–17 Budget will not proceed.
The government had proposed to reform the TOFA rules to reduce the scope, decrease compliance costs and increase certainty by redesigning the TOFA framework. The proposed changes included:
The measure was initially proposed to apply for income years starting on or after 1 January 2018. The start date was later deferred to the enactment of amending legislation.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 18.
A proposed measure from the 2018–19 Budget to impose a limit of $10,000 for cash payments made to businesses for goods and services will not proceed.
A Bill implementing the measure had been previously introduced into parliament in 2019 but was discharged from the Senate notice paper following recommendations from a Senate Economics Legislation Committee in February 2020 that the measure be reviewed.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 19.
Proposed changes first announced in the 2016–17 Budget to amend the taxation of asset-backed financing arrangements will not proceed. The changes proposed that these type of arrangements, such as deferred payment arrangements and hire purchase arrangements, be amended to ensure they were treated in the same way as financing arrangements based on interest-bearing loans or investments and was due to commence from 1 July 2018.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 18.
The new tax and regulatory regime for limited partnership collective investment vehicles proposed in the 2016–17 Budget will not proceed.
This measure was first announced together with a new regime for corporate collective investment vehicles (CCIVs), which has since been enacted into legislation (Corporate Collective Investment Vehicle Framework and Other Measures Bill 2021, Act No 8 of 2022). This confirms the unenacted proposal for a partnership regime will not go ahead.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 18.
The Pacific Australia Labour Mobility (PALM) scheme will be expanded and enhanced.
From 2022–23, the government will provide $67.5 million in funding over 4 years and from 2025–26 onwards, $12.4 million per year will be provided.
Funding will be used for initiatives to improve the benefits of the scheme for potential employers and workers, including:
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 111. Top
Age and veterans pensioners will be provided with a once off credit of $4,000 to their Work Bonus income bank. This will increase the amount pensioners can earn in 2022–23 from $7,800 to $11,800, before their pension is reduced. The measure will support pensioners who want to work or work more hours to do so without losing their pension.
This measure implements an outcome from the Jobs and Skills Summit in September 2022.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 181.
The assets test exemption for principal home sale proceeds will be extended from 12 months to 24 months for income support recipients. The income test will also be changed, to apply only the lower deeming rate (0.25%) to principal home sale proceeds when calculating deemed income for 24 months after the sale of the principal home.
This measure delivers on the Labor government's election commitments as published in the Plan for a Better Future.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 180.
The income threshold for the Commonwealth Seniors Health Card will be increased from $61,284 to $90,000 for singles and from $98,054 to $144,000 (combined) for couples.
The government will also freeze social security deeming rates at their current levels for a further 2 years until 30 June 2024, to support older Australians who rely on income from deemed financial investments, as well as the pension, to deal with the rising cost of living.
This measure delivers on the Labor government's election commitments as published in the Plan for a Better Future.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 181.
The Paid Parental Leave Scheme will be amended from 1 July 2023 so that either parent is able to claim the payment and both birth parents and non-birth parents are allowed to receive the payment if they meet the eligibility criteria. Parents will also be able to claim weeks of the payment concurrently so they can take leave at the same time.
From 1 July 2024, the scheme will be expanded by 2 additional weeks a year until it reaches a full 26 weeks from 1 July 2026. Both parents will be able to share the leave entitlement, with a proportion maintained on a “use it or lose it” basis, to encourage and facilitate both parents to access the scheme. Sole parents will be able to access the full 26 weeks.
The Women’s Economic Equality Taskforce will assist in the finalisation of the changes to the scheme to ensure that the final model supports women’s economic participation and gender equality, including the period of concurrence and the most appropriate proportion of “use it or lose it” weeks.
This measure extends the Coalition government’s 2022–23 Budget measure titled Women’s Economic Security Package.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 177.
The maximum Child Care Subsidy (CCS) rate will be increased from 85% to 90% for families for the first child in care and the CCS rate for all families earning less than $530,000 in household income will be increased.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 93.
The current higher Child Care Subsidy (CCS) rates for families with multiple children aged 5 or under in child care will be maintained, with higher CCS rates to cease 26 weeks after the older child's last session of care, or when the child turns 6 years old.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 93.
Legislation will be introduced to clarify that digital currency (or crypto currencies) will continue to not be treated as foreign currency for income tax purposes. The treatment does not apply to digital currencies issued by, or under the authority of, a government agency, which continue to be taxed as foreign currency.
This tax treatment for digital currency will be backdated to apply to income years that include 1 July 2021. The position was announced on 22 June 2022 following the decision of the government of El Salvador to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender, and draft legislation was released by Treasury on 6 September 2022 for consultation.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 11.
Eligibility to make a downsizer contribution to superannuation will be expanded by reducing the minimum age from 60 to 55 years.
The downsizer contribution allows an individual to make a one-off post-tax contribution to their superannuation of up to $300,000 per person from the proceeds of selling their home.
Both members of a couple can contribute and the contributions do not count towards non-concessional contribution caps.
The measure will take effect from the start of the first quarter after Royal Assent of the enabling legislation.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 20.
The 2021–22 Budget measure that proposed relaxing residency requirements for SMSFs and small APRA-regulated funds (SAFs) from 1 July 2022, has been deferred.
The proposed measure relaxes the residency requirements for SMSFs by extending the central control and management test safe harbour from two to five years for SMSFs. In addition, the active member test will also be removed for both SMSFs and SAFs.
The change will allow members to continue to contribute to their superannuation fund whilst temporarily overseas, ensuring parity with members of large APRA-regulated funds.
This measure will now take effect on or after the date of Royal Assent of the enabling legislation.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 18.
The 2018–19 Budget measure that proposed changing the annual audit requirement for certain self-managed superannuation funds (SMSFs) will not proceed.
The measure had proposed to change the annual SMSF audit requirement to a 3 yearly requirement for SMSFs with a history of good record-keeping and compliance.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 19.
The 2018–19 Budget measure that proposed introducing a requirement for retirement income product providers to report standardised metrics in product disclosure statements will not proceed.
The measure had proposed forcing retirement income product providers to report simplified, standardised metrics in product disclosure statements to assist customer decision making. The proposed measure had been announced alongside the introduction of a retirement covenant requiring superannuation trustees to formulate a retirement income strategy for superannuation fund members.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 18.
Thin capitalisation rules will be amended for non authorised deposit-taking institutions (non ADIs) with the replacement of the safe harbour test (debt to asset ratio) and the worldwide gearing test (debt to equity ratio) with earnings-based tests, to limit debt deductions in line with an entity's activities (profits). ADIs will continue to apply the current thin capitalisation rules.
The safe harbour test is being replaced with an earnings-based test, which will limit the entities’ interest expense to 30% of profit. Profit will be defined as EBITDA, or earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation. If a multinational entity wishes to use this entity-level EBITDA earnings-based test (interest expense amounts exceeding the 30% EBITDA ratio), any debt deductions denied may be carried forward and claimed in a subsequent year (up to 15 years).
A second option for a multinational entity would be to claim a debt deduction up to the level of their worldwide group’s net income expense as a percentage of earnings. This earnings-based group ratio will replace the worldwide gearing ratio.
The remaining arm’s length debt test will be retained as a substitute test, but will only apply to a multinational entity’s external (third party) debt, disallowing deductions for any related party debt under this test.
Multinational entities operating in Australia, and any inward or outward investor, must pass thin capitalisation rules in order to claim a deduction for interest expenses above $2 million.
This measure will apply to income years commencing on or after 1 July 2023.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, pp 15–16.
A significant global entity will be denied a deduction for payments to related parties in relation to intangibles held in low- or no-tax jurisdictions. This anti-avoidance rule will apply to payments made on or after 1 July 2023.
Payments or fees are commonly made by multinational entities to a head company for their use of the head company’s intangibles. These payments can be made either directly or indirectly to a related entity. These payments reduce net profit from the Australian tax system, which has a corporate tax rate of 30% for large companies. The denial of a deduction reduces the effectiveness of utilising low taxing countries to hold intangible assets.
A significant global entity is defined as an entity with annual global revenue of at least $1 billion.
For the purposes of the new anti-avoidance measure, a low- or no-tax jurisdiction is a jurisdiction with:
This measure delivers on the Labor government's election commitment as published in the Plan for a Better Future.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 16.
Certain tax information of significant global entities will be publicly disclosed by the ATO on a country by country basis. Significant global entities are currently required to lodge additional reports with the ATO, which includes a country by country report. The public disclosure may include new types of information not currently reported on, including a statement on their approach to taxation.
Public companies will be required to disclose to the public the number of subsidiaries they have and their tax domicile. This disclosure will apply to both listed and unlisted public companies.
To further improve tax transparency, government contract tenderers will be required to disclose their ultimate head entity’s country of tax residence for tenders above $200,000.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 17.
Proposed amendments to the debt/equity tax rules mentioned in the 2013–14 MYEFO will not proceed.
The amendments appear to refer to a measure first announced in the 2011–12 Budget which sought to limit the scope of an integrity provision in the debt/equity rules to prevent unintended outcomes. The then incoming Coalition government identified this measure as one that it intended to proceed with in the 2013–14 MYEFO, but it had since remained unenacted.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 18.
From 1 January 2023 the value of a Commonwealth penalty unit will increase from $222 to $275. The amount will continue to be indexed in accordance with the triennial Consumer Price Index (CPI) indexation regime introduced from 1 July 2017, with the next indexation occurring on 1 July 2023.
Penalty units are used to calculate the penalties for various tax offences including making false statements and failing to lodge documents on time. The increased penalty unit will apply to offences committed after the increase is given legislative effect.
This measure was included in the government's Plan for a Better Future election platform.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 6.
Funding will be provided to extend the Personal Income Taxation Compliance Program a further 2 years to 30 June 2025. Like the ATO Shadow Economy Program, this compliance program received funding in the 2021–22 MYEFO in December 2021 extending its application to 30 June 2023. This program targets the key areas of non-compliance, including overclaiming of deductions and incorrect reporting of income.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 11.
The ATO Shadow Economy Program will be extended for a further 3 years from 1 July 2023. Measures to address the shadow economy were first announced as part of the 2018–19 Budget and in response to the Black Economy Taskforce’s Final Report. Increased funding to extend this program to 30 June 2023 was previous announced in the 2021–22 MYEFO in December 2021.
This measure was included in the government's Plan for a Better Future election platform.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 12.
The ATO Tax Avoidance Taskforce will receive additional funding and be extended to 30 June 2026 supporting a broadening of priority areas of observed business tax risks, complementing the ongoing focus on multinational enterprises and large public and private businesses. This taskforce received funding in 2016 for an initial 4-year period to enhance then current compliance activities targeting large multinationals, private groups and high-wealth individuals, extending them to 30 June 2020. Further funding announced in the 2019– 20 Federal Budget extended the operation of the Taskforce to 2022–23. Compliance programs associated with this taskforce include the Top 100 Risk Categorisation Approach and Top 1,000 Tax Performance Program.
This measure was included in the government's Plan for a Better Future election platform.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 12.
Financial penalties for breaches that relate to foreign investment in residential land will double from 1 January 2023.
Fees paid by foreign persons for all applications made under the foreign investment framework were doubled from 29 July 2022. This announcement complements those increases by doubling the maximum financial penalties that can be applied for breaches in relation to residential land.
This measure was included in the government's Plan for a Better Future election platform.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 10.
Access to refunds of indirect tax, including GST, fuel and alcohol taxes, under the Indirect Tax Concession Scheme (ITCS) has been expanded to the diplomatic and consular representations of Bhutan.
Access to the ITCS for Bhutan has also been extended to include construction and renovation relating to their current and future diplomatic missions and consular posts.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 13.
The 2019–20 MYEFO in December 2019 announced an extension of the Taxable Payments Reporting System to the sharing economy. This reporting regime requires businesses providing online platforms within the sharing or gig economy to report identification and income information, of all sellers and providers using their platform, to the ATO for data-matching purposes. The implementation of the reporting requirements has generally been deferred by 12-months pending policy legislation and implementation as follows:
ride-sharing and short-term accommodation platforms — deferred to income years commencing from 1 July 2023 (previously from 1 July 2022. In August 2018 the ATO gazetted notice to collect, from online accommodation platforms, data to identify individuals providing accommodation services through an online platform for the period 1 July 2016 to 30 June 2020).
all other reportable transactions, including, but not limited to asset sharing, food delivery, task-based services — deferred to income years commencing from 1 July 2024 (previously from 1 July 2023).
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 18.
The Tax Practitioners Board (TPB) will be given $30.4 million to increase compliance investigations into high-risk practitioners and unregistered preparers over 4 years from 1 July 2023.
The TPB will use new risk engines to better identify tax practitioners who engage in poor and unlawful tax advice, to improve tax compliance and raise industry standards.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 20.
Additional funding will be provided to support the delivery of government priorities in the Treasury portfolio. This will include:
$2.7 million in 2022–23 for Treasury to support reviews of the Reserve Bank of Australia and the regulatory framework for managed investment schemes, and
support for ASIC to administer the financial adviser exam, to be partially cost recovered from examination fees (costs are not for publication due to commercial sensitivities).
Additionally, the Productivity Commission will review the current framework to incentivise philanthropy in the not-for-profit sector. The Department of Social Services will also work with the not-for-profit sector to develop a sector led not-for-profit Blueprint as a roadmap towards providing the not-for-profit sector with support and strategic direction to expand their services in future years.
The costs of this measure will be partially met from within the existing resourcing of the Treasury portfolio.
This measure will redirect partial funding from the Coalition government's 2022–23 Budget measure titled Insolvency Reform – continuation and savings identified as part of the Spending Audit.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, pp 193–194.
Australians for Indigenous Constitutional Recognition will be specifically listed as a deductible gift recipient (DGR) for donations made from 1 July 2022 to 30 June 2025.
The listing of the Australian Women Donors Network as a DGR will also be extended for 5 years, for gifts made from 9 March 2023 to 8 March 2028.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 17.
The 2021–22 MYEFO measure that proposed establishing a deductible gift recipient category for providers of pastoral care and analogous well-being services in schools will not proceed.
Source: Budget Paper No 2, p 19.
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