TR 2005/2: Income tax: the meaning of
'foreign income' in subsection 6AB(1) of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936 - inclusion of statutory income
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Date |
Version |
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9 February 2005 |
Original
ruling |
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You are
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29 November 2006 |
Original
ruling + note |
Repeal provision note |
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What this Ruling is about |
1 |
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Date of effect |
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Related Rulings |
4 |
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Ruling |
5 |
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Explanation |
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Alternative views |
19 |
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Examples |
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Detailed contents list |
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Preamble
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The
number, subject heading, What
this Ruling is about (including Class
of person/arrangement section), Date
of effect, and Ruling parts
of this document are a 'public ruling' for the
purposes of Part
IVAAA of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 and
are legally binding on the Commissioner.
Taxation Rulings TR 92/1 and TR 97/16 together
explain when a Ruling is a 'public ruling' and
how it is binding on the Commissioner. |
What this Ruling is about
1. This Ruling considers whether the term 'foreign
income' defined in subsection 6AB(1) of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA
1936) covers statutory income amounts not specifically
listed in the definition.
Class of Persons/Arrangements
2. This Ruling applies to taxpayers who derive income
from sources in a foreign country that is included in
their assessable income under a statutory provision.
Date of effect
3. This Ruling applies to years of income commencing
both before and after its date of issue. However, the
Ruling does not apply to taxpayers to the extent that it
conflicts with the terms of settlement of a dispute
agreed to before the date of issue of the Ruling (see
paragraphs 21 and 22 of Taxation Ruling TR 92/20).
Related Rulings
4. Taxation Ruling IT 2562: foreign tax credit system:
interaction of foreign tax credit provisions with
capital gains and capital losses provisions of Part IIIA.
Ruling
5. The word 'income' in the definition of foreign income
in subsection 6AB(1) of the ITAA 1936 is to be
interpreted widely. It can include both income according
to ordinary concepts (whether assessable or not) and
amounts included in assessable income under a statutory
provision. However, the term does not encompass net
capital gains included in a taxpayer's assessable income
under Part 3-1 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA
1997) except for the purposes of applying Division 18 of
Part III of the ITAA 1936, as provided for in subsection
160AE(2).
Explanation
Background
6. The term 'foreign income' is defined in subsection
6AB(1) of the ITAA 1936 as follows:
Foreign income is income (including eligible
termination payments as defined in subsection
27A(1)) derived from sources in a foreign country or
foreign countries, and includes a reference to an
amount included in assessable income under section
26D, 27CAA, 102AAZD, 456, 457, 459A or 529.
7. 'Foreign income', as defined, is relevant in the
context of the foreign tax credit provisions in Division
18 of Part III of the ITAA 1936 and for applying the
foreign loss quarantining rule in section 79D of the
ITAA 1936. Notably, subsection 6AB(1) was enacted
contemporaneously with the foreign tax credits regime.
Division 18 was inserted into the ITAA 1936 to replace
the various unilateral double taxation relief
arrangements of the income tax law with a world-wide
general foreign tax credit system.1
'Income' in
subsection 6AB(1)
8. The reference to 'income' in the definition is to be
interpreted broadly to include both income according to
ordinary concepts (whether assessable or not) and
amounts that become income under a statutory provision.
9. This interpretation accords with the object and
intent of the provision as set out in the Explanatory
Memorandum to its introduction as part of the Tax
Laws Amendment (Foreign Tax Credit) Act 1986 .
It states that:
Sub-section 6AB(1) provides that a reference to
'foreign income' is a reference to income derived
from sources in a foreign country or more than one
foreign country. It ensures that all
income derived
from sources out of Australia will be subject to the
provisions of the Principal Act. Specific detailed
rules have not been included for this purpose, and
the source of income will be determined on the same
basis as under the existing income tax laws. [ emphasis
added ]
10. Subsection 6AB(1) is one example of a provision
where the term 'income' is used broadly to cover both
ordinary income and amounts that become income under a
statutory provision. Another example is section 23L of
the ITAA 1936. This section provides that when a
taxpayer derives income by way of the provision of a
fringe benefit, then the benefit is exempt from income
tax. The term 'income' in this context must refer to
statutory income if the provision is to have any
practical application. Fringe benefits would generally
be included in a taxpayer's assessable income under
paragraph 26(e) of the ITAA 1936 and not as income
according to ordinary concepts.
'Foreign income'
includes net capital gains for the purposes of Division
18 only
11. While the Commissioner considers that the term
'income' in subsection 6AB(1) can include both ordinary
income and amounts included in assessable income under a
statutory provision, the definition only extends to
foreign-sourced capital gains included in a taxpayer's
assessable income under Part 3-1 of the ITAA 1997 for
the purposes of applying the foreign credit provisions
in Division 18 of Part III of the ITAA 1936.
12. Capital gains have always been distinguished from
income under the general operation of the income tax
law, and it is this distinction that led to the
particular treatment given to gains and profits of a
capital nature under the foreign tax credits regime.
Capital gains (other than gains on revenue account) are
taxed under a separate and somewhat self-contained
regime in Part 3-1 and 3-3 of the ITAA 1997.
13. However, where a taxpayer's net capital gain
consists of gains and profits of a capital nature that
are derived from sources in a foreign country, such
gains are deemed to be 'foreign income' (within the
meaning of subsection 6AB(1)), for the purposes of
applying Division 18 (other than section 160AFD), by
subsection 160AE(2). The inclusion of subsection
160AE(2) in Division 18 thereby expands the definition
of 'foreign income' in subsection 6AB(1) to include
foreign-sourced gains and profits of a capital nature,
where appropriate, for the purposes of Division 18 only.
This points to an interpretation that foreign-sourced
capital gains are not otherwise included in the
definition of 'foreign income' in subsection 6AB(1). The
definition of 'foreign income' must never have been
intended to include foreign-sourced capital gains.
Otherwise, the specific provision in subsection 160AE(2)
would not have any practical effect.
14. If foreign-sourced capital gains were to be treated
as 'foreign income' for the purposes of the Act as a
whole, a conflict would arise between the provisions in
Part 3-1 of the ITAA 1997 which quarantine net capital
losses and section 79D of the ITAA 1936 which
quarantines foreign income losses.
15. The view that the definition of 'foreign income' in
subsection 6AB(1) does not include net capital gains
assessed under Part 3-1, except as provided for in
subsection 160AE(2), accords with the position expressed
in Taxation Ruling IT 2562 at paragraph 3.2
Foreign tax - supporting meaning
16. The term 'foreign tax' is also broadly defined.
Subsection 6AB(2) states that:
A reference in this Act to foreign tax is a
reference to:
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(a)
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tax imposed by a law of a
foreign country, being:
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(i)
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tax upon income; or
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(ii)
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tax upon profits or
gains, whether of an income or
capital nature; or
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(iii)
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(Repealed by No 96 of
2004)
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(iv)
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any other tax, being
a tax that is subject to an
agreement having the force of law
under the International Tax
Agreements Act 1953.
...
17. The definition of 'foreign tax' refers to tax paid
on income and profits or gains under a law of a foreign
country. The definition is intended to be as broad as
possible to cover all possible taxes imposed by the law
of a foreign country on income that may be subject to
tax in Australia.3 The
definition must therefore cover amounts that are
included in a taxpayer's assessable income either as
ordinary or statutory income and enables tax paid on
those amounts to fall within the definition of 'foreign
tax'.
18. Read in conjunction with the definition of 'foreign
income' in subsection 6AB(1), the broad definition of
'foreign tax' supports the view that 'foreign income' is
also to be broadly interpreted.
Alternative views
19. There is an argument that the definition of foreign
income in subsection 6AB(1) should be limited to income
according to ordinary concepts (called ordinary income)
and those amounts of statutory income specifically
referred to in the subsection (such as assessable
amounts under section 456 of the ITAA 1936). As such,
other amounts of statutory income not specifically
referred to, such as attributed personal services
income, do not fall within the definition of foreign
income.
20. It is argued that the view is supported by the
statutory construction of subsection 6AB(1). The first
part of the definition of foreign income states that 'a
reference in this Act to foreign income is a reference
to income (including eligible termination payments as
defined in subsection 27A(1)) derived from sources in a
foreign country or foreign countries...'. It is argued
that the words 'income derived' in this context should
be read as being limited to ordinary income. Therefore,
amounts specifically included in a taxpayer's assessable
income under a statutory income provision such as
subsection 86-15(1) that cannot be characterised as
ordinary income fall outside the first part of the
definition of foreign income. Notably, section 6-5
refers to 'ordinary income that is derived' whilst there
is no corresponding requirement in section 6-10 for
statutory income to be derived. The argument is that
only ordinary income can be 'derived'.
21. It is further argued that the second part of the
definition of foreign income complements the narrow view
of the base definition of foreign income by 'including'
certain amounts of assessable income that constitute
statutory income. It is argued that because a number of
specific sections creating statutory income are referred
to expressly, by implication, other kinds of statutory
income are excluded.
22. The Commissioner disagrees with the view that the
base definition of 'foreign income' should be limited to
ordinary income for a number of reasons.
23. Firstly, the reference to the phrase 'income derived
from sources in a foreign country' was intended to be
interpreted broadly to include all forms of income,
including statutory income - see paragraphs 8 to 10 of
the explanation.
24. Secondly, the word 'derived' in the context of
subsection 6AB(1) should not be read to refer only to
amounts of ordinary income. It is relatively common to
use 'derived' in reference to income generally. In some
cases the usage is a reference to amounts included in
assessable income generally, such as section 79D (except
capital gains), and in other contexts, it may have
different meanings, such as in section 128B where it
refers to dividends and royalties which may not be
ordinary income (see section 128A(1AA) which covers
non-assessable, non exempt income under section 128D).
'Derived' is also used in relation to profits in a
number of provisions which may go beyond ordinary income
(for example, section 44(1) of ITAA 1936 and section
110-55(7) of the ITAA 1997). Similarly it is used in
relation to 'income, profits or gains' as in section
96C. In this particular context, the ATO considers that
'income derived' is a shorthand reference to an amount
that is treated as some form of income for the purposes
of income tax. The focus of the provision is on source,
not the nature of income. The one exception is capital
gains for reasons explained in paragraphs 11 to 15.
25. Thirdly, the ATO does not accept the view that the
specific inclusion of some statutory provisions by
implication excludes other kinds of statutory income not
referred to. The inclusion by subsequent amendments of
references to specific sections in subsection 6AB(1) was
to deal with cases where it was desired to characterise
an amount as foreign income, but the kind of income in
question may in some cases have been Australian sourced
under the judicial rules of source. In other words, the
references to specific provisions are intended to deem
the relevant income to be foreign where it is not,
rather than deem it to be ordinary income where it is
not.
26. This interpretation is supported in the Explanatory
Memorandum to the Income Tax Assessment Amendment
(Foreign Investment) Bill 1992 at Chapter 22 which
states:
With the introduction of the CFC measures, the FTCS
was modified and certain new exemptions were
introduced for the purposes of relief from double
taxation.
Credit is available to a resident company for tax
paid by a related CFC against any amount of the
CFC's attributable income that is included in the
resident company's assessable income. The credit is
allowed on a similar basis as credit is allowed for
taxes paid on dividends received by a resident
company from a related foreign company.
Amounts of income of the CFC that have already been
taxed in full in Australia - for example, Australian
sourced income derived by a branch of the CFC and
taxed by assessment in Australia - are excluded from
the calculation of the CFC's attributable income.
Attributed income is treated as foreign income. The
foreign tax and Australian tax paid by the CFC on
that amount are creditable foreign taxes. This
effectively allows any Australian withholding tax
paid by the CFC to be creditable on attribution for
foreign tax credit purposes if the resident taxpayer
is entitled to a foreign tax credit.
The wording in the Explanatory Memorandum serves to
explain the reasons for the references to those specific
attribution sections under the CFC measures.
27. In addition, the reference to eligible termination
payments as defined in subsection 27A(1) and section
27CAA were inserted into subsection 6AB(1) by Taxation
Laws Amendment Act (No. 4) 1994 which
introduced the current international rules in relation
to the taxation of superannuation fund payments. These
sections apply to certain payments by eligible
non-resident non-complying superannuation funds. Under
the definition of resident superannuation fund in
section 6E, it is possible for a fund which is mainly
based in Australia to be treated as a non-resident
superannuation fund and hence to make payments caught by
section 27CAA which are Australian sourced in accordance
with the principles in IT 2168 paragraph 45 (because the
fund is based in Australia). As these payments may be
taxed overseas it is necessary to deem them to be
foreign-sourced in order to allow a foreign tax credit
for the foreign tax.
Examples
Example 1
28. Jody, an Australian resident for tax purposes, is a
computer programmer. Jody is the director, sole
shareholder and sole employee of an Australian resident
company, Techo Pty Ltd (Techo). Techo enters into a
contract with a Hong Kong company, Ficus Ltd (Ficus) to
provide the services of Jody. Jody performs the services
in Hong Kong for 6 months under the contract and in
return, Ficus pays fees to Techo for Jody's services on
a monthly basis. Techo promptly pays Jody a monthly
salary equal to half the fees derived.
29. The fee paid to Techo by Ficus constitutes the
personal services income of Jody under section 84-5 of
the ITAA 1997, Assuming that Techo does not satisfy any
of the personal services business tests set out in
section 87-15 of the ITAA 1997, the balance of the fees
derived by Techo (assuming there are no allowable
deductions), ie. the amount not paid to Jody as salary,
is included in Jody's assessable income under subsection
86-15(1) of the ITAA 1997.
30. Provided that the statutory income included in
Jody's assessable income under subsection 86-15(1) of
the ITAA 1997 is derived from sources in a foreign
country, based on the judicial rules of source, the
amount will be considered to be 'foreign income' of Jody
for the purposes of subsection 6AB(1) of the ITAA 1936.
Example 2
31. Ronald, an Australian resident for tax purposes,
operates a building and construction business in New
Caledonia. As part of that business, Ronald acquires a
crane for $900,000 on 1 July 2001. The crane is utilised
by the business from the date of acquisition until
Ronald disposes of the crane by selling it on 30 June
2003 for $900,000. If the effective life of the crane is
15 years, and Ronald chooses to use the prime cost
method to work out the crane's decline in value', the
adjustable value of the crane (worked out under Division
40 of the ITAA 1997) at the date of disposal is
$780,000. Ronald must therefore include a balancing
adjustment amount of $120,000 in his assessable income
for the 2003 income year, being the difference between
the adjustable value and the termination value
($900,000) of the crane.
32. The amount is included in Ronald's assessable income
under subsection 40-285(1) of the ITAA 1997. Provided
this amount is derived from sources in a foreign
country, based on judicial rules of source, the amount
will be considered to be 'foreign income' for the
purposes of subsection 6AB(1) of the ITAA 1936.
Detailed contents list
33. Below is a detailed contents list for this Taxation
Ruling:
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Paragraph |
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What this Ruling is about |
1 |
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Class of person/arrangements |
2 |
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Date of effect |
3 |
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Related Rulings |
4 |
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Ruling |
5 |
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Explanation |
6 |
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Background |
6 |
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' Income'
in subsection 6AB(1) |
8 |
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' Foreign
income' includes net capital gains for the
purposes of Division 18 only |
11 |
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Foreign tax - supporting meaning |
16 |
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Alternative views |
19 |
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Examples |
28 |
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Example 1 |
28 |
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Example 2 |
31 |
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Detailed contents list |
33 |
Commissioner of Taxation
9 February 2005
Footnotes
[1]
1 See Explanatory Memorandum to Taxation Laws Amendment
(Foreign Tax Credits) Bill 1986.
[2]
2 The Income
Tax Assessment Amendment (Capital Gains) Act 1986 which
introduced the CGT regime indicated in a variety of
other ways that capital gains were not to be regarded as
'income' under the ITAA 1936. For example, certain
exemptions of income in Division 1 of Part III of the
ITAA 1936 were not applicable to capital gains and were
therefore necessarily replicated to some extent within
the CGT regime itself, via section 160K, the definition
of 'relevant exempting provision', and section 160Z(8)
of the 1936 Act. In the 1997 Act, the similar exemptions
in Division 50 apply to ordinary income and statutory
income so there was no need to repeat them in Part 3-1
or 3-3. The one exception was section 23(q) which was
amended in 1986 to exempt capital gains as well as
income. That provision was repealed with effect from 1
July 1987 with the introduction of the foreign tax
credit system.
[3]
3 For further guidance on amounts covered by the
definition of 'foreign tax', refer to Taxation Ruling IT
2507 and Taxation Ruling IT 2437.
Previously released in draft form as TR 2004/D13
References
ATO references:
NO 2004/8798
ISSN: 1039-0731
Related Rulings/Determinations:
TR 92/20
IT 2168
IT 2437
IT 2507
IT 2562
Subject References:
assessable income
foreign income
statutory income
Legislative References:
TAA 1953 Part IVAAA
ITAA 1936 6AB(1)
ITAA 1936 6AB(2)
ITAA 1936 Pt III Div 1
ITAA 1936 23L
ITAA 1936 26(e)
ITAA 1936 26D
ITAA 1936 27A(1)
ITAA 1936 27CAA
ITAA 1936 44
ITAA 1936 44(1)
ITAA 1936 79D
ITAA 1936 102AAZD
ITAA 1936 128A(1AA)
ITAA 1936 128B
ITAA 1936 128D
ITAA 1936 Pt III Div 18
ITAA 1936 160AE(2)
ITAA 1936 160AFD
ITAA 1936 160K
ITAA 1936 160OZ(8)
ITAA 1936 456
ITAA 1936 457
ITAA 1936 459A
ITAA 1936 529
ITAA 1997 Pt 3-1
ITAA 1997 Pt 3-3
ITAA 1997 6-5
ITAA 1997 6-10
ITAA 1997 Div 40
ITAA 1997 40-285(1)
ITAA 1997 Div 50
ITAA 1997 84-5
ITAA 1997 86-15(1)
ITAA 1997 87-15
ITAA 1997 110-55(7)
Taxation Laws Amendment Act (No. 4) 1994
Other References
Explanatory Memorandum to its introduction as part of
the Tax Laws Amendment (Foreign Tax Credit) Act 1986
Explanatory Memorandum to the Income Tax Assessment
Amendment (Foreign Investment) Bill 1992
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