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Home International Customs

Australian Tax Office signals massive tax windfall for the wealthy

byCT Report
04/07/2017
in International Customs
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CANBERRA: The Australian Taxation Office may open the floodgates for family investment companies across the country to claim back hundreds of millions of dollars in company tax, after issuing a landmark ruling that signals a flood of future refunds. The likely refunds would extend tax cuts implemented for active trading companies earning up to $25 million in income to passive family investment vehicles that are designed to warehouse, or retain, family wealth, reports The Australian.

In the past two years, the federal government has reduced the company tax rate for smaller companies by 2.5 per cent to its current level of 27.5 per cent. The ATO’s ruling could mean massive refunds and ongoing reductions for hundreds of thousands of passive family investment companies. For example, one warehousing $1m of taxable income per year could save $25,000 for each tax year. BDO senior tax partner Tony Sloan told The Australian that the change is “massive.” “Everyone is talking about it. It affects a lot of our clients,” he said. There could, however, be issues if family companies don’t plan their affairs properly. Mr Sloan saidthat mum-and-dad shareholders of low-tax companies could be hit if the companies chose to distribute fully franked dividends to them.

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However, he said many of those types of companies and their shareholders would benefit from the new ruling, particularly wealthy families, as their companies tended to warehouse profits “over years and decades”, and were frequently used as a form of “family bank”. When the tax cuts were announced a few years ago, it was made clear they would only apply to companies that carried on a business. However, the ATO has taken a much more generous stance than expected for passive family companies. Its draft ruling states that “generally, where a company is established or maintained to make profit or gain for its shareholders it is likely to carry on business … This is so even if the company only holds passive investments, and its activities consist of receiving rents or returns on its investments and distributing them to shareholders.”

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