TR 2007/2: Income tax:
application of the same business test to consolidated and MEC groups
- principally, the interaction between section 165-210 and
section 701-1 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
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LEGALLY BINDING SECTION: |
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What this Ruling is about |
1 |
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Definitions |
9 |
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Ruling |
12 |
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Examples |
20 |
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Date of effect |
60 |
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NOT LEGALLY BINDING SECTION: |
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Appendix 1: Explanation |
61 |
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Appendix 2: Alternative views |
75 |
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Appendix 3: Detailed contents list |
99 |
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This
publication provides you with the following level of
protection:
This publication (excluding appendixes) is a public
ruling for the purposes of the Taxation
Administration Act 1953.
A public ruling is an expression of the Commissioner's
opinion about the way in which a relevant provision
applies, or would apply, to entities generally or to a
class of entities in relation to a particular scheme or
a class of schemes.
If you rely on this ruling, we must apply the law to you
in the way set out in the ruling (unless we are
satisfied that the ruling is incorrect and disadvantages
you, in which case we may apply the law in a way that is
more favourable for you - provided we are not prevented
from doing so by a time limit imposed by the law). You
will be protected from having to pay any underpaid tax,
penalty or interest in respect of the matters covered by
this ruling if it turns out that it does not correctly
state how the relevant provision applies to you. |
What this Ruling is about
1. This Ruling sets out the Commissioner's views on how the same
business test applies in the context of determining whether
deductions are available to the head company of a consolidated
group in respect of:
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prior year tax losses;
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bad debts;
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net capital losses; or
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foreign losses.
2. This Ruling also sets out the Commissioner's views on the
application of the same business test to head companies that are
required to determine whether they calculate their taxable
income and tax loss, or net capital gain and net capital loss,
for an income year under Subdivision 165-B or Subdivision 165-CB
of theIncome Tax Assessment Act
1997 (ITAA 1997).
These views on the same business test are also relevant in terms
of the application of Subdivision 165-CC of the ITAA 1997 to a
head company.
3. Unless otherwise specified:
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all legislative references in this Ruling
relate to the ITAA 1997; and
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all references to tax losses include a
reference to tax losses, net capital losses, foreign
losses or bad debts.
Key consolidation concepts
4. Subsection 701-1(1) provides that, for the head company core
purposes, an entity which is a subsidiary member of a
consolidated group for any period, and any other subsidiary
member of the group, are taken to be parts of the head company
during that period. This is the 'single entity rule'.
5. Subsection 701-1(2) sets out the head company core purposes
to which subsection 701-1(1) refers. In terms of
subsection 701-1(2), the head company core purposes are working
out the amount of the head company's liability (if any) for
income tax calculated by reference to any income year in which
any of the period occurs or any later income year, and working
out the amount of the head company's loss (if any) for any such
income year.
6. Taxation Ruling TR 2004/11: Income tax: consolidation: the
meaning and application of the single entity rule in Part 3-90
of the ITAA 1997, explains the meaning and application of the
'single entity rule'.
7. Section 701-5 provides that, for the head company core
purposes in relation to the period after an entity becomes a
subsidiary member of the group, everything that happened in
relation to the entity before it became a subsidiary member is
taken to have happened in relation to the head company. This is
the 'entry history rule'. However, section 165-212E provides:
For the purposes of the *same business test, if an entity
(the joining
entity )
becomes a *subsidiary member of a *consolidated group or a *MEC
group, section 701-5 (the entry history rule) does not
operate to take the *business of the *head company of the
group to include the business of the joining entity before
it become a *member of the group.
Section 165-212E applies from 1 July 2002.1
Class of entities/Scheme
8. This Ruling applies to:
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(a)
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the head company of a consolidated group
or a multiple entry consolidated (MEC) group that is
seeking a deduction for a prior year tax loss, foreign
loss or the application of a net capital loss, or a
deduction for a bad debt in a year of income in which
the head company is unable to demonstrate that the
requirements of the continuity of ownership test in
section 165-12 or section 165-123 (as appropriate) are
satisfied;
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(b)
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the head company of a consolidated group
or a MEC group that is required to calculate its taxable
income or tax loss under Subdivision 165-B, or net
capital gain or net capital loss under
Subdivision 165-CB;
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(c)
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the head company of a consolidated group
or a MEC group that has an unrealised net loss at the
time of a change of ownership or control and must
determine, in accordance with Subdivision 165-CC,
whether that unrealised net loss will restrict the
extent to which a future capital loss or revenue loss
can be taken into account; and
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(d)
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the head company of a consolidated group
or a MEC group that has accumulated tax losses or net
capital losses at the time that it is acquired by
another consolidated group and is seeking to determine
the extent to which those losses can be transferred to
the head company of the new consolidated group
(Subdivision 707-A).
Definitions
9. In this Ruling the terms 'same
business test' , 'new
business test' and 'new
transactions test' have
the meanings adopted in Taxation Ruling TR 1999/9: Income tax:
the operation of sections 165-13 and 165-210, paragraph
165-35(b), section 165-126 and section 165-132. Those terms are
discussed in the Ruling section of TR 1999/9 and the relevant
paragraphs are set out below.
11. Subsections 165-210(1) and 165-210(2) include three
tests, each of which must be satisfied by a company in order
for the company to meet the requirements of section 165-13
and section 165-210 and thereby not be prevented by section
165-10 from deducting prior year losses. The first test is
in subsection 165-210(1) and comprises a positive
requirement that the company carry on at all times during
the period of recoupment the same business as the business
that it carried on at the change-over. The second and third
tests are in subsection 165-210(2) and they comprise the
respective negative requirements that the taxpayer does not
carry on certain businesses and does not enter into certain
transactions during the period of recoupment.
12. The requirement in section 165-13 and subsection
165-210(1) ... is referred to in this Ruling as the 'same
business test'. For the purpose of the same business test, a
company is treated as carrying on one overall business at
the change-over and during the period of recoupment since
the reference to 'business' in the same business test is a
reference to all of the activities carried on by the company
at the change-over and during the period of recoupment,
irrespective of whether those activities constitute or are
treated by the company as constituting separate or distinct
activities, enterprises, divisions or undertakings carried
on by the company.
13. In the same business test, the meaning of the word
'same' in the phrase 'same business as' imports identity and
not merely similarity; the phrase 'same business as' is to
be read as referring to the same business, in the sense of
the identical business. However, this does not mean
identical in all respects: what is required is the
continuation of the actual business carried on immediately
before the change-over. Nevertheless, it is not sufficient
that the business carried on after the change-over meets
some industry wide definition of a business of the same
kind; nor would it be sufficient for there to be mere
continuance of business operations from immediately before
the change-over into the period of recoupment, if the
business had so changed that it could no longer be described
as the same business. The analysis of whether the same
business continues after the change-over may give rise to
questions of degree and ultimately depends on the facts of
the case. In making the analysis it needs to be acknowledged
that a company may expand or contract its activities without
necessarily ceasing to carry on the same business. The
organic growth of a business through the adoption of new
compatible operations will not ordinarily cause it to fail
the same business test provided the business retains its
identity; nor would discarding, in the ordinary way,
portions of its old operations. But, if through a process of
evolution a business changes its essential character, or
there is a sudden and dramatic change in the business
brought about by either the acquisition or the loss of
activities on a considerable scale, a company may fail the
test.
14. The requirement in subsections 165-13 and 165-210(2) ...
relating to 'business of a kind' is referred to in this
Ruling as the 'new business test'. In the new business test
there is a reference to 'business of a kind' that the
company did not carry on before the change-over. In the new
business test the word 'business' has a different meaning
from the word 'business' in the same business test; it
refers to each kind of enterprise or undertaking comprised
in the overall business carried on by the company at the
change-over and during the period of recoupment. The new
business test puts a limit on the type of expansion the
company may undertake if it is to retain the benefit of
accumulated losses; for the taxpayer may not engage in an
undertaking or enterprise of a kind in which it did not
engage before the change-over and still benefit from
accumulated losses.
15. The requirement in section 165-13 and
subsection 165-210(2) ... relating to a 'transaction of a
kind' not entered into in the course of the taxpayer's
business operations is referred to in this Ruling as the
'new transactions test'. The new transactions test is
directed to preventing the injection of income into a loss
company that has satisfied the same business test and the
new business test. The new transactions test includes all
transactions entered into in the course of the company's
business operations and not merely those that are 'isolated'
or 'independent'. However, generally speaking, the new
transactions test is not failed by transactions of a type
that are usually unmotivated by tax avoidance, namely,
transactions that could have been entered into ordinarily
and naturally in the course of the business operations
carried on by the company before the change-over.
Conversely, a transaction entered into during the period of
recoupment and which is outside the course of the business
operations before the change-over, or which is extraordinary
or unnatural when judged by the course of the business
operations before the change-over, is usually a transaction
of a different kind from the transactions actually entered
into by the company before the change-over.
16. The content of the word 'kind' in the new transactions
test and the new business test, when applied in a particular
case, is to be derived from the course of the company's
business operations before the change-over. A transaction
from which income is derived during the period of
recoupment, which could have been entered into before the
change-over in the course of the company's business
operations, and which is neither extraordinary nor unnatural
in the context of the business carried on by the company at
the change-over, is generally a transaction of the same kind
as transactions actually entered into by the company before
the change-over.
17. In the new transactions test, 'transaction' refers to
any operation or dealing from which income directly or
indirectly flows or arises, and a company enters into a
transaction for the purposes of the new transactions test if
it engages or participates in it. The new transactions test
is intended to extend to every means by which a company may
derive income, including transactions of a passive or
investment character. The words 'business operations' refer
to everything that a company undertakes or does; together,
the business operations constitute the business, meaning the
overall business, of the company.
18. The word 'income' in subsection 165-210(2) does not
include amounts that are 'de minimis'.2
10. Both 'test
time' and 'same
business test period' are
defined in various provisions of the ITAA 1997, and for the
purpose of this Ruling those phrases take the meanings:
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(a)
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specified in section 165-13 when
considering deductions for prior year tax losses,
foreign losses, the application of prior year net
capital losses and the determination of whether or not
unrealised net losses will limit the extent to which
capital or revenue losses can be taken into account;
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(b)
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specified in section 165-35 when working
out the taxable income or tax loss, or the net capital
gain or net capital loss, for an income year during
which the head company has not maintained the same
ownership and control;
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(c)
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specified in section 165-126 when
considering deductions for bad debts; and
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(d)
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specified in section 707-125 or section
707-135 when considering the extent to which previously
unutilised losses can be transferred to the head company
of a consolidated group that has acquired another
company with unutilised losses.
11. A reference in this Ruling to a consolidated group should be
read as including a MEC (multiple entry consolidated) group.
Ruling
The same business test and the single entity rule
12. If in respect of a particular year of income the head
company of a consolidated group has failed a relevant continuity
of ownership test, then the same business test in section
165-210 will be relevant when calculating taxable income to
determine the income tax liability of the head company. The
single entity rule therefore will apply in this context (refer
to section 701-1 and TR 2004/11).
13. The conditions to be satisfied under the same business test
are explained in TR 1999/9 and relevant paragraphs have been
reproduced at paragraph 9 of the Definitions section of this
Ruling. Broadly speaking, the same business test in section
165-210 is satisfied by a company where at all times during the
same business test period:
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it carried on the same business (meaning
the business of the company as an entirety, or its
'overall business') that it carried on immediately
before the appropriate test time (subsection
165-210(1));
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it did not carry on any business (meaning
a particular undertaking or enterprise) other than a
business of a kind carried on before the test time as
part of the overall business (subsection 165-210(2));
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it only derived income from transactions
of a kind that it entered into in the course of the
overall business before the test time (subsection
165-210(2)); and
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the anti-avoidance provisions in
subsection 165-210(3) do not apply.
14. Under the single entity rule of subsection 701-1(1),
subsidiary members of a consolidated group are taken for the
purposes of the same business test (section 165-210) (among
other purposes), to be parts of the head company. In this
context, the principles set out in TR 1999/9 in respect of the
application of the same business test to a single company apply
equally to the head company of a consolidated group.
15. When determining the one overall business carried on by the
head company of a consolidated group for the purposes of
subsection 165-210(1) it is necessary to have regard to the
activities of the subsidiary members of the group. Applying the
principles of TR 1999/9, one overall business of the head
company is to be identified by examining all of the activities,
enterprises or undertakings carried on:
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at the appropriate test time by all those
entities that were members of the consolidated group at
that time; and
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by all entities during that part of the
same business test period when they were members of the
consolidated group.
16. When applying the new business test and new transactions
test to the head company (subsection 165-210(2)), regard must be
had to the enterprises, undertakings and transactions that were
carried on or entered into before the test time by entities
while they were members of the consolidated group. These
activities are then compared with the enterprises, undertakings
and transactions carried on or entered into by all entities
while they are members of the consolidated group during the same
business test period. This comparison determines whether the
enterprises, undertakings and transactions before the test time
and during the same business test period are different in kind.
17. In relation to the new business and new transactions tests,
it is not necessary that a business carried on or a transaction
entered into during the same business test period by an entity
in the group be of a kind carried on by that same entity
before the test time. In accordance with the operation of the
single entity rule, where an entity within the group undertook a
business or transaction of that kind before the test time when
that entity was a member of the consolidated group, the new
business or new transactions test will be satisfied.
18. Activities, undertakings and enterprises taking place within
a consolidated group (not involving the derivation of income
through dealings outside the group) will be relevant for
characterising the business of the head company. This will be
the case notwithstanding the fact that individual transactions
between group members will not be recognised as happening under
the same business test because of the single entity rule which
treats group members as parts of the head company for the
purpose of determining its income tax liability. The relevance
of intra-group activities and transactions for the same business
test is described further in the Explanation section of this
Ruling and illustrated by Examples 3 and 6 of this Ruling.
Section 165-212E and the entry history rule
19. Working together, section 165-212E and the entry history
rule in section 701-5 operate in such a way that the activities
of an entity during any period when that entity was not a member
of a consolidated group are ignored when determining either the
'business' of the head company of a consolidated group, or
whether the new business test or the new transactions test have
been satisfied.
Examples
20. The examples set out in paragraphs 28 to 59 of this Ruling
illustrate the application of the same business test, the new
business test and the new transaction test to the head company
of a consolidated group. Furthermore, the examples in paragraphs
96 to 184 of TR 1999/9, which illustrate the application of the
same business test to a single company, are of assistance in
determining the application of the same business, new business
and new transactions tests to the head company of a consolidated
group.
Facts
21. Hold Co is
the head company of a consolidated group. It holds shares in
other companies but otherwise does not conduct any business
activity. Hold Co has a 30 June tax year.
22. Property Co 1,
Property Co 2 ,
and Property Co 3 are
all 100% subsidiaries of Hold Co. Each is a parent of a number
of property development companies. The Property Co 1 sub-group
is involved in the construction and sale of residential
apartments. The Property Co 2 sub-group is involved in
commercial and industrial property development. The Property Co
3 sub-group is engaged in the construction and management of
shopping centres. Traditionally, property development has been
the core business of the group and success in this industry has
facilitated new business acquisitions by the group and expansion
into other industries.
23. The Hold Co group acquired, prior to 1 July 2002, Retail
Co and its
subsidiaries, a large but ailing national department store
chain, which had a presence in many of the shopping centres
managed by the Property Co 3 sub-group . Over time, the
profitability of the department store chain was restored and
began to contribute significantly to the overall profits of the
Hold Co group.
24. The Hold Co group also acquired, prior to 1 July 2002, Mag
Co 1, Mag Co 2 ,
and Mag Co 3 which
were engaged in the business of magazine publishing. Apart from
a general desire to move into the print media business, Hold Co
also saw natural synergies in terms of advertising its retail
business. Mag Co 1 and Mag Co 2 are responsible for the
production of two popular culture magazines released weekly and
monthly respectively, which have an extremely wide national
circulation. Mag Co 3 produces a quarterly fishing magazine
which has a very limited circulation. The scale of the business
operations of Mag Co 3 is negligible by comparison to Mag Co 1
and Mag Co 2.
25. The group comprising Hold Co and all of its wholly owned
subsidiaries was consolidated on 1 July 2002.
26. After a massive downturn in the property and retail sectors,
the Hold Co consolidated group incurred large tax losses during
the years ended 30 June 2003 and 2004. In March 2004 some of the
entities in the Property Co 3 sub-group were transferred to the
Property Co 2 sub-group as a number of shopping centres were to
be re-developed as industrial properties. On 31 March 2004,
there was a change in majority ownership of Hold Co.
27. This factual matrix is the starting point for each of the
discrete examples set out in paragraphs 28 to 59 of this Ruling.
Example 1
28. Hold Co has to apply Subdivision 165-B to work out the
taxable income and loss for the income year ended 30 June 2004
unless it satisfies the same business test (refer section
165-35). For the application of that test, the test time is 31
March 2004 and the same business test period is the period from
the change of ownership to 30 June 2004.
29. The activities being carried on by entities within the group
immediately prior to 31 March 2004 and during the period from
31 March to 30 June 2004 have to be examined in accordance with
the principles set out in paragraphs 59 to 62 of TR 1999/9 to
establish if the same business test in subsection 165-210(1) is
satisfied. In essence this involves a comparison of the business
of the relevant taxpayer immediately before the test time with
the business of the taxpayer during the same business test
period. As a consequence of the operation of the single entity
rule in section 701-1, the business of Hold Co as the head
company of the consolidated group would be characterised as one
overall business that incorporates the various elements of
property development, retail activity and magazine publishing
conducted by the group.
30. If the same business test is satisfied (subsection
165-210(1)), it would then be necessary to examine whether any
entities in the consolidated group had engaged in new
enterprises or undertakings that generated assessable income
during the same business test period. The new business test will
be failed if a new enterprise or undertaking is not of a kind
carried on by the group before the change of ownership occurred.
31. The transactions undertaken by all entities in the
consolidated group during the same business test period would
also have to be examined to determine whether or not any
assessable income has been derived by the group from
transactions of a kind not undertaken by the group before 31
March 2004.
32. If the same business test of subsection 165-210(1) is
satisfied and the examination of the enterprises, undertakings
and transactions of the entities when they were members of the
consolidated group reveals that no assessable income has been
derived during the same business test period from a business or
transaction of a kind not undertaken before the test time (in
terms of subsection 165-210(2)), Hold Co will be considered to
have passed the same business test and will not be required to
calculate its taxable income and tax loss for the year ended 30
June 2004 under Subdivision 165-B.
Example 2
33. During the year ended 30 June 2005, Hold Co transfers all of
the business activities of Mag Co 1 to Mag Co 2 and liquidates
Mag Co 1 which previously produced culture magazines.
34. In that year, Hold Co seeks a deduction for losses incurred
in the year ended 30 June 2003 and, because of the change of
ownership on 31 March 2004, relies on the same business test
being satisfied.
35. The question for consideration in this case is whether or
not the liquidation of Mag Co 1 will cause failure of the same
business test as outlined in subsection 165-210(1).
36. The same business test involves comparison of the business
of the relevant taxpayer immediately before the test time with
the business of the taxpayer during the same business test
period. In this example the test time is 31 March 2004, and the
same business test period is the year ended 30 June 2005. The
business of Hold Co as the head company of the consolidated
group would be characterised as one overall business that
incorporates the various elements of property development,
retail activity, and magazine publishing conducted by the group.
37. The liquidation of Mag Co 1 has not changed the business
taken to be carried on by Hold Co as the head company of the
consolidated group. The activities conducted by Mag Co 1 before
the test time are still being conducted by the group during the
same business test period and will be taken into account in the
identification of the business of Hold Co at each of those
times.
Example 3
38. During the year ended 30 June 2005, Hold Co disposes of all
of its shares in Mag Co 3 and the group ceases to be involved in
the publishing of the fishing magazine. However Mag Co 1
continues to provide printing and pre-production services to Mag
Co 3 on the same basis as it did prior to the disposal of Mag Co
3. Hold Co commences to derive assessable income from the
provision of these external services to Mag Co 3, this charge
having previously been an intra-group transaction and therefore
ignored under the single entity rule.
39. In the year ended 30 June 2005, Hold Co seeks a deduction
for losses incurred during the year ended 30 June 2003 and,
because of the change of ownership on 31 March 2004, relies on
the same business test being satisfied (section 165-210).
40. The immediate question for consideration in this example is
whether or not the disposal of the business of Mag Co 3 causes
failure of the same business test. As stated in paragraph 13 of
TR 1999/9, the analysis of whether the same business continues
after a change of ownership may give rise to questions of degree
and ultimately depends on the facts of the case. In making the
analysis, it needs to be acknowledged that a company may expand
or contract its activities without necessarily ceasing to carry
on the same business.
41. Identifying and defining the one overall business of the
relevant taxpayer, that is, Hold Co as the head company of the
consolidated group, involves looking at all the things done and
the activities carried out:
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·
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immediately before the test time, 31 March
2004, by entities that were members of the group at that
time; and
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·
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by entities during the year ended 30 June
2005 (the same business test period) when they were
members of the consolidated group.
42. The business of Hold Co as the head company of the
consolidated group would be characterised as one overall
business that incorporates the various elements of property
development, retail activity, and magazine publishing conducted
by the group.
43. As outlined under the Facts at paragraph 24 of this Ruling
the business of Mag Co 3 is negligible in relation to the
overall activities of the consolidated group. In these
circumstances, the disposal of Mag Co 3 and its related business
activities is unlikely, of itself, to cause failure of the same
business test (in terms of subsection 165-210(1)).
44. If the disposal of the shares in Mag Co 3 produces
assessable income (for example a net capital gain), the new
transactions test must be applied. Having regard to all the
relevant circumstances of the Hold Co group, if it were
concluded that the transaction is of a kind that could have been
entered into ordinarily and naturally in the course of the
business operations carried on by Hold Co, the new transactions
test is, for this reason alone, unlikely to be failed (refer to
paragraphs 15 and 16 of TR 1999/9).
45. In respect of the assessable income derived by Hold Co from
printing and pre-production services provided by Mag Co 1 to Mag Co 3,
the question of the possible application of the new business
test or the new transactions test arises. The activities of
printing and pre-production would be recognised within the
consolidated group before the change of ownership on
31 March 2004 although agreements between group members to
provide such services for consideration would not be recognised
under the single entity rule. The fact that printing and
pre-production activities had been carried on previously within
the group would point to a conclusion that the new business test
is satisfied. Furthermore, this fact would assist in reaching a
conclusion that the agreement to provide services of that nature
is one that could have been entered into ordinarily and
naturally in the course of the business operations carried on by
Hold Co before the change of ownership. In these circumstances,
the service agreement from which Hold Co derives assessable
income would not be considered to be a transaction of a
different kind to those entered into by the group before the
change of ownership. This is likely to be the case even if Mag
Co 3 was not previously charged for these services.
Example 4
46. During the year ended 30 June 2005 the existing members of
the consolidated group continued to carry on all of the
activities they carried on immediately before the change of
ownership occurred on 31 March 2004, and there were no
significant changes to the nature or scale of each of those
activities. On 1 September 2004, Hold Co acquired all of the
shares in Boat Co 1 which had conducted a ferry service since
before 31 March 2004. Boat Co 1 is a very profitable company and
adds significantly to the income of the consolidated group for
the remainder of the year ended 30 June 2005.
47. In the year ended 30 June 2005, Hold Co seeks a deduction
for losses incurred during the year ended 30 June 2003 and,
because of the change of ownership on 31 March 2004, relies on
the same business test being satisfied. The test time for the
purposes of subsection 165-13(2) is 31 March 2004 and the same
business test period is the year ended 30 June 2005.
48. The first issue for consideration in this case is the
impact, if any, that the acquisition of Boat Co 1 and its
associated activities has on the identification of the business
of Hold Co as the head company of the consolidated group for the
purpose of the same business test.
49. The business of Hold Co as the head company of the
consolidated group would be characterised by reference to all of
the activities carried on by members of the group during the
period in which they were members of the group. This process
results in one overall business conducted by the group
incorporating the various elements of property development,
retail activity, magazine publishing, and from 1 September 2004,
the ferry service.
50. Due to the application of section 165-212E when
characterising the business of Hold Co at 31 March 2004 (the
test time) it is necessary to ignore the activities of Boat Co
prior to it becoming a member of the consolidated group.
Consequently, the business of Hold Co at that time does not
include the ferry business. In this case, it is unlikely that
Hold Co will satisfy the requirements of the same business test
and no deduction will be available during the year ended 30 June
2005 for the tax loss incurred during the year ended 30 June
2003.
51. Even if, as a result of the analysis of the activities of
the consolidated group at the relevant times, it is determined
that the business of Hold Co as the head company of the
consolidated group has not been sufficiently changed by the
introduction of Boat Co 1 to cause failure of the same business
test in subsection 165-210(1), the new business test under
subsection 165-210(2) would be failed as the business of Boat Co
is of a kind that Hold Co did not carry on before the test time,
and the loss deduction would not be available to Hold Co for the
year ended 30 June 2005.
Example 5
52. In July 2004, Hold Co acquires Mag Co 4 which produces a
quarterly fishing magazine. Mag Co 4 also runs a fishing boat
hire activity which it has operated since 30 April 2004. The
boat hire activity contributes some income to the consolidated
group but does not achieve the level of profitability that was
anticipated at the date of acquisition of the company. In May
2005, Mag Co 4 ceases the boat hire activity.
53. Hold Co seeks to claim a deduction in the year ended
30 June 2005 for losses incurred in the year ended 30 June 2003
and, because of the change of ownership on 31 March 2004, relies
on the same business test being satisfied.
54. The publication of the fishing magazine by Mag Co 4 is not a
new kind of business because Mag Co 3 previously carried on this
kind of business while a member of the consolidated group.
However, the boat hire activity is not a business of a kind that
Hold Co carried on before the test time and, as it is a business
that produces assessable income for Hold Co during the same
business test period, Hold Co will fail the new business test in
the year ended 30 June 2005 and will be unable to deduct the
2003 loss.
Example 6
55. During the year ended 30 June 2003, Retail Co develops
computer software for its business operations which is a major
advance on previously available software. This software is made
available to the Property Co 1, 2 and 3 sub-groups. Retail Co
derives intra-group licensing fees which are ignored for the
purposes of calculating the income tax liability of Hold Co
under the single entity rule.
56. In July 2004, Retail Co executes a multiple year software
licensing contract with a major software provider which is
external to the consolidated group. Hold Co as head company of
the consolidated group derives significant assessable income
from this niche activity of licensing its software to a third
party during the year ended 30 June 2005.
57. In the year ended 30 June 2005, Hold Co seeks a deduction
for losses incurred during the year ended 30 June 2003 and,
because of the change of ownership on 31 March 2004, relies on
the same business test being satisfied. In this case it would
need to be determined whether the software licensing activities
are sufficient to result in the overall business of Hold Co
being characterised as a different business to that previously
conducted before the change of ownership for the purposes of the
same business test per subsection 165-210(1).
58. If as a result of the analysis of the activities of the
consolidated group at the relevant times it is determined that
the business of Hold Co has not been sufficiently changed by the
licensing of software outside the group to cause failure of the
same business test (subsection 165-210(1)) the new business test
and new transactions tests of subsection 165-210(2) will need to
be considered.
59. The license agreements between Retail Co and the entities
within the Property Co sub-groups would not be recognised
because of the single entity rule. However, the activities of
software development and use of new software within the group
would still be recognised as constituent elements of the overall
business of Hold Co. These activities within the consolidated
group before the change of ownership would point to a conclusion
that the licensing agreement with the external software provider
does not result in failure of the new business test.
Furthermore, recognition of these activities would assist in
reaching a conclusion that the external licensing agreement is
neither extraordinary nor unnatural having regard to the overall
business carried on by Hold Co at the time of the change in
ownership. In these circumstances, the new transactions test
also would not be failed.
Date of effect
60. This Ruling applies 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
75 and 76 of Taxation Ruling TR 2006/10).
Commissioner of Taxation
20 June 2007
Appendix 1 - Explanation
|
This
Appendix is provided as information to help you
understand how the Commissioner's view has been reached.
It does not form part of the binding public ruling. |
61. In respect of the test in subsection 165-210(1), this Ruling
adopts the approach that a head company carries on one overall
business identified by reference to all the consolidated group
activities.
The structure of section 165-210
62. Paragraphs 24 to 27 of TR 1999/9 explain that
subsections 165-210(1) and (2) provide three tests, (the same
business test ,
the new business
test and the new
transactions test )
each of which must be satisfied by a company in order to satisfy
the requirements of section 165-210. The principles set out in
TR 1999/9 about the operation of those tests, the identity of a
business of a company and the issues that are relevant to be
considered in identifying a business that is being carried on,
are also applicable in relation to the head company of a
consolidated group.
The meaning of 'the business' of the head company of a
consolidated group
63. The effect of the single entity rule, section 701-1, is that
the tests contained in section 165-210 will apply to the head
company of a consolidated group as if the subsidiary members of
the group are parts of the head company. Effectively, the tests
will apply to the group in a similar way to how they would apply
to a non-consolidated company carrying on a business in
divisions.
64. Because each subsidiary member is taken to be a part of the
head company, rather than a separate entity, the business of the
head company must be ascertained by reference to all of the
activities carried on by all of the entities during a relevant
period, or at a relevant point in time, provided that the
entities were members of the consolidated group during that
relevant period or at that relevant point in time.
65. Paragraphs 28 and 29 of TR 1999/9 set out the meaning of the
word 'business' in relation to a single company and explore the
different contexts in which the word is used in section 165-210.
TR 1999/9 explains the meanings that the word can have within
those different contexts for companies operating as a distinct
commercial entity. In seeking to satisfy subsection 165-210(1),
the head company of a consolidated group will need to examine
each of the activities, enterprises or undertakings being
carried out at the appropriate test time by all those entities
that were members of the consolidated group at that time; and by
all entities during that part of the same business test period
when they were members of the consolidated group. The
identification of each of those activities, enterprises and
undertakings, and the determination of what is relevant to
examine in relation to the business of the consolidated group
that is taken to be carried on by the head company, should be
done in accordance with the principles set out in TR 1999/9.
66. It has been suggested that circumstances could arise where
the activities and operations of wholly-owned subsidiary members
are sufficiently numerous and diverse that the head company is,
as a matter of fact, in the business of holding interests in
other companies or 'in the business of being in business'. This
suggestion fails to recognise that, consistent with the single
entity rule, the overall business of the head company is to be
identified by reference to the various activities, enterprises
and undertakings of the subsidiary members and cannot constitute
the holding of interests in wholly owned subsidiary members.
Further, characterising the business of a head company as simply
'being in business' can never be a satisfactory outcome of a
rigorous factual assessment of the whole of the business
activities undertaken, regardless of the diversity of these
overall activities. However, there may be instances where the
head company of a consolidated group holds investments in one or
more less than wholly owned subsidiaries. In this instance the
overall business of the consolidated group for the purposes of
subsection 165-210(1) may include being in the business of
holding investments in other entities.
The new business test
67. In the new business test there is a reference to business of
a kind that the company did not carry on before the test time.
In the new business test, the word 'business' has a different
meaning from the word 'business' in the same business test; it
refers to each kind of enterprise or undertaking comprised in
the overall business carried on by the consolidated group before
the test time and during the same business test period (refer to
paragraphs 28 and 29 of TR 1999/9). The new business test puts a
limit on the type of expansion that the group may undertake if
it is to retain the benefit of accumulated losses. In order for
the head company to benefit from accumulated losses, it must not
derive assessable income from an enterprise or undertaking of a
kind that it is not treated as having been engaged in before the
test time.
68. If, during the same business test period, any member of the
consolidated group commences to derive assessable income from an
enterprise or undertaking of a kind that was not carried on by
the group before the test time, the head company would fail the
test.
69. It must however be noted that because of the operation of
the single entity rule, satisfaction of the new business test
may be achieved if a new business carried on by an entity in the
consolidated group during the same business test period is of a
kind carried on by any entity during the period before the test
time when that entity was a member of the consolidated group.
The new transactions test
70. In the context of consolidation, the new transactions test
is directed at preventing the injection of income into a
consolidated group, the head company of which has satisfied the
same business test and the new business test in relation to
accumulated losses. The new transactions test looks at all
transactions (other than intra-group) entered into in the course
of the group's business operations by an entity while a member
of the group. It is not merely concerned with those transactions
that are 'isolated' or 'independent'. A transaction entered into
during the same business test period which is:
-
·
-
outside the course of the group's business
operations, before the test time; or
-
·
-
extraordinary or unnatural when judged by
the course of the group's business operations before the
test time,
will usually be a transaction of a different kind from those
transactions entered into or carried on before the test time by
an entity while a member of the consolidated group.
Intra-group activities and transactions
71. The single entity rule treats subsidiary members of a
consolidated group as parts of the head company for the purpose
of working out the income tax liability of the head company.
Accordingly, intra-group transactions are not recognised for the
purpose of applying the same business test which is relevant for
working out the income tax liability of the head company after a
change in ownership.
72. However, activities, undertakings and enterprises taking
place within a consolidated group (in the sense that they do not
involve the derivation of income through dealings outside the
group) will still be relevant for characterising the business of
the head company notwithstanding the fact that individual
transactions between group members are not recognised because of
the single entity rule. For example, in a consolidated group
where a product is manufactured by a member entity and sold by
wholesale to another member entity that sells the product
externally, the business of the head company of that
consolidated group would be characterised as both the
manufacturing and retailing of that product. The sale
transactions between the member entities are not recognised but
the manufacturing activity is relevant for characterising the
business of the head company for the purposes of the same
business, new business and new transactions tests. Examples 3
and 6 in this Ruling further illustrate the relevance of
intra-group activities in this context.
Section 165-212E and the entry history rule
73. Section 165-212E provides that for the purposes of the same
business test, if an entity becomes a subsidiary member of a
consolidated group, the entry history rule does not operate to
take the business of the head company of the group to include
the business of the joining entity before it became a member of
the group.3
74. When read with the entry history rule in section 701-5, the
effect of section 165-212E is that the activities of an entity
during any period when that entity was not a member of a
consolidated group are ignored when determining either the
'business' of the head company of a consolidated group, or
whether the new business test or the new transactions test have
been satisfied.
Appendix 2 - Alternative views
|
This
Appendix sets out alternative views and explains why
they are not supported by the Commissioner. It does not
form part of the binding public ruling. |
75. There are a number of alternative views to those expressed
in this Ruling. Those views and the Commissioner's responses are
set out below.
Only the head company's business is relevant
76. Under one alternative approach the business of the head
company is determined by reference only to the activities of
that company. Under this approach only the activities actually
undertaken by the head company would be considered in seeking to
identify the business being carried on at the relevant test time
and during the same business test period. The activities being
undertaken by other members of the consolidated group would be
ignored.
77. Applying the same business test to the head company without
reference to the activities of other entities of the
consolidated group is not compatible with the stated intention
of the consolidation legislation or the objectives sought to be
achieved by the same business test provisions.
78. For this approach to be arguable, it is necessary to read
the words 'working out the amount of the head company's
liability (if any) for income tax' in subsection 701-1(2) very
narrowly. Those words would need to be interpreted in such a way
that determining the business the head company carried on
immediately before the test time, as required by subsection
165-210(1), is not considered to be working out the head
company's liability for income tax, that is, it is not
considered to be for head company core purposes.
79. TR 2004/11 explains the operation of the single entity rule
(SER). Several paragraphs from that Ruling are set out below:
Consequences of the SER
-
7.
-
For income tax purposes the SER deems
subsidiary members to be parts of the head company
rather than separate entities during the period that
they are members of the consolidated group.
-
8.
-
As a consequence, the SER has the effect
that:
-
(a)
-
the actions and transactions of a
subsidiary member are treated as having been
undertaken by the head company;
-
(b)
-
the assets a subsidiary member of
the group owns are taken to be owned by the head
company (with the exception of intra-group
assets) while the subsidiary remains a member of
the consolidated group;
-
(c)
-
assets where the rights and
obligations are between members of a
consolidated group (intra-group assets) are not
recognised for income tax purposes during the
period they are held within the group whether or
not the asset, as a matter of law, was created
before or during the period of consolidation
(see also paragraph 11 and paragraphs 26-28);
and
-
(e)
-
dealings that are solely between
members of the same consolidated group
(intra-group dealings) will not result in
ordinary or statutory income or a deduction to
the group's head company.
-
24.
-
This ensures that working out the
consolidated group's taxable income and losses and
offsets, record keeping requirements and penalties, are
addressed on the basis that the group is a single entity
with the head company as that entity. Broadly, this
provides parity of income tax treatment between a
consolidated group, treated as a single entity, and a
non-consolidated company.
80. Given this explanation it is not considered appropriate to
read subsection 701-1(2) so narrowly that the business of the
head company, for the purposes of applying section 165-210, does
not take into account the activities of the subsidiary members
of the consolidated group. The intention of the same business
test is to provide a basis for allowing deductions for prior
year tax losses to a company which has undergone a change of
ownership. The deduction is available where the objective
evidence indicates that the change of ownership is not followed
by a change of business, or the introduction of new business
activities or income earning transactions, providing a new
source of assessable income against which the new owners can
offset the accumulated losses. In a consolidated group the head
company is the only entity that returns any assessable income
and is the only entity entitled to a deduction for tax losses.
All of the activities of the consolidated group must be
considered when determining both the assessable income and
allowable deductions of the head company. Likewise all the
activities of the consolidated group are relevant when applying
the same business test.
Multiple 'businesses' of the head company
81. There is another alternative approach under which the head
company is viewed as carrying on a number of businesses for the
purposes of subsection 165-210(1). This view stems from the
propositions that in a pre-consolidated context each company
identifies its own overall business for the purposes of
subsection 165-210(1) and that it is not appropriate or
realistic to identify and define a single overall business of a
consolidated group.
82. The legislative basis for this view is said to be paragraph
23(b) of the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901 which
states (in part) that '... unless the contrary intention appears
...words in the singular number include the plural and words in
the plural number include the singular'. Therefore the word
'business' in sections 165-13, 165-126, 165-132 and 165-210
should be taken to include the plural 'businesses'.
Consequently, when examining the business of the head company of
a consolidated group for the purposes of applying the same
business test, it is necessary to consider the businesses of all
members of that group.
83. One method of characterising the 'business' of the head
company of the consolidated group under this view is to identify
the separate businesses being conducted by the individual
members of the consolidated group by reference to the activities
being carried on immediately before the test time by each
individual entity in the group. All of these separate businesses
are then taken to be distinct businesses carried on by the head
company. If any of those businesses cease to be carried on
before the end of the same business test period, the test in
subsection 165-210(1) will not be satisfied.
84. This would require application of the principles set out in
TR 1999/9 to each of the entities in the consolidated group at
the test time to identify the business being carried on by each
entity. It would then be necessary to apply those principles to
the activities of entities in the group throughout the same
business test period to ascertain whether or not those
businesses identified at the test time have continued during the
relevant period. In this regard, it would not be necessary that
the businesses are being carried on by the same entities, or
even that the entities that conducted the businesses at the test
time continue to be members of the group. It would only be
required that the identified businesses continue to be carried
on by the consolidated group.
85. It would also be necessary to identify whether or not any
entity in the consolidated group has commenced to derive
assessable income from either of the following:
-
·
-
A business of a kind that had not
previously been undertaken by a member of the
consolidated group before the test time.
-
·
-
A transaction of a kind that had not
previously been entered into in the course of the
business operations that had been conducted by a member
of the consolidated group before the test time.
86. A cessation of the business activities of one entity within
the consolidated group, even if the activities of that entity
are insignificant in terms of the overall profitability of the
group, could result in the head company failing the test in
subsection 165-210(1).
87. A second method of characterising the 'business' of the head
company of the consolidated group under this view is by
reference to all the activities being undertaken by members of
the consolidated group immediately before the test time and then
aggregating some of those activities into discrete businesses.
Under this approach if the activities of two or more members of
the group are sufficiently integrated, they can be identified as
constituting one business. As with the first method, the
consolidated group may be identified as carrying on a number of
businesses but, unlike that approach, the number of those
businesses is not determined by the number of entities in the
group at the test time.
88. This approach would require detailed analysis of the
activities of all entities in the group at the test time and a
decision as to which activities are sufficiently integrated to
support a conclusion that those activities are part of one
business. The businesses identified as being conducted at the
test time would be compared with the businesses being carried on
throughout the same business test period. If any of those
businesses has ceased, the head company may not satisfy the
requirements of subsection 165-210(1). If any new business has
been commenced, the head company would not satisfy
paragraph 165-210(2)(a) unless that new business is of a kind
with one of the businesses carried on by the group before the
test time.
89. These two methods depend, for their effectiveness, on there
being no contrary intention to 'business' in subsection
165-210(1) being read as including 'businesses'. The
Commissioner considers that section 165-210 does express such a
contrary intention.
90. Paragraphs 28 and 29 of TR 1999/9 explain the meaning of
'business'. Subsection 165-210(1) would not achieve the desired
outcome in either a consolidated or non-consolidated context if
the word 'business' is read as 'businesses'.
Section 165-212E does not 'turn off' the entry history rule
for the purposes of applying the same business test, new
business test or the new transactions test
91. It has been argued that section 165-212E does not actually
prevent the operation of the entry history rule because of a
mismatch between the wording of that section and the wording of
the entry history rule in section 701-5. Section 165-212E is
drafted in terms of not taking '... the *business of the *head
company of the group to include the business of the joining
entity before it became a *member of the group'. However,
section 701-5 is drafted in terms of '... everything that
happened in relation to it before it became a subsidiary member
...'. That is, the entry history rule is not directly concerned
with the business carried on by an entity prior to it becoming a
subsidiary member. Consequently, it is argued that a provision
that requires the 'business' of an entity to be disregarded does
not also require that the actual underlying activities of the
entity be disregarded.
92. Alternatively it has been argued that section 165-212E does
not 'turn off' the entry history rule for the purposes of
applying the new business or new transactions tests, as the
section only refers to the 'same business test', a defined term.
The 'same business test' as defined in subsection 165-210(1) is
a separate and standalone concept from the new business and new
transactions tests in subsection 165-210(2). Further, it is
contended that the relevant paragraphs in the Explanatory
Memorandum to the Tax Laws Amendment (Loss Recoupment Rules and
Other Measures) Bill 2005 contain no reference to a purpose of
determining whether the new business or new transactions tests
apply.
93. The Commissioner does not agree with these alternative
arguments. Firstly, when section 165-212E makes it necessary to
disregard the business of the joining entity before it became a
subsidiary member, this naturally refers to the transactions and
activities constituting that business. Secondly, the
Commissioner's view is that the reference to 'same business
test' in section 165-212E incorporates both the positive
condition and the negative conditions of section 165-210 and
thereby 'turns off' the entry history rule for the purposes of
the same business test, the new business test, and the new
transactions test.
94. It is considered that the legislative context of section
165-210 supports the view that the defined term, 'same business
test', represents a single, integrated test comprising a
positive condition in subsection 165-210(1) and the negative
conditions in subsections 165-210(2) and (3). This is the case
notwithstanding that TR1999/9 and this Ruling use the terms same
business test, new business test and new
transactions test as
a short-hand method of referring to the positive condition and
two of the negative conditions.
95. Furthermore, it is considered that the two alternative
arguments would not be compatible with the purpose of
section 165-212E and the clear statement as to its intended
operation, and would result in anomalous outcomes.
Section 165-212E ensures consistency of treatment between a
consolidated group commencing a new business activity and a
consolidated group acquiring a subsidiary member that conducts
that activity.
96. Under a restricted application of section 165-212E as
contended under the alternative views, after a change in
ownership of a head company the consolidated group may acquire a
subsidiary that conducts business activities not of a kind
carried on by any member of the group before the test time.
Inappropriately, the new business test would not be failed if
the subsidiary had been carrying on those activities before
joining the group at a time before the date of the ownership
change of the head company. This anomaly is underlined by
considering the case where the new subsidiary commenced to carry
on those business activities before joining the group but only
after the time at which there was a change in ownership of the
head company. In these circumstances, the new business test
would be failed. There is no sensible reason for distinguishing
these two sets of circumstances.
97. The Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Laws Amendment (Loss
Recoupment Rules and Other Measures) Bill 2005 confirms the
intended operation of section 165-212E in respect of the
activities of a joining entity without restriction to only the
primary test under subsection 165-210(1):
3.17 This Bill clarifies that the entry history rule does not
operate to deem the head company of a consolidated or MEC group
to carry on the activities of a subsidiary member of the group
during a period before the subsidiary member joined the group.
...
3.18 When an entity joins a consolidated or MEC group, its
activities are treated as activities of the head company from
its joining time for the purposes of the SBT. Activities that
the entity carried on before the joining time are not attributed
to the head company for the purposes of determining whether the
head company carried on the same business.
98. When read in context a combination of section 165-212E and
the entry history rule in section 701-5 operate in such a way
that the activities of an entity during any period when that
entity was not a member of a consolidated group are ignored when
determining either the 'business' of the head company of a
consolidated group, or whether the new business test or the new
transactions test have been satisfied.
Appendix 3 - Detailed contents list
99. The following is a detailed contents list for this Ruling:
|
|
Paragraph |
|
What this Ruling is about |
1 |
|
Key consolidation concepts |
4 |
|
Class of entities/Scheme |
8 |
|
Definitions |
9 |
|
Ruling |
12 |
|
The same business test and the single
entity rule |
12 |
|
Section 165-212E and entry history rule |
19 |
|
Examples |
20 |
|
Facts |
21 |
|
Example 1 |
28 |
|
Example 2 |
33 |
|
Example 3 |
38 |
|
Example 4 |
46 |
|
Example 5 |
52 |
|
Example 6 |
55 |
|
Date of effect |
60 |
|
Appendix 1 - Explanation |
61 |
|
The structure of section 165-210 |
62 |
|
The meaning of 'the business' of the head
company of a consolidated group |
63 |
|
The new business test |
67 |
|
The new transactions test |
70 |
|
Intra-group activities and transactions |
71 |
|
Section 165-212E and the entry history rule |
73 |
|
Appendix 2 - Alternative views |
75 |
|
Only the head company's business is
relevant |
76 |
|
Multiple 'businesses' of the head company |
81 |
|
Section 165-212E does not 'turn off' the
entry history rule for the purposes of applying the same
business test, new business test or the new transactions
test |
91 |
|
Appendix 3 - Detailed contents list |
99 |
Footnotes
[1]
On 8 May 2007, the Government announced in the Australian
Government - Budget Measures 2007-8, Budget Paper No. 2 that it
would improve and clarify the loss recoupment rules by ensuring
that the 'entry history' rule is disregarded in applying the
same business test, with effect from 1 July 2002. The
announcement advised that the proposed amendment would reduce
uncertainty and ensure that outcomes under the rules are
consistent with policy intent.
[2]
See also paragraphs 30 to 90 of TR 1999/9 for a discussion of
these terms.
[3]
On 8 May 2007, the Government announced in Australian Government
- Budget Measures 2007-8, Budget Paper No. 2 that it would
improve and clarify the loss recoupment rules by ensuring that
the 'entry history' rule is disregarded in applying the same
business test, with effect from 1 July 2002. The announcement
advised that the proposed amendment would reduce uncertainty and
ensure that outcomes under the rules are consistent with policy
intent.
Previously released in draft form as TR 2006/D4
References
ATO references:
NO 2005/16640
ISSN: 1039-0731
Related Rulings/Determinations:
TR 1999/9
TR 2004/11
TR 2006/10
Subject References:
consolidated group
consolidation - multiple entry consolidated group
consolidation - same business test
entry history rule
head company
head company of a MEC group
losses
MEC
MEC losses
new business test
new transactions test
same business test
single entity rule
Legislative References:
ITAA 1997 165-10
ITAA 1997 165-12
ITAA 1997 165-13
ITAA 1997 165-13(2)
ITAA 1997 Subdiv 165-B
ITAA 1997 165-35
ITAA 1997 165-35(b)
ITAA 1997 Subdiv 165-CB
ITAA 1997 Subdiv 165-CC
ITAA 1997 165-123
ITAA 1997 165-126
ITAA 1997 165-132
ITAA 1997 165-210
ITAA 1997 165-210(1)
ITAA 1997 165-210(2)
ITAA 1997 165-210(2)(a)
ITAA 1997 165-210(3)
ITAA 1997 165-212E
ITAA 1997 701-1
ITAA 1997 701-1(1)
ITAA 1997 701-1(2)
ITAA 1997 701-5
ITAA 1997 Subdiv 707-A
ITAA 1997 707-125
ITAA 1997 707-135
AIA 1901 23(b)
TAA 1953
Other References
Australian Government - Budget Measures 2007-8, Budget Paper No.
2
Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Laws Amendment (Loss
Recoupment Rules and Other Measures) Bill 2005
|