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ATO to unveil large business hit list, clamps down on Singapore hubs

EXCLUSIVE

The ATO has issued a warning to large businesses to come forward and discuss their Singapore hub arrangements.

The ATO has issued a warning to large businesses to come forward and discuss their Singapore hub arrangements. Photo: Alamy

Hundreds of millions of dollars of revenue could be up for grabs as the Tax Office announces reviews of multinationals using offshore hubs in Singapore to minimise their tax.

The ATO has issued a warning to multinationals to come forward immediately to discuss their overseas hub arrangements, if they have not done so already.

The warning comes as Tax Commissioner Chris Jordan  will begin publishing the tax details of the nation's largest public companies later this week, and the ATO outlines its specific areas of "compliance focus" for large businesses in 2015-16.

Fairfax Media has obtained a copy of a document that lists the ATO's key focus areas for the year ahead. Aside from hubs, areas on the hit list include the goods and services tax treatment of local and overseas transactions, multinational related-party or cross-border transactions, offshore deals involving secrecy jurisdictions, business restructures, and tax planning by wealthy individuals and their private groups.

Big revenue at stake

In a taxpayer alert issued this month, Deputy Commissioner Mark Konza said the overseas hubs were seen as a core tax revenue risk and the ATO would be using its controlled foreign company (CSC) rules, transfer pricing and anti-avoidance powers to investigate.

The recent Senate inquiry into corporate tax avoidance revealed that a number of companies (such as Google, Apple, Microsoft,  BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto) were under ATO audit for using hubs.

The amount of revenue at stake because of hub structures could amount to hundreds of millions of dollars, but it is unclear how much money the Tax Office will be able to recoup, given that the arrangements may be considered legitimate by Singapore's tax authority.

Clayton Utz tax partner Niv Tadmore said corporations should "constructively engage" with the ATO, but if Singapore's tax authority had a view that was different from the ATO's then the matter might end up as a tax revenue dispute. 

"Definitely, they could disagree on a lot of money, and there is a risk of double taxation," he said.

The ATO said it was focusing on multinationals which had split functions so that a "procurement hub" received services from a related offshore entity known as a "services hub".

These services were usually in exchange for a fee, which might be calculated as a percentage of sales or profits.

But the procurement hub "does not substantially transform the goods it buys on behalf of the [multinational enterprise]" and typically had few or no employees and assets, so there was "little or no commercial justification" for the separation of the procurement function into two separate entities.

The ATO was also concerned with the "substance and pricing of some of these arrangements from a transfer pricing perspective".

ATO may have to litigate

The ATO will also this week release its compliance focus for large businesses with revenue  more than $250 million for the year ahead. While the goal was to "resolve disputes early and quickly, litigation may be necessary where there is a contentious or uncertain point of law".

Tax planning by wealthy individuals and their private groups will come under its watch.

The ATO would check that correct GST was being paid on cross-border transactions, and that sharing economy services such as Uber and Airbnb, as well as large property developers, were meeting their GST obligations.

It would also ensure businesses were meeting the federal government's new requirements for GST on imported digital products and services, which take hold on July 1, 2017.

Compliance regarding other taxes paid on excise (alcohol, tobacco, fuel and energy) and the luxury car tax and wine equalisation tax would also be examined.

Cross-border deals under fire

To ensure multinational profit is not artificially shifted offshore, the ATO would continue its International Structuring and Profit Shifting (ISAPS) program.

This program has so far raised $250 million in liabilities and Tax Commissioner Chris Jordan has said it would hit $1 billion in assessments.

The ATO is looking closely at the "use of related-party or back-to-back cross-border activities" and "inappropriate application of thin capitalisation rules" and other related-party financing arrangements that result in tax deductions.

It was also looking at "trust schemes" used to conceal income and reduce tax, especially offshore dealings involving secrecy jurisdictions.

 Restructuring a company before its sale to a third party in order to reduce tax could spark anti-avoidance provisions. General business restructures such as mergers and acquisitions, demergers, share buy-backs and major divestments would also be examined, and th ATO would look at the "correct timing and calculation" of capital gains or losses following key events such as corporate restructures.

It would also look into private equity firms making investments in Australia, and assess the privatisation of public infrastructure.

Companies misusing the  research and development tax incentive regime and which had applied capital gains tax incorrectly would be looked at.

25 comments so far

  • Of course the Singaporeans think the arrangements are legitimate - they are creaming our tax revenue off the top. Shut em down - issue amended assessments with 75% penalty tax plus interest. It is none of Singapore's business - if they get shirty reintroduce tariffs on any goods supplied from Singapore hubs.

    Commenter
    rhw
    Location
    wahroonga
    Date and time
    December 14, 2015, 11:10AM
    • 1. Why has this taken until now before action?
      2. Can I pretty please negotiate with the ATO on how much tax I would like to pay?
      3. Still one set of rules for the BIG END OF TOWN and another for the poor burghers.

      Commenter
      Troppo
      Date and time
      December 14, 2015, 12:25PM
    • I agree with RHW.
      Here's a chance for our new PM to show that he wants some fairness in society. Hit these tax avoiders, not the poor workers who get slugged in income tax and GST every week. Surely this is something Malcolm can take up with the leaders of SIngapore?

      Commenter
      Bronte
      Location
      Bronte
      Date and time
      December 14, 2015, 1:16PM
    • If Chris Jordan is not given free reign or stopped from following his persuit of companies dodging their tax liabilities by either politicians, accountants or the major parties (read coal miners etc ) I believe every Australian would be correct in refusing to pay the present10pc sales tax, paye taxation and any otrher form of federal taxation until the government agrees to finally ending all corporate taxation that the australian people have been asking and waiting for since the John Howard government days. These institutions have been bleeding the aussie taxpayers for too long.

      Commenter
      Paul
      Location
      Canberra
      Date and time
      December 14, 2015, 2:15PM
    • Your suggestion makes perfect sense - it'll never happen! You don't get to listen to the lobbying that goes on behind closed doors.

      Commenter
      Payback
      Location
      Sydney
      Date and time
      December 14, 2015, 3:49PM
  • The Federal Government needs to back the ATO 100% and if that means legislation changes then so be it. We keep hearing talk but very little real action.

    Commenter
    Had Enuff
    Date and time
    December 14, 2015, 12:10PM
    • If any of these companies are found guilty and they don't pay up we don't have to argue with Singapore. All the ATO does is seize the Australian-based assets and sell them off to pay the bill. It's no big deal. Singapore, via Temasek Holdings, might be able to increase their Oz portfolio at bargain prices.

      Commenter
      Arthur McKenzie
      Location
      Canberra
      Date and time
      December 14, 2015, 12:24PM
      • Why not just stop Internet IP traffic from/to their domains and shut them down until they comply.

        Drastic? Perhaps, but something drastic needs to be done to curb their behaviour.

        Commenter
        Richard
        Date and time
        December 14, 2015, 9:02PM
    • The profits from sales Apple and Google make to Australian-based customers should be booked as profit here in Australia, and tax paid upon these profits here.
      And exactly how many mines does BHP or Rio Tinto have operating on the island of Singapore? We get the environmental damage and the legal and policing costs of protecting these companies' assets in a well-ordered society; the tax haven gets a slice of the profits.
      I get that countries who are sick of a one-way brain-drain will try to keep the revenue generated by the work of the people they have educated in their country. That is why Ireland's lower tax rate is legitimate: for too long their most valuable export was their highly educated citizens. They have made their country attractive to knowledge-based companies, and I believe this is legitimate competition.
      But hubs like Singapore and the Cayman Islands for that matter are simply creaming off other people's efforts. I presume they figure 5% of large amounts in profits is better than 25% of no amounts, as most of these companies would simply have no presence in these jurisdictions if they weren't tax havens.

      Commenter
      PRA
      Date and time
      December 14, 2015, 12:57PM
      • Or we could ensure that we are internationally competitive with our overall tax take by elimination the wasteful churn in the system where middle class taxpayers pay in, the bureaucracy consumes 30% of the revenue and then we pay it out to the taxpayer again....
        The problem is that universal healthcare, education and welfare for the middle class is wasteful. Let people keep their own money like in Singapore where you have not only lower general taxation but concessionally taxed retirement accounts and also health accounts......
        In relation to health this has a major advantage in that consumers make the choice on what they spend which puts cost discipline in the system which is sorely lacking in Australia.
        The real difficulty that the ATO has with transfer pricing is that they have to determine what is a fair return for the services done out of Singapore.......wouldn't it be better to have a globally competitive tax and transfer payments system so that we could compete and those jobs and profits would come here......?
        No we would prefer to run an expensive wasteful bloated bureaucracy, have higher taxes and lower growth, continue to run up deficits for our children to pay off and tell people they don'y have to compete globally and that the govt. can just keep borrowing....

        Commenter
        Rob. W.
        Location
        FNQ
        Date and time
        December 14, 2015, 1:06PM

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