TR 2008/8: Income tax: the
taxation treatment of ship and aircraft leasing profits under
the ships and aircraft articles of Australia's tax treaties
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Contents |
Para |
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LEGALLY BINDING SECTION: |
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What this Ruling is about |
1 |
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Background |
7 |
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The standard ships and aircraft article |
11 |
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Terminology |
14 |
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Ruling |
20 |
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Examples |
59 |
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Date of effect |
91 |
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NOT LEGALLY BINDING SECTION: |
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Appendix 1: Explanation |
92 |
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Appendix 2: Alternative views |
212 |
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Appendix 3: Tables of differing wording of the ships and
aircraft articles of Australia's Tax Treaties |
219 |
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Appendix 4: Detailed contents list |
220 |
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, the Commissioner must apply
the law to you in the way set out in the ruling (unless
the Commissioner is satisfied that the ruling is
incorrect and disadvantages you, in which case the law
may be applied to you in a way that is more favourable
for you - provided the Commissioner is 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 clarifies what profits derived from the leasing
of ships or aircraft fall within the ships and aircraft articles1 of
each of Australia's tax treaties contained in the schedules to
the International
Tax Agreements Act 1953 (the
Agreements Act).2
2. This Ruling also clarifies:
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·
-
in what circumstances Australia is
allocated a right to tax those leasing profits under the
ships and aircraft article; and
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·
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the method of taxing such profits under
the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 (the
ITAA 1997) or the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 (the
ITAA 1936).
3. This Ruling examines those paragraphs of the ships and
aircraft articles in each of Australia's tax treaties that are
relevant to ship and aircraft leasing profits. As the wording of
some of these articles differ, the texts are set out in Appendix
3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling. For the purpose of applying
the principles contained in this Ruling, minor wording
differences that exist between corresponding paragraph(s) of the
article are ignored where those differences do not materially
affect the taxation treatment of profits from the leasing of
ships or aircraft.
Class of entities
4. This Ruling applies to:
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·
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residents of Australia for tax treaty
purposes (an 'Australian treaty resident'); and
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·
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residents (for treaty purposes) of those
countries with which Australia has a tax treaty (a
'treaty partner resident'),3
that:
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·
-
engage in the operation of ships or
aircraft; and
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·
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derive profits from leasing out ships or
aircraft.4
Scheme
5. This Ruling applies to leases of ships or aircraft that fall
for consideration under the ships and aircraft article of
Australia's tax treaties. The ships and aircraft article applies
to certain 'full basis' and 'bareboat basis' leases (see
paragraphs 15 and 16 of this Ruling) relating to the operation
of ships or aircraft.
Related Rulings
6. The Commissioner has issued other Rulings that cover related
issues to the ones raised in this Ruling. These Rulings are:
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·
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Taxation Ruling TR 2003/2 Income tax: the
royalty withholding tax implications of ship chartering
arrangements.
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·
-
Taxation Ruling TR 2006/1 Income tax: the
scope of and nature of payments falling within section
129 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 .
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·
-
Taxation Ruling TR 2007/10 Income tax: the
treatment of shipping and aircraft leasing profits of
United States and United Kingdom enterprises under the
deemed substantial equipment permanent establishment
provision of the respective Taxation Conventions.
Background
7. The ships and aircraft article provides for the allocation of
taxing rights between Contracting States in respect of profits
from the operations of ships and aircraft. The extent to which
the ships and aircraft articles in Australia's tax treaties
allocate taxing rights with respect to leasing profits is the
central issue in this Ruling. In order to address this issue,
the Ruling also considers how the ships and aircraft article
applies more generally in non-leasing situations.
8. The expression 'profits from the operation of ships and
aircraft' includes profits directly obtained by an enterprise
from the transportation of passengers or cargo by ships or
aircraft (whether owned, leased or otherwise at the disposal of
the enterprise), as well as profits from activities directly
connected with such operations and profits from activities which
are not directly connected but are ancillary to such operations.5 In
some situations it may also include profits from non-transport
activities.
9. The ships and aircraft article may be based on article 8 of
the OECD Model Tax Convention on Income and on Capital (the OECD
Model),6 or
may adopt approaches to accommodate countries' particular
positions. Australia's position in respect of the ships and
aircraft article in its tax treaties is to preserve source
taxation rights over profits from internal ship and aircraft
operations, which include not just transport activities but also
non-transport activities. Australia also treats as internal
traffic the operations of ships or aircraft confined solely to
places in Australia, even if they form part of an overall
international voyage. The Commentary on article 8 of the OECD
Model recognises that countries may bilaterally agree to extend
the scope of article 8 to adopt both these positions.7
10. Australia's intention to depart from the OECD Model is
reflected in its reservation on the OECD Model8 which
states:
Australia reserves the right to tax profits from the
carriage of passengers or cargo taken on board at one place
in Australia for discharge in Australia. Australia also
reserves the right to tax profits from other coastal and
continental shelf activities.
The standard ships and aircraft article
11. Due to the bilateral nature of tax treaties the text of
Australia's ships and aircraft articles vary from treaty to
treaty. This Ruling focuses on the text which generally appears
in the ships and aircraft articles in Australia's most recent
tax treaties9 (the
standard ships and aircraft article), and then examines the
major variations from that text contained in other tax treaties.
12. For the purposes of this Ruling, the standard ships and
aircraft article is as follows:
ARTICLE 8
Ships and Aircraft
1. Profits of an enterprise of a Contracting State derived
from the operation of ships or aircraft in international
traffic shall be taxable only in that State.
2. Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 1, profits of
an enterprise of a Contracting State derived from the
operation of ships or aircraft may be taxed in the other
Contracting State to the extent that they are profits
derived directly or indirectly from ship or aircraft
operations confined solely to places in that other State.
3. The profits to which the provisions of paragraphs 1 and 2
apply include profits from the operation of ships or
aircraft derived through participation in a pool service or
other profit sharing arrangement.
4. For the purposes of this Article, profits derived from
the carriage by ships or aircraft of passengers, livestock,
mail, goods or merchandise which are shipped in a
Contracting State and are discharged at a place in that
State shall be treated as profits from ship or aircraft
operations confined solely to places in that State.
13. This Ruling takes a similar approach in respect
of the definition of 'international traffic'. The definition of
'international traffic' that relates to the standard ships and
aircraft article is as follows:
ARTICLE 3
General Definitions
1. For the purposes of this Convention, unless the context
otherwise requires:
...
(j) the term 'international traffic' means any transport by
a ship or aircraft operated by an enterprise of a
Contracting State, except where the ship or aircraft is
operated solely between places in the other Contracting
State;
Terminology
Meaning of resident 'for tax treaty purposes'
14. The expression used in this Ruling of a resident 'for tax
treaty purposes' refers to the residency status of a person as
determined by the article in each tax treaty dealing with
residence (usually article 4).
Meaning of 'full basis' and 'bareboat basis' leases
15. A lease of a ship or an aircraft on a full basis (also
generally referred to as a 'time charter-party' in the shipping
industry and as a 'wet lease' in the airline industry) refers to
the charter of a ship or aircraft with the captain and crew.
Paragraph 5 of the Commentary on article 8 of the OECD Model
explains that a full basis lease is one that is 'fully equipped,
crewed and supplied'.10 Paragraph
15 of Taxation Ruling TR 2007/10 describes 'full basis' leases
as follows:
A full basis lease involves a situation where a lessee
wishes to have a ship or an aircraft for its use for a given
period of time, but has no wish to operate the ship or
aircraft itself. The owner of the ship or aircraft provides
the captain, crew (who remain its servants) and equipment
and the owner is responsible for the technical operation and
navigation of the ship or aircraft. The lessee pays hire to
the owner in order to have the ship or aircraft at its
disposal for the specified period of time. The lessee
therefore obtains the right to commercially exploit the
carrying capacity of the ship or aircraft for its own
purposes.
16. Conversely, a bareboat lease (also generally referred to as
a 'demise' or 'bareboat charter-party' in the shipping industry
and as a 'dry lease' in the airline industry), refers to the
charter of a ship or an aircraft generally without the captain
and crew.11 Paragraph
16 of Taxation Ruling TR 2007/10 describes 'bareboat basis'
leases as follows:
A bareboat lease involves a situation where a lessee wishes
to take a ship or an aircraft and to treat it as its own for
a certain period of time. The ship or aircraft will usually,
but not invariably, be leased without captain and crew. The
practical effect, however, is the same whether the ship is
actually leased with or without captain and crew because in
both situations the lessee obtains control of the captain
and crew under the lease (that is they are the servants of
the lessee, not the owner). The owner of the ship or
aircraft also transfers the possession and navigation of the
ship or aircraft to the lessee.
17. As a 'voyage charter-party' is a contract of carriage it is
therefore not a lease for the purposes of this Ruling. The
charterer under a voyage charter-party does not obtain
possession of the ship or have the ship at its disposal. As
noted at paragraph 34 of Taxation Ruling TR 2003/2:
Under a voyage charter-party the ship is chartered for a
specific voyage (for example Melbourne to London). It is
usually used as a contract of carriage where a large
quantity of cargo, requiring the entire carrying capacity of
the ship, is carried between designated ports. The ship may
be chartered for the voyage directly from the shipowner or
sub-chartered from another charterer. Generally speaking,
the charterer or sub-charterer is also the shipper under a
voyage charter-party, although in some cases the charterer
may have sublet some of the space to a third party.
Meaning of an 'exclusive residence country taxing right'
18. For the purposes of this Ruling, the expression 'exclusive
residence country taxing right' refers to a situation where the
tax treaty provides that only the country of residence of the
lessor of the ship or aircraft is permitted to tax the
particular profits of the lessor.
Meaning of a 'source country taxing right'
19. For the purposes of this Ruling, the expression 'source
country taxing right' refers to a situation where the tax treaty
allocates a taxing right to the treaty partner country in which
the lessor of the ship or aircraft is not a resident (the
'source country').
Ruling
Part A: the treatment of leasing profits under the standard
ships and aircraft article
Paragraph 1
20. The standard wording adopted in paragraph 1 of the ships and
aircraft article (paragraph 1) in Australia's tax treaties12 provides
an exclusive residence country taxing right over profits from
the operations of ships or aircraft in international traffic,
but only in respect of transport.13
21. Paragraph 1 does not apply to provide an exclusive residence
country taxing right where the ship or aircraft is operated
solely between places in the other State (the source State). The
definition of international traffic in article 3 excludes such
internal operations from paragraph 1. This exclusion from
paragraph 1 applies to voyages that start and end at the same
port or airport, or in two different ports or airports in the
other State, even if part of the transport takes place outside
that State (for example a voyage to nowhere). However, the
definition of international traffic for the purposes of
paragraph 1 does include the internal leg of an international
voyage even though it may involve the same passengers or cargo
being loaded and unloaded in that State.14
22. Profits derived by a lessor from the lease of a ship or
aircraft on a full basis and used by the lessee in international
traffic fall under paragraph 1 as profits from the operation of
ships or aircraft in international traffic.
23. The profits derived by a lessor from a bareboat lease of a
ship or aircraft do not fall within the ships and aircraft
article as profits from the operation of ships or aircraft,
unless they are ancillary to the ship or aircraft operations of
the lessor in international traffic. The lessor under a bareboat
lease is only making available the ship or aircraft, and is not
considered to be operating the ship or aircraft.
24. A bareboat leasing activity will be 'ancillary' to the
lessor's operation of ships or aircraft, notwithstanding that
the activity may not need to be carried on for the purposes of
the lessor's own operation of ships or aircraft, provided that
the activity:
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·
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does not make more than a minor
contribution to the lessor's overall transport
activities; and
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·
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does not amount to a separate source of
income or separate business.15
25. A bareboat leasing profit will be 'ancillary' to the
lessor's own operation of ships or aircraft irrespective of
where the lessee uses the ship or aircraft.
Paragraph 2
26. Notwithstanding the exclusive residence country taxing right
provided over profits by paragraph 1, the standard wording in
paragraph 2 of the ships and aircraft article (paragraph 2) in
Australia's tax treaties16 provides
a source country taxing right over profits from the operation of
ships or aircraft to the extent that the profits are derived
from operations that are 'confined solely to places in that
other State'.
27. Paragraph 2 applies to both transport and non-transport
profits derived by a tax treaty resident. Profits from the
operation of ships or aircraft confined solely to places in that
other State include voyages that start and end at the same port
or airport, or in two different ports or airports in the other
State, even if part of the transport takes place outside that
other State (without stopping at another port or airport). It
also includes the internal leg of an international voyage where
it involves the same passengers or cargo being loaded and
unloaded in that State. Accordingly paragraph 2 applies in
priority over paragraph 1 in relation to internal legs.
28. Determining profits that are derived from non-transport
activities confined solely to places in the other State requires
an examination of the ship or aircraft activities undertaken by
the enterprise in that other State and determining whether those
particular activities constitute operations which are confined
to places in that State.
29. The activity or activities undertaken in the other
Contracting State must be sufficient to constitute a distinct
ship or aircraft operation that is identifiable separately from
other ship or aircraft operations of the enterprise.
30. For a full basis lease, the profits of the lessor are
considered derived from 'operations confined solely to places in
that other State' when the relevant use of the ship or aircraft
is confined solely to places in that other State. This includes
where the ship or aircraft is used for:
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·
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an internal leg of an international voyage
where passengers or cargo are taken onboard at a place
in that other State for discharge in that State; and
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·
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a voyage that starts and ends at the same
port or airport, or in two different ports or airports
in the other Contracting State, even if part of the
transport takes place outside that other State (without
stopping at another port or airport).
31. Profits derived from ship or aircraft operations confined
solely to places in that other State will include ancillary
activities on the basis that they make a minor contribution and
are so closely related to those operations that they should not
be regarded as a separate business or source of income. This
includes a bareboat lease that is ancillary to the lessor's ship
or aircraft operations that are confined solely to places in the
source country.
32. Where the internal operation (that is, operation confined
solely to places in that other State) of the lessor is the
internal leg of a broader international voyage, any ancillary
bareboat leasing profits the lessor derives will be treated as
arising solely in respect of the lessor's international
operations, except where those international operations are only
a minor part of the lessor's overall operations.
Part B: the treatment of leasing profits under non-standard
ships and aircraft articles
Major variations from the
standard paragraph 1
Reciprocal exemption approach
33. The relevant provisions of some of Australia's tax treaties17 that
provide a reciprocal exemption from, or limitation of, a source
country taxing right, have the same practical effect as
providing an exclusive residence country taxing right.
Application to non-transport
profits
34. Where paragraph 1 of the ships and aircraft article in
Australia's tax treaties18 does
not refer to 'international traffic', it provides an exclusive
residence country taxing right in respect of both transport and
non-transport profits derived from the operation of ships or
aircraft.
35. This variation of paragraph 1 includes profits from a full
basis lease or ancillary bareboat lease that are derived in
respect of non-transport ship or aircraft operations. Apart from
this difference, this broader paragraph 1 applies to leasing
operations on a similar basis to the standard article 8
paragraph 1 (see paragraphs 22 to 25 of this Ruling).
36. As the term 'international traffic', is defined in
subparagraph (1)(k) of article 3 of the Korean convention by
reference to the broader concept of 'operation of ships or
aircraft', the leasing profits falling within the scope of
paragraph 1 of the Korean convention are the same as those
covered under the broader paragraph 1 wording.
Specific provisions dealing with
leasing profits
The United States convention
37. Subparagraphs 1(a) and (b) of the shipping and air transport
article in the United States convention19 restrict
the exclusive residence country taxing right to profits from the
following ships and aircraft leases:
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·
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a full basis lease where the ship or
aircraft is operated in international traffic by the
lessee, provided the lessor:
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(i)
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either operates ships or aircraft
otherwise than solely between places in the
source country; or
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(ii)
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regularly leases ships or aircraft
on a full basis; and
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·
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a bareboat lease which is merely
incidental to the lessor's operation of ships or
aircraft in international traffic.
The South African agreement
38. In the case of bareboat leasing profits, the ships and
aircraft article of the South African agreement20 not
only requires that the lease be merely incidental to the
international operations of the lessor, but also requires that
the lessee operate the ship or aircraft in international traffic
before the leasing profit will be subject to the residence
country taxing right. Therefore, ancillary bareboat leases will
not be included in paragraph 1 unless the lessee operates the
leased ship or aircraft in international traffic.
Taipei Agreement
39. The ships and aircraft article in the Agreement
between the Australian Commerce and Industry Office and the
Economic and Cultural Office of Taipei concerning the avoidance
of double taxation and the prevention of fiscal evasion with
respect to taxes on income (hereinafter
referred to as the Taipei Agreement)21 also
requires that a lease be merely incidental to the international
operations of the lessor and that lessee operate the ship or
aircraft in international traffic before the leasing profit will
be subject to the exclusive residence country taxing right.
However, the Taipei Agreement applies not just to bareboat
leases but also to full basis and voyage leases.22
40. This will not result in a different outcome for full basis
and voyage leases. However, ancillary bareboat leases will not
be included in paragraph 1 unless the lessee operates the leased
ship or aircraft in international traffic.
Major variations from the
standard paragraph 2
No treatment of leasing profits
under paragraph 2
41. Some of the ships and aircraft articles in Australia's tax
treaties23 either:
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·
-
do not include a provision that is
equivalent to the standard paragraph 2; or
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·
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include a provision that is equivalent to
the standard paragraph 2 but it is restricted to profits
derived from 'carriage'.
42. As a result, the ships and aircraft article in these tax
treaties does not specifically provide a source country taxing
right in respect of leasing profits.
43. In such cases, leasing profits which are derived from
operations confined solely to places in that other State will
also not be dealt with under the standard paragraph 1 because
they are not derived from international traffic. These profits
will fall outside the scope of the ships and aircraft article or
Airline Profits Agreements (APAs) and fall for consideration
under the business profits article (where it is a standard
business profits article),24 the
royalties article of any relevant tax treaty or domestic law (if
not covered by a tax treaty provision).
Specific provisions dealing with
leasing profits
The South African agreement
44. The requirement in the ships and aircraft article of the
South African agreement that a bareboat lease that is merely
incidental to the international operations of the lessor must
also be used in international operations by the lessee does not
limit the situations where paragraph 2 applies to incidental
bareboat leases, as paragraph 2 does not apply in respect of the
international operations of the lessor.25
Taipei Agreement
45. The requirement in paragraph 3 in the ships and aircraft
article of the Taipei Agreement that a full basis, voyage basis
or bareboat lease of a ship or aircraft that is merely
incidental to the international operations of the lessor must
also be used in international operations by the lessee does not
limit the situations where paragraph 2 applies, as paragraph 2
does not apply in respect of the international operations of the
lessor.26
Rate limits on source country
taxing right
46. Certain paragraphs in the ships and aircraft articles in
Australia's tax treaties with France,27 Finland
1984, Switzerland, Belgium, Netherlands and Germany28 limit
the rate of tax that can be applied under the standard paragraph
2 source country taxing right in these tax treaties to 5 per
cent of the payment in respect of the carriage.
47. This restriction, however, only applies to certain full
basis leasing profits that are considered to be payments 'in
respect of carriage'. Other leasing profits are not subject to
this rate limit and either continue to be subject to the source
country taxing right under the ships and aircraft article29 or
fall for consideration under the business profits article of the
relevant tax treaty.30
Variations in wording
48. In some of Australia's tax treaties, paragraph 2 of the
ships and aircraft article refers to 'such profits' rather than
'profits of an enterprise of a Contracting State derived from
the operation of ships or aircraft', and to 'derived' rather
than 'extent'. These variations merely make it clearer how the
provision applies, and do not make any change to the practical
effect of the paragraph.
Other types of major
variations to the standard ships and aircraft article
The Philippine agreement
49. Profits from the operation of ships or aircraft in
international traffic are dealt with in accordance with the
respective domestic laws of Australia and the Philippines,
except that any tax payable on profits from the operation of
ships in international traffic is subject to the limit imposed
by the shipping article of the Philippine agreement, which is
the lesser of:
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·
-
1.5 per cent of the gross revenues derived
from sources in that other state; and
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·
-
the lowest rate of Philippine tax that may
be imposed on profits of the same kind derived under
similar circumstances by a resident of a third State.
Other profits from the operation of ships or aircraft fall for
consideration under the business profits article of the
Philippine agreement.31
The Greek APA
50. As Australia does not have a comprehensive tax treaty with
Greece, both Australia and Greece are free to apply their
domestic law to all ship leasing profits, and to those aircraft
leasing profits not covered by the Greek APA. Aircraft leasing
profits not covered by the Greek APA include:
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·
-
full basis leasing profits derived from
transport operations conducted solely within the
Contracting State in which the lessor is not a resident
(the 'source' State);
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·
-
bareboat leasing profits which are not
ancillary to the lessor's international transport
operations; and
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·
-
all leasing profits derived from
non-transport operations.
Extensions of source country
taxing right - ship operations
51. The ships and aircraft articles in Australia's tax treaties
with Kiribati, Sri Lanka and Thailand32 extend
the source country taxing right beyond profits from the
operation of ships 'confined solely to places in that State' to
half of the profits from the operation of ships other than those
confined solely to places in that State. This extension will
also apply to the relevant leasing profits, which for these
agreements applies in respect of both transport and
non-transport activities (see paragraphs 26 to 27 of this
Ruling).
Part C: priority of the ships and aircraft article over the
business profits article and the royalties article
Business profits article
52. Where profits from leasing ships or aircraft are covered by
an exclusive residence country taxing right under paragraph 1 or
a source country taxing right under paragraph 2 in the relevant
ships and aircraft article, the profits are considered to be
dealt with by that article. Although such profits will often
also be considered to fall within the scope of the business
profits article of the relevant tax treaty, the priority rule in
the business profits article (see for example paragraph 6 of
article 7 of the United Kingdom convention) provides that the
ships and aircraft article applies to those profits.
Accordingly, it is not necessary to consider whether an
enterprise has a permanent establishment in Australia as the
business profits article does not apply to the profits.
Royalties article
53. In certain circumstances, profits of a treaty partner lessor
from leasing a ship or aircraft on a bareboat basis can fall
both within the scope of the ships and aircraft article as
'profits from the operation of ships or aircraft' and within the
scope of the royalties article33 as
a payment of an 'industrial, commercial or scientific equipment
royalty' (if the royalties article of the relevant tax treaty
includes such a payment within the royalties definition).
54. In such cases of overlap, the Commissioner considers that
the treaty context demonstrates that the ships and aircraft
article should take priority over the royalties article unless
there are clear words to the contrary contained in the relevant
tax treaty. Accordingly, the profits from leasing a ship or
aircraft on a bareboat basis will be dealt with by the ships and
aircraft article only.
55. In these circumstances, subsection 17A(5) of the Agreements
Act prevents section 128B of the ITAA 1936 (which deals with
liability to royalty withholding tax) from applying to the
leasing profits of the lessor because the leasing profits are
not treated as a royalty under the relevant tax treaty.
Part D: method of taxation in Australia
56. Leasing profits of an Australian treaty resident lessor of a
ship or aircraft that may be taxed in Australia in accordance
with the ships and aircraft article are taxed on a net
assessment basis under the ordinary provisions applicable for
Australian residents (subsection 6-5(2) of the ITAA 1997).
57. Leasing profits of a treaty partner resident lessor of a
ship or aircraft that may be taxed in Australia in accordance
with the ships and aircraft article, and that have a source in
Australia,34 are
subject to tax on a net assessment basis under the ordinary
income assessment provisions for foreign residents (subsection
6-5(3) of the ITAA 1997).
58. However, where the leasing profits of a lessor (who has its
place of business outside Australia) of a ship meet the
requirements of section 129 of the ITAA 1936 (which deals with
overseas ships), section 129 of the ITAA 1936 will apply to
determine the relevant taxable income of the treaty partner
lessor, rather than the ordinary income assessment provisions.
Examples
Part A: the treatment of leasing profits under the standard
ships and aircraft article
Example 1: leasing profits
subject to an exclusive residence country taxing right - the
standard paragraph 1 wording - the United Kingdom convention
59. Ausco is a resident of Australia for tax treaty purposes.
Ausco operates ships between Australia and the United Kingdom
for the purpose of transporting goods between the two countries.
Apart from this transport activity, Ausco also regularly leases
out its ships on a full basis to other companies that require a
fully crewed ship for a certain period of time to transport
goods between Australia and the United Kingdom. Only on a very
rare occasion is Ausco approached to lease out its ships on a
bareboat basis. This bareboat leasing activity amounts to, on an
average annual basis, only 5 per cent of Ausco's overall revenue
from shipping activities.
60. The profits Ausco derives from leasing its ships on a full
basis fall within paragraph 1 of the shipping and air transport
article in the United Kingdom convention and Australia, as the
country of residence of Ausco, is allocated the taxing right
over these profits.
61. The profits Ausco derives from leasing its ships on a
bareboat basis also fall within paragraph 1 of the shipping and
air transport article in the United Kingdom convention because
the bareboat leasing activity is considered to be ancillary to
Ausco's overall shipping activities. Accordingly, Australia, as
the country of residence of Ausco, is allocated the taxing right
over these bareboat leasing profits.
Example 2: leasing profits
subject to a source country taxing right - the standard
paragraph 2 wording - the 2006 Norwegian convention
62. Seaco is a resident of Norway for tax treaty purposes. Seaco
operates ships that transport passengers and their vehicles only
between Melbourne and Tasmania.
63. On two occasions in the ten years Seaco has run this
business, Seaco has also leased out one of its spare ships on a
bareboat basis to entities who require a ship for slightly
different routes or timeframes than that offered by Seaco. The
last occasion being a bareboat lease to a company, Ventureco,
who used it to take their international clients on a special
sightseeing tour along the west coast of New Zealand.
64. The profits Seaco derived from leasing the ship to Ventureco
on a bareboat basis fall within paragraph 2 of the ships and
aircraft article in the 2006 Norwegian convention. The bareboat
leasing activity is considered to be ancillary to Seaco's ship
operations that are confined solely to places within Australia.
Furthermore, the mere fact that the bareboat leased ship is
operated by Ventureco in New Zealand waters does not change the
ancillary nature of Seaco's leasing activity. Accordingly,
Australia is allocated a source country taxing right over these
bareboat leasing profits. Due to this Australian taxing right,
the source of income article of the 2006 Norwegian convention
deems the leasing profit to have a source in Australia for the
purposes of Australia's domestic tax law provisions.
Example 3: leasing profits
subject to a source country taxing right - the standard
paragraph 2 wording - a voyage to nowhere - the Singapore
agreement
65. Fishingco is a resident of Singapore for tax treaty
purposes. Fishingco owns a ship that is used for fishing
purposes and is based in Cairns. Fishingco enters into a full
basis lease with a lessee wishing to conduct a commercial
fishing expedition off the coast of Australia. The leased ship
departs Cairns and is used to fish mainly in Australian waters,
although it also travels into and fishes in international
waters. The ship returns to Cairns where the catch is unloaded
and sold. At no time during the fishing expedition does the ship
stop in a port outside Australia.
66. Australia is allocated a source country taxing right over
these full basis leasing profits, as distinct from the fishing
profits derived by the lessee, under paragraph 2 as these
profits are derived from 'ship operations confined solely to
places in Australia' because the ship operations constitute a
voyage to nowhere as the leased ship leaves and returns to a
port in Australia and does not stop in a port outside Australia.
Due to this Australian taxing right, article 17 of the
Singaporean agreement deems the leasing profit to have a source
in Australia for the purposes of Australia's domestic tax law
provisions.
Example 4: leasing profits
subject to a source country taxing right - the standard
paragraph 2 wording - a voyage to nowhere - the Netherlands
agreement
67. Surveyco is a resident of the Netherlands for tax treaty
purposes. Surveyco leases one of its ships on a full basis to a
lessee who uses it to survey the seabed along the western coast
of Australia and the southern coast of Indonesia. During the
lease, the leased ship departs from Fremantle with specialist
surveyors and equipment from Perth and returns to Fremantle.
During the voyage the ship does not stop in a port outside
Australia, however, it does enter Indonesian waters.
68. For the same reasons as in Example 3 at paragraph 66 of this
Ruling, the full basis leasing profits are derived from 'ship
operations confined solely to places in Australia' because the
ship operations constitute a voyage to nowhere as the leased
ship leaves and returns to a port in Australia and does not stop
in a port outside Australia. Accordingly, Australia is allocated
a source country taxing right over these full basis leasing
profits, as distinct from the surveying service profits derived
by the lessee, under paragraph 2. Due to this Australian taxing
right, the source of income rules at item 1 of the protocol to
the Netherlands agreement deems the leasing profit to have a
source in Australia for the purposes of Australia's domestic tax
law provisions.
Example 5: leasing profits
subject to a source country taxing right - the standard
paragraph 2 wording - an internal leg of an international voyage
- the Canadian convention
69. Charterco is a resident of Canada for tax treaty purposes.
Charterco operates aircraft for private charter between various
countries in the world. Charterco's clients usually require
their aircraft services within short time frames, for various
purposes and lease the aircraft from Charterco on a full basis
as they do not wish to, or do not have the ability to physically
operate the aircraft themselves.
70. One of Charterco's clients leases an aircraft on a full
basis in order to undertake the client's research activities on
a continuous route between New Zealand, Fiji, Brisbane, Sydney,
then back to New Zealand. The aircraft is leased for five months
and travels this route regularly during this period. Specialist
researchers and equipment from New Zealand are onboard the plane
for the entire route.
71. The operation of the aircraft between Brisbane and Sydney
involves specialist researchers and equipment from Australia
joining the flight in Brisbane and disembarking in Sydney.
During the flight between Brisbane and Sydney the Australian
researchers use their equipment to conduct various tests for the
Australian part of the research activity. This Australian leg of
the overall international voyage of the aircraft is considered a
distinct and separate operation of the aircraft. Accordingly,
the profits from the full basis lease that relate to the time
the aircraft is used by the lessee for the routes between
Brisbane and Sydney are profits of Charterco from operations
confined solely to places within Australia. Therefore, Australia
is allocated a source country taxing right over these full basis
leasing profits, as distinct from any profits derived from the
research by the lessee, under paragraph 2 of the ships and
aircraft article of the Canadian convention. Due to this
Australian taxing right, the source of income article of the
Canadian convention deems the profits from the full basis lease
that relate to the time the aircraft is used in Australia to
have a source in Australia for the purposes of Australia's
domestic tax law provisions.
Part B: the treatment of leasing profits under non-standard
ships and aircraft articles
Example 6: leasing profits
subject to an exclusive residence country taxing right - major
variation to paragraph 1 wording - the United States convention
72. The facts are the same as Example 1 at paragraph 59 of this
Ruling except Ausco operates aircraft between Australia and the
United States. Ausco does not operate aircraft within the United
States.
73. The profits Ausco derives from leasing its aircraft on a
full basis fall within paragraph 1 of the shipping and air
transport article in the United States convention because Ausco
operates the aircraft otherwise than solely within the United
States. As this requirement of subparagraph 1(a) is met, there
is no need to consider whether Ausco regularly leases aircraft
on a full basis. Accordingly, Australia is allocated a residence
country taxing right over these full basis profits.
74. The profits Ausco derives from leasing its aircraft on a
bareboat basis also fall within paragraph 1 of the shipping and
air transport article in the United States convention because
the bareboat leasing activity is considered to be merely
incidental to Ausco's overall operations of aircraft in
international traffic (as prescribed in subparagraph 1(b)).
Accordingly, Australia is allocated a residence country taxing
right over these bareboat leasing profits.
Example 7: leasing profits
(if any) subject to a source country taxing right - major
variation - no equivalent to paragraph 2 - the Korean convention
75. The facts are the same as in Example 2 at paragraph 62 of
this Ruling except that Seaco is a resident of Korea for tax
treaty purposes. Seaco also derives profits from leasing its
ships on a full basis between Tasmania and Melbourne.
76. The profits Seaco derives from leasing its ships on a full
basis and from leasing its ship on a bareboat basis are not
taxable by Australia under the ships and aircraft article of the
Korean convention. This is because the ships and aircraft
article of the Korean convention does not allocate a source
country taxing right to Australia in such circumstances. The
Article does not contain a provision dealing with profits from
the operation of ships confined solely to places within the
other State.
77. Whether Australia has a taxing right in respect of these
leasing profits will be determined under the business profits
article or royalties article in the Korean convention. In
accordance with the Commissioner's view at paragraph 21 of
Taxation Ruling TR 2003/2, profits from a full basis lease of a
ship are not royalties, therefore, article 7 of the Korean
convention will be the applicable article and Australia will
only be permitted to tax this income if Seaco has a permanent
establishment in Australia. Profits from a bareboat lease of a
ship, however, are considered royalties under paragraph 20 of
Taxation Ruling TR 2003/2 and as such the royalties article of
the Korean convention will apply to permit Australia to impose
tax of 15 per cent on the bareboat lease payment (the royalty
payment).
Example 8: major variation
providing rate limits on source country taxing right - the
Belgian agreement
78. The facts are the same as in Example 2 at paragraph 62 of
this Ruling except Seaco is resident of Belgium for tax treaty
purposes.
79. The profits Seaco derives from leasing the ship to Ventureco
on a bareboat basis fall within paragraph 2 of the ships and
aircraft article in the Belgian agreement because the bareboat
leasing activity is considered to be ancillary to Seaco's ship
operations that are confined solely to places within Australia.
Accordingly, Australia is allocated a source country taxing
right over these bareboat leasing profits. Due to this
Australian taxing right, the source of income article of the
Belgium agreement deems the profits from the bareboat lease to
have a source in Australia for the purposes of Australia's
domestic tax law provisions.
80. Paragraph 5 of article 8 of the Belgian agreement limits the
source country's ability to tax profits under paragraph 2 of
article 8 to 5 per cent of the amount paid or payable in respect
of carriage in such operations. There is no limit in respect of
amounts that are not in respect of carriage in such operations.
The profits that arise under a bareboat lease are not 'in
respect of carriage' (of passengers, goods etcetera) as the
lease fees will be received regardless of the number of
passengers, amount of goods, etcetera carried on the ship during
the lease. Hence, the 5 per cent rate limit under paragraph 5 of
article 8 does not apply. As a result, Australia is not
restricted by this rate limit when exercising its source country
taxing right over bareboat leasing profits under paragraph 2 of
article 8 of the Belgian agreement.
Example 9: major variation
extending source country taxing rights for ship operations - the
Thai agreement
81. Pacifico is a resident of Thailand for tax treaty purposes.
Pacifico provides ship transport and freight services between
Australia and Thailand. Pacifico also leases some of its ships
on a full basis between Australia and Thailand.
82. The profits Pacifico derives from leasing its ships on a
full basis in international traffic fall within paragraph 2 of
the shipping and aircraft article in the Thai agreement.
Accordingly, Australia is allocated a source country taxing
right over these full basis profits. Due to this Australian
taxing right, the source of income article of the Thai agreement
deems the profits from these full basis leases to have a source
in Australia for the purposes of Australia's domestic tax law
provisions. However, Australia's taxing right under paragraph 2
of article 8 of the Thai agreement (which only applies to ships)
is restricted to one half of the amount of tax that would
otherwise be payable in Australia in respect of Pacifico's full
basis leasing profits but for this restriction.
Part C: priority of the ships and aircraft article over the
business profits article and the royalties article
Example 10: the Mexican
agreement
83. Touristco is a resident of Mexico for tax treaty purposes.
Touristco operates specialised sightseeing tours by aircraft
within Queensland and the Northern Territory of Australia. It
does not have any offices in Australia, as it procures most of
its business online.
84. Due to a scheduling mistake, Touristco had an idle aircraft
in Australia for a period of three weeks. Touristco decided to
lease it out on a bareboat basis to an Australian resident
individual for use within the Northern Territory.
85. The profits Touristco derives from leasing the aircraft on a
bareboat basis fall within paragraph 2 of the ships and aircraft
article in the Mexican agreement because the bareboat leasing
activity is considered to be ancillary to Touristco's aircraft
operations that are confined solely to places within Australia.
However, the lease payment could be regarded as a royalty under
the royalties article in the Mexican agreement because it is
also a payment for the right to use commercial equipment.
86. However the Commissioner considers that in such cases of
potential overlap between the ships and aircraft article and the
royalties article, the treaty context indicates that the ships
and aircraft article should take priority unless there are clear
words to the contrary contained in the relevant treaty. As a
result, the profits are dealt with in accordance with paragraph
2 of article 8 of the Mexican agreement, not the royalties
article with effect that the leasing profits are not treated as
a royalty under the relevant tax treaty.
87. This means that Australia is allocated a source country
taxing right over these bareboat leasing profits. Due to this
Australian taxing right, the source of income article of the
Mexican agreement deems the profits from the bareboat lease to
have a source in Australia for the purposes of Australia's
domestic tax law provisions. However, Australia taxes those
profits on a net assessment basis, not on a withholding basis as
subsection 17A(5) of the Agreements Act prevents section 128B of
the ITAA 1936 (which relates to withholding tax) from applying.
Part D: method of taxation in Australia
Example 11: the United
Kingdom convention
88. The facts are the same as Example 7 at paragraph 75 of this
Ruling except Seaco is a United Kingdom resident for tax treaty
purposes.
89. The profits Seaco derives from leasing the ship on a full
basis fall within paragraph 2 of the shipping and air transport
article in the United Kingdom convention because the leasing
profits are considered to be profits from ship operations
confined solely to places within Australia. Accordingly,
Australia is allocated a source country taxing right over these
full basis leasing profits. Due to this Australian taxing right,
the source of income article of the United Kingdom convention
deems the leasing profit to have a source in Australia for the
purposes of Australia's domestic tax law provisions.
90. As the profits fall within section 129 of the ITAA 1936, the
taxable income derived by Seaco for Australian tax purposes will
be deemed to be 5 per cent of the lease payment it receives in
respect of the carriage under the full basis lease. Accordingly
there is no need to calculate the assessable income and
deductions that relate to the full basis lease payment.
Date of effect
91. This Ruling applies to years of income commencing both
before and after its date of issue. However, this Ruling will
not apply to taxpayers to the extent that it conflicts with the
terms of a settlement of a dispute agreed to before the date of
issue of this Ruling (see paragraphs 75 and 76 of Taxation
Ruling TR 2006/10).
Commissioner of Taxation
22 October 2008
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. |
Undefined terms
92. Many of the terms that are contained in the ships and
aircraft article of Australia's tax treaties are not defined
within those treaties. The majority of Australia's tax treaties
contain a provision explaining the treatment of undefined terms
in the general definition article. That provision provides
broadly that where a term is not defined in the treaty, it takes
on the meaning it has under the domestic taxation law of the
country applying the treaty, unless the context otherwise
requires.35
93. The Commissioner's approach to the interpretation of
undefined terms in a tax treaty, as set out in paragraphs 63 to
76 of Taxation Ruling TR 2001/13 Income tax: interpreting
Australia's Double Tax Agreements, is used in this Ruling to
provide meaning to the undefined terms referred to in this
Ruling.
Part A: the treatment of leasing profits under the standard
ships and aircraft article
Paragraph 1
94. Paragraph 1 of the standard36 ships
and aircraft article37 provides
an exclusive residence country taxing right to profits from the
operations of ships and aircraft in 'international traffic'.
95. Profits falling within this exclusive residence country
taxing right under the standard wording in paragraph 1 are
considered to be 'dealt with' by the ships and aircraft article
and therefore do not fall for consideration under the business
profits article of the relevant tax treaty (see also paragraph
52 of this Ruling).
Meaning of 'international
traffic'
96. For the standard articles,38 the
term 'international traffic' is defined in the relevant
definitions article of the tax treaty as 'any transport by a
ship or aircraft operated by an enterprise of a Contracting
State, except when the ship or aircraft is operated solely
between places in the other Contracting State'.39
97. The effect of this definition is to limit the exclusive
residence country taxing right contained in paragraph 1 to
profits from transport (for example the carriage of passengers
or cargo).
98. The definition also limits the exclusive residence country
taxing right to those profits from transport activities that are
not solely operated out of, or between, places such as ports or
airports in the other Contracting State.
99. This limitation provided in the definition of 'international
traffic' also covers voyages that start and end at the same port
or airport, or in two different ports or airports in the other
Contracting State, even if part of the transport takes place
outside that State provided it does not involve a stop in a port
or airport in any other State. This is similar to the approach
taken in the Commentary on article 3 of the OECD Model40 which
explains that a cruise ship which begins and ends in a State
without stopping at a foreign port does not constitute a
transport of passengers in international traffic. It is noted
that in Australia's tax treaty with the United Kingdom the words
'from a place' have been inserted in the definition of
'international traffic' which removes any doubt concerning this
approach. These operations fall outside paragraph 1, but fall
for consideration under paragraph 2, which provides that a
taxing right is allocated to the other State (the 'source
country').
100. However, consistent with the OECD Model's approach, the
term international traffic includes transport between places in
the other Contracting State where the journey between places in
that State (the internal leg) forms part of a longer voyage
involving a place of departure and a place of arrival which is
outside that State (a broader international voyage).41 Notwithstanding
that these specific operations fall within the term
'international traffic' in the standard ships and aircraft
article, the internal leg may also fall for consideration under
paragraph 2 if it is an operation 'confined solely to places
within the other State' (see paragraphs 114 to 147 of this
Ruling).
Application to leasing
101. A lessor under a full basis lease is considered to be
providing a service to the lessee by providing a ship fully
crewed and supplied (See paragraph 21 of Taxation Ruling TR
2003/2), and as a result the lessor is treated as operating the
ship or aircraft. This is supported by paragraph 5 of the
Commentary on article 8 of the OECD Model, which states that
'profits obtained by leasing a ship or aircraft on charter fully
equipped, crewed and supplied must be treated like profits from
the carriage of passengers or cargo'. Therefore, profits derived
by a lessor from the lease of a ship or aircraft on a full basis
fall within paragraph 1 as profits from the operation of ships
or aircraft.
102. The lessor under a bareboat lease is only making available
the ship or aircraft, and is not considered to be operating the
ship or aircraft. Therefore profits derived by a lessor from a
bareboat lease of a ship or aircraft generally do not fall
within paragraph 1 as profits from the operation of ships or
aircraft.
103. However, activities that are different from, but ancillary
to the main shipping or aircraft operations of a non-resident
enterprise are treated as part of those main operations.
Accordingly, profits from a bareboat lease that is ancillary to
the ship or aircraft operations of a lessor will fall within
paragraph 1.
104. The basis for this approach is outlined in the Commentary
on article 8 of the OECD Model. Paragraph 4 of the Commentary
states that paragraph 1 of article 8 covers profits not directly
connected with the operations of ships or aircraft in
international traffic as long as they are ancillary to such
operations. Paragraph 4.2 of the Commentary considers ancillary
activities to be those which make a minor contribution and are
so closely related to the operations that they should not be
regarded as a separate business or source of income.
105. A bareboat leasing activity will be 'ancillary' to the
lessor's operation of ships or aircraft, notwithstanding that
the activity may not need to be carried on for the purposes of
the lessor's own operation of ships or aircraft, provided that
the activity:
-
·
-
does not make more than a minor
contribution to the lessor's overall transport
activities; and
-
·
-
does not amount to a separate source of
income or separate business.
106. This would be the case where, for example, an enterprise
operates a ship for transport purposes, but enters into a
'one-off' bareboat lease for the ship because of down time. See
paragraph 145 of this Ruling for further detail on the factors
that the Commissioner considers relevant in determining whether
the leasing activity is 'ancillary' to the operation of ships or
aircraft.
107. The location where the bareboat leased ship or aircraft is
operated by the lessee does not change the ancillary nature of
the leasing activity. As such a bareboat leasing profit will be
'ancillary' to the lessor's own operation of ships or aircraft
irrespective of where the lessee uses the ship or aircraft, for
example, between the two treaty partner countries or within one
of the treaty partner countries.
108. Accordingly, the types of leasing profits covered by
paragraph 1 are:
-
·
-
a full basis lease in respect of any
transport by a ship or aircraft operated in
international traffic; and
-
·
-
a bareboat lease which is ancillary to the
lessor's transport operations of ships or aircraft in
international traffic.
Paragraph 2
109. Notwithstanding the exclusive residence country taxing
right provided over profits by paragraph 1, the wording in
paragraph 2 of the standard42 ships
and aircraft article in Australia's tax treaties43 provides
a source country taxing right over profits from the operation of
ships or aircraft to the extent they are 'confined solely to
places in that other State'.
110. Profits falling within this source country taxing right
under the standard wording in paragraph 2 are dealt with by the
ships and aircraft article and do not fall for consideration
under the business profits article of the relevant tax treaty
(see also paragraph 52 of this Ruling).
111. The scope of paragraph 2 is not restricted by the scope of
paragraph 1. The words 'notwithstanding paragraph 1' in
paragraph 2 ensure that the source country taxing right afforded
under paragraph 2 applies to any profits that might otherwise be
subject to the exclusive residence country taxing right under
paragraph 1.
112. Unlike paragraph 1, paragraph 2 applies to both transport
and non-transport profits derived by a tax treaty resident where
the operations are confined solely to places in the source
country. This is because paragraph 2 uses the broader language
of 'operations of ships or aircraft' which is not restricted to
transport activities.44 Non-transport
profits include profits from ship or aircraft operations such as
fishing, dredging, crop dusting, salvage operations, and
surveying.
113. Further, unlike paragraph 1, the internal operations apply
not to 'where a ship or aircraft is operated solely between
places', but to 'ship or aircraft operations confined solely to
places in that other state'.
Meaning of 'operations confined
solely to places in that other state'
Operations of ships or aircraft
114. Paragraph 2 deals with an enterprise of a Contracting State
that is deriving profits from the operation of ships or
aircraft, and applies to provide a taxing right to the other
State over any parts of those profits that are derived from
operations confined solely to places in that other State.
Therefore this provision involves an examination of the ship or
aircraft activities undertaken by the enterprise in that other
Contracting State and determining whether those particular
activities constitute operations that are confined solely to
places in that State.
115. The predominant activities to be considered are those that
involve the physical operation of the ship or aircraft, as
opposed to the activities involved in the administration of an
enterprise's overall shipping or aircraft business (for example,
contract negotiation or ongoing management of ownership, lease
or finance obligations relating to the ship or aircraft).
116. In considering whether or how particular activities
constitute 'operations of ships or aircraft' guidance can be
obtained from the ordinary meaning45 of
the term 'operation' which includes the action or process of
operating.46 Therefore,
when considering the plural, 'operations', provided the
activities consist of actions or processes of operating in their
own right, they would constitute an 'operation'.
117. However, this does not mean that any ship or aircraft
activity, or group of activities will constitute a ship or
aircraft operation in their own right. The activity or
activities undertaken in the other Contracting State must be
sufficient to constitute a distinct ship or aircraft operation
that is identifiable separately from other ship or aircraft
operations of the enterprise.
118. This approach can be distinguished from that taken in
respect of the definition of 'international traffic'. That
definition only has regard, in relation to the breadth of its
internal traffic exclusion, to whether the ship or aircraft
itself is operated solely between places in the other State. The
reference to 'operated' is linked to the use made of 'the ship
or aircraft' and in the context of transport activities this is
considered to be the particular voyage undertaken by the
particular ship or aircraft. For paragraph 2, however, the focus
is on 'operations' with the more general reference to 'ship or
aircraft' being of a descriptive nature (that is to distinguish
ship or aircraft operations from other operations). Therefore,
it involves examining the activities of an enterprise relating
to ships or aircraft that take place in the other State, to
determine whether they constituted an 'operation' or
'operations' confined solely to that State, rather than merely
examining the particular voyage of a ship or aircraft. This
difference is consistent with the fact that unlike the
definition of 'international traffic', paragraph 2 also deals
with non-transport activities, which by their nature involve a
wider range of activities than the mere voyage itself (for
example fishing, dredging, surveying).
Transport activities
119. Whilst the terms of paragraph 2 determine the scope of the
profits covered therein, certain profits are also expressly
included in paragraph 2 by the deeming provision provided in
paragraph 4 of the ships and aircraft article (paragraph 4) in
Australia's tax treaties. Accordingly paragraph 4 has effect to
ensure these profits are included within paragraph 2 by removing
any doubt. Therefore it does not operate in a manner which could
be said to narrow the scope of the profits falling within the
source country taxing right in paragraph 2.
120. The standard paragraph 4 in the ships and aircraft article
in Australia's tax treaties deems profits derived from the
carriage by ships or aircraft of passengers and cargo which are
shipped in a Contracting State and discharged at a place in that
State to be profits from ship or aircraft operations confined
solely to places in that State for the purposes of paragraph 2.
121. Paragraph 4 also deals with those profits from the
Australian leg of an international voyage, where passengers or
cargo are taken onboard at a place in a Contracting State for
discharge in that State. While such profits fall within
paragraph 1 by virtue of the definition of 'international
traffic', they are also caught under paragraph 2 and a taxing
right is allocated to that other State (the 'source country').
122. The paragraph also applies to voyages that start and end at
the same port or airport, or in two different ports or airports
in the other Contracting State, even if part of the transport
takes place outside that State (without stopping at another port
or airport), that is a voyage to nowhere.
Non-transport activities
123. Paragraph 4 does not apply to profits from non-transport
ship or aircraft operations, such as fishing, dredging, aerial
advertising, aerial spotting, crop dusting, salvage operations
and surveying. Whether these profits fall within paragraph 2
must be considered under the specific terms of that paragraph.
124. Paragraph 2 deals with an enterprise of a Contracting State
that derives profits from the operation of ships or aircraft,
and it provides a taxing right to the other State over any parts
of those profits that are derived from operations confined
solely to places in that State. Therefore this provision
requires an examination of the ship or aircraft activities
undertaken by the enterprise in that other Contracting State and
determining whether those particular activities constitute
operations which are confined solely to places in that
Contracting State. The fact that the activities are part of a
wider business conducted outside that State does not preclude
the activities from constituting an operation in that State in
their own right. If they do form an operation in that State in
their own right, then they will be an operation confined solely
to places in that State for these purposes.
125. Whether or not activities undertaken in the other State
constitute an operation in that State will depend on the type of
non-transport activity and nature and extent of the particular
activities being undertaken. Provided the activities consist of
an active process, activity, performance and discharge of
function in their own right, they would constitute an
'operation'.
126. However, this does not mean that any ship or aircraft
activity, or group of activities will constitute ship or
aircraft operations in their own right. The activity or
activities undertaken in the other Contracting State must be
sufficient to constitute a distinct ship or aircraft operation
that is identifiable separately from other ship or aircraft
operations.
127. For example in relation to a dredging vessel contracted to
dredge a harbour in an Australian port the dredging and
associated activities conducted in that Australian port area
would be treated as an operation of a ship confined solely to
places in Australia. The mere travel necessary for the
contractor to bring the dredge to Australia, and on completion
travel to another location for the next contract would not form
a part of the operation.
128. On the other hand, where an enterprise operates a fishing
boat that departs and finishes its voyage in the Contracting
State of which it is resident, but makes a single visit to a
port in the other Contracting State to refuel, this visit would
not constitute a ship operation in that other State. However, if
the boat re-fuels and picks up provisions from the port, departs
and fishes in that other Contracting State, returns to that port
in the other State to unload fish, re-fuel and pick up
provisions, these activities would constitute a distinct ship
operation in the other State. Such an operation is separately
identifiable from other ship or aircraft operations of that
enterprise, notwithstanding that the activities may be part of a
larger fishing expedition that commences and finishes in the
State of residence of the enterprise.
129. A further consideration is that ship or aircraft activities
will be likely to be separately identifiable operations where
they are part of the usual operations of the enterprise, such as
where the contract for the operation of the ship or aircraft in
international traffic includes use for internal flights or
voyages, or internal flights or voyages are part of the usual
schedule of use of the aircraft or ship. However, internal
flights or voyages that form part of a broader international
voyage would be unlikely to be separately identifiable
operations where they are one-off arrangements that arise on an
ad hoc basis. They would also be unlikely to be separately
identifiable operations where they form only a minor part of the
overall flight or voyage, for example in paragraph 128 of this
Ruling where the fishing activities in Australia only
constituted one day of a seven day fishing expedition.
Voyages to nowhere
130. A further issue arises where a ship or aircraft departs and
returns to a location in the other State (or another location in
that other State), but also travels outside the domestic waters
or airspace of that State as a part of the journey. This
requires consideration of whether such activities constitute an
operation that is confined solely to places in that other State,
or whether the operation is also undertaken in places outside
that other State.
131. Some guidance can be obtained by examining the ordinary
meaning of the term 'places', or 'place'. While the term has a
number of meanings, in the context of the ships and aircraft
article which deals with the operations of ships and aircraft in
international and domestic traffic, it is considered that it is
being used in a geographical sense.
132. The dictionary meaning of 'place' in a geographical sense
includes:
-
·
-
a particular position or point in space; a
location;
-
·
-
a portion of space available or designated
for someone; or
-
·
-
a square or short street.47
133. Many elements of the geographical definition link a 'place'
with a physical location. This is the sense that the term would
be used in paragraph 2, given that it deals with the operations
of ships and aircraft in internal traffic, which would involve
the use of specific physical locations, such as harbours, ports,
safe anchorages, airports and landing strips.
134. In this context, 'places' does not include broad concepts
such as 'international airspace' or 'international waters', as
these are not specifically identifiable locations that refer to
a particular area occupied by a person or thing. Further, the
view that 'places' refers to specific physical locations, such
as ports, does not result in ship or aircraft activities being
limited to a particular point on a map. In the context of
paragraph 2, confined solely to 'places' refers to specific
physical locations within the other Contracting State as
compared to specific physical locations in other States.
Therefore, activities undertaken solely within or between ports
in the other Contracting State would constitute activities
confined solely to places in that other State. This approach is
also supported by the fact that to limit the term 'places' to a
particular point on a map would produce an absurd result.
135. This approach is also consistent with the OECD Commentary
on article 3 when considering the term 'places' in the context
of 'operated solely between places in the other State'. The
Commentary treats 'places' as referring to specific physical
locations such as 'the place of departure' and 'place of
arrival'. It also states that transport would still be between
places in the other Contracting State where the ship or aircraft
is operated between two places in that State, even if part of
the transport takes place outside that State, and gives the
example of a cruise beginning and ending in that State without
stopping in a foreign port.48 Not
only does this indicate that for shipping a port is considered
to be a place, but also that a place could not mean areas of a
general nature such as international waters or airspace, as this
would render the approach taken in the Commentary invalid.
136. Therefore ship or aircraft operations that depart from and
return to locations within the other Contracting State would be
confined solely to places in that State, provided the operations
did not involve a stop in a port, airport, etcetera, in any
other State. This would apply notwithstanding that the ship or
aircraft merely passes through international waters or airspace
or the waters or airspace of another State.
Application to leasing
137. The deeming provided under paragraph 4 is limited to
profits derived from the carriage by ships or aircraft of
passenger and cargo, and therefore does not apply to leasing
arrangements, whether involving transport or non-transport
activities. Leasing profits are not profits derived from the
carriage of passengers and cargo, rather they are profits that
the lessor derives from the provision of services under the
lease that facilitate the carriage and are not derived from the
carriage of passengers and goods. Therefore, the treatment of
profits of a lessor under a full basis lease will depend on
whether they fall under the expression 'operations of ships or
aircraft confined solely to places in that other State' in
paragraph 2.
138. As identified in paragraphs 114 to 129 of this Ruling,
applying paragraph 2 of the ships and aircraft article requires
an examination of the ship or aircraft activities undertaken in
the other State, in this case by the lessor, and determining
whether those activities would constitute ship or aircraft
operations. The activities must be sufficient to constitute an
identifiable and separate operation in that State.
139. For a full basis lessor, the predominant activities to be
considered are not the activities involving the formation of the
lease itself, but the activities in respect of the provision of
services under the lease.49 These
activities would consist of the tasks undertaken by a ship or
aircraft, crew and other facilities when meeting the
requirements of the lessee under the lease. As such a key
consideration when determining the characteristics of these
activities is the characteristics of the actual tasks that are
undertaken. If the tasks are undertaken in the other Contracting
State, then the activities would take place in that State.
Further, where the tasks undertaken by the ship or aircraft,
crew and other facilities is sufficient to constitute a ship or
aircraft operation of the lessee, then those tasks would also be
sufficient to constitute a ship or aircraft operation of the
lessor.
140. This approach is supported by the Commentary on article 8
of the OECD Model which provides that the profits of the lessor
must be treated the same as the profits from the carriage of
passengers or cargo.50 Implied
in this approach is the consideration that the operations of the
lessor should be treated the same as the operations of the
lessee, particularly given the substantial nature of a full
basis lease in relation to the overall shipping activity.
141. Therefore, for a full basis lease, where a ship or aircraft
operation of the lessee is confined solely to places in the
other State, the lessor will be considered to also have
undertaken a ship or aircraft operation confined solely to
places in that state. The profits of the lessor derived from
that operation will be taxable in that other State.
Ancillary activity - bareboat leasing profits covered by
paragraph 2
142. The issue arises as to whether ancillary activities should
be covered under paragraph 2 in a similar manner as they are
covered under paragraph 1. Including ancillary activities in
international operations for the purposes of paragraph 1 arises
in the context that international transport has 'evolved' and
covers a whole range of activities, both directly and indirectly
related to such transport and because of this diverse nature
should be viewed as encompassing all these activities when
determining the tax position. These diverse features of
international traffic would be just as relevant for domestic
transport, and the same holistic approach should be taken to
determining what are shipping or aircraft operations under
paragraph 2 for non-international purposes.
143. Therefore profits derived from ship or aircraft operations
confined solely to places in that other State will include
ancillary activities on the basis that they make a minor
contribution and are so closely related to those operations that
they should not be regarded as a separate business or source of
income. This is the case for a bareboat lease that is ancillary
to the ship or aircraft operations of a lessor.
144. Similar to the approach under paragraph 1, where the main
activity of a lessor is the operation of ships or aircraft
solely within the other Contracting State (internal operations),
any profits the lessor derives from leasing ships or aircraft on
a bareboat basis that are ancillary to such internal operations
fall within paragraph 2 regardless of where the lessee uses the
bareboat leased ship or aircraft.
145. Whether bareboat leasing profits are 'ancillary' to the
internal operations of a lessor for the purposes of paragraph 2
is a matter to be determined on the facts of each case. The
Commissioner considers the following factors are relevant to
such a determination:
-
·
-
a comparison between the lessor's internal
ship or aircraft operations and the lessor's bareboat
leasing activity;
-
·
-
the duration of the bareboat lease or
leases;
-
·
-
the frequency with which the lessor
engages in such bareboat leasing activity; and
-
·
-
any other facts or circumstances relevant
to determining whether such bareboat leasing activities
are incidental to the lessor's business or are a
separate business of the lessor.
146. A difficulty could arise in respect of ancillary activities
where the internal operation of the lessor is the internal leg
of an overall international voyage. In this situation, profits
derived from an ancillary bareboat lease could be treated as
allocable to both international traffic and internal traffic,
which may defeat the purpose of treating the ancillary bareboat
lease as part of just one business or source of income.
147. To address this difficulty, an ancillary bareboat lease
will be treated as arising solely in respect of the
non-resident's international operations, except where those
international operations are only a minor part of the lessor's
overall ship or aircraft operations.
Part B: the treatment of leasing profits under non-standard
ships and aircraft articles
Major variations from the
standard paragraph 1
Reciprocal exemption approach
148. The relevant provisions of Australia's tax treaties with
the Philippines, Japan 1969 and Germany, and Australia's APAs
with Italy, France, Greece and China (see Tables 1 and 3 of
Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling) provide a reciprocal
exemption from, or limitation of, a source country taxing right
over certain profits from ship or aircraft operations (with some
requiring the operations be in international traffic or within
the country of residence of the lessor).
149. Although these tax treaties and APAs do not expressly
'allocate' a residence country taxing right over certain profits
from the operation of ships and/or aircraft, they have the same
practical effect as providing an exclusive taxing right. That
is, the source country is not permitted to tax the relevant
profits under the provision.
Application to non-transport
profits
150. Paragraph 1 of the ships and aircraft article in some of
Australia's tax treaties51 provides
an exclusive residence country taxing right over 'profits from
the operations of ships or aircraft', without limiting the
provision to 'international traffic'.
151. The lack of a reference to international traffic means that
the scope of this paragraph is broader than the standard
Australian paragraph 1, and applies to both transport and
non-transport profits derived by a tax treaty resident from the
operation of ships or aircraft.
152. The major difference with the broader application of
paragraph 1 from a leasing perspective is that it will include
profits from a full basis lease, or ancillary bareboat lease,
that are derived from non-transport ship or aircraft operations.
153. Apart from this difference, the broader words in paragraph
1 would apply to leasing profits on a similar basis to the
standard words. The ordinary meaning of the expression 'profits
from the operations of ships or aircraft' includes profits
derived from leasing a ship or aircraft on a full basis because
the provision of a ship or aircraft fully crewed and supplied
under a full basis lease involves such a substantial use of the
ship or aircraft that it clearly constitutes the lessor
'operating' the ship or aircraft.
154. Similarly, profits derived from leasing a ship or aircraft
on a bareboat basis would not generally be considered to be
profits from the operation of ships or aircraft because such
leases involve the more passive provision by the lessor of the
ship or aircraft to a lessee who then organises the crew and
supplies required to operate the ship or aircraft.
155. However, the Commissioner considers that profits from
leasing a ship or aircraft on a bareboat basis that are
ancillary to the lessor's other operations of ships or aircraft
should be accorded the same treatment as profits from the
operation of ships or aircraft and therefore included within the
scope of the exclusive residence country taxing right in
paragraph 1.
156. Such ancillary bareboat leasing profits are included
because they are so minor and closely related to the operations
of ships or aircraft by the lessor that they should not be
treated as a separate business or source of income.
157. This view is consistent with the approach taken in the
Commentary on article 8 of the OECD Model52 which
considers ancillary activities to be those which make a minor
contribution and are so closely related to the operations that
they should not be regarded as a separate business or source of
income.
158. It should be noted that although paragraph 1 of the Korean
convention uses the term 'international traffic', the term is
defined in subparagraph (1)(k) of article 3 of the Korean
convention by reference to the broader concept of 'operation of
ships or aircraft', rather than the narrower concept of
'transport'. Accordingly, the leasing profits falling within the
scope of paragraph 1 of the Korean convention are the same as
those covered under the broader paragraph 1 wording.
Specific provisions dealing with
leasing profits
The United States convention
159. While paragraph 1 of the shipping and air transport article
in the United States convention53 adopt
the standard approach to paragraph 1, subparagraphs 1(a) and (b)
provide restrictions on the exclusive residence country taxing
right over profits from leasing activities.
160. These paragraphs provide an exclusive residence country
taxing right over profits from the following ships and aircraft
leases:
-
·
-
a full basis lease where the ship or
aircraft is operated in international traffic by the
lessee, provided the lessor:
-
(i)
-
either operates ships or aircraft
otherwise than solely between places in the
source country; or
-
(ii)
-
regularly leases ships or aircraft
on a full basis; and
-
·
-
a bareboat lease which is merely
incidental to the lessor's operation of ships or
aircraft in international traffic.
161. Therefore, only those full basis leasing profits that meet
the additional requirements in subparagraph (1)(a) of article 8
of the United States convention (see the first dot point in
paragraph 160 of this Ruling) will be the subject of the
exclusive residence country taxing right in paragraph 1.
162. In the case of bareboat leasing profits, however, the
requirements in subparagraph (1)(b) of article 8) of the United
States convention (see the second dot point in paragraph 160 of
this Ruling) include the same types of bareboat leasing profits
as those under the standard paragraph 1 wording of Australia's
tax treaties. This is because the term 'merely incidental' is
considered to have the same effect as the term 'ancillary'.54
The Taipei Agreement
163. Paragraph 1 of the ships and aircraft article of the Taipei
Agreement 55 adopts
the broad approach that applies to both transport and
non-transport activities. However, subparagraph 3(a) of article
8 provides that the profits to which paragraph 1 (and paragraph
2) of article 8 applies includes profits from a full time,
voyage or bareboat basis lease where the lease is merely
incidental to the international operation of ships or aircraft
by the lessor, but only if the lessee uses the ship or aircraft
in international operations.
164. A full basis lease is usually not considered to be
incidental to the operation of ships or aircraft by the lessor,
but is treated itself as an operation of ships or aircraft by
the lessor.
165. A profit from a 'lease on a voyage basis' (or 'voyage
charter-party') is, for the purposes of other Australian tax
treaties, not regarded as a 'leasing profit' (see paragraph 17
of this Ruling). However, the Taipei Agreement refers to a
voyage charter-party as a lease and therefore is an exception to
this position. A lease on a voyage basis is also usually not
considered to be incidental to the operation of ships or
aircraft by the lessor, but is treated itself as an operation of
ships or aircraft by the lessor.
166. The general requirements for bareboat leases to fall within
paragraph 1 as being ancillary do not rely upon whether or not
the leased ship or aircraft is used in international or internal
operations. However, subparagraph 3(a) of article 8 of the
Taipei Agreement applies to restrict ancillary bareboat leases
from falling within paragraph 1 unless the lessee operates the
leased ship or aircraft in international traffic.
The South African agreement
167. Paragraph 1 of the ships and aircraft article of the South
African agreement56 adopts
the broad approach that applies to both transport and
non-transport activities. However, subparagraph 3(a) of article
8 provides that the profits to which paragraph 1 (and paragraph
2) apply include profits from a bareboat basis lease where the
lease is merely incidental to the international operation of
ships or aircraft by the lessor but only if the lessee uses the
ship or aircraft in international operations.
168. Consequently, in the case of bareboat leasing profits,
where the lease is merely incidental to the international
operations of the lessor, the South African agreement requires
that the lessee operate the ship or aircraft in international
traffic before the leasing profit will be included in the
exclusive residence country taxing right. This is consistent
with paragraph 1.66 of the Explanatory Memorandum to the
International Tax Agreements Amendment Bill 1999 (which
incorporates the South African agreement) which states:
Paragraph 3 extends the application of the article to
profits derived from the lease of ships or aircraft on a
bareboat basis, or of containers and related equipment, where
the lease of such ships or aircraft, or the containers and
related equipment, is incidental to the international
operation of the ships or aircraft .
The article only extends to such profits, however, where the
lessee operates the ships or aircraft in international
traffic or the containers and related equipment are so used.
(emphasis added)
Variation from the standard
paragraph 2
No treatment of leasing profits
under paragraph 2
169. The ships and aircraft articles in Australia's tax treaties
with the US, Japan 1969, and Korea, and Australia's APAs with
Italy, France, Greece and China57 either:
-
·
-
do not include a provision that is
equivalent to the standard paragraph 2; or
-
·
-
include a provision that is equivalent to
the standard paragraph 2 but it is restricted to profits
derived from 'carriage'.
170. As a result, no leasing profits are subject to a source
country taxing right under the ships and aircraft article in
these tax treaties or under the respective APAs.
The United States convention
171. There is no equivalent to the standard paragraph 2 in the
shipping and air transport article of the United States
convention. Although paragraph 4 of that Article58 provides
a source country taxing right over certain profits, the
paragraph does not include leasing profits.
172. Paragraph 4 refers to 'profits derived from the carriage by
ships or aircraft'. The words 'derived from' require a direct
link between the profits and the carriage which is only met by
profits from actual carriage, that is the profits derived from
transporting passengers, goods, etcetera. Ship or aircraft
leasing profits are profits that a lessor derives from the
leasing out a ship or aircraft to a lessee to use for their own
transportation needs. Such leasing profits are not derived from
the lessor providing for the carriage of the lessee's passengers
or cargo.
173. Accordingly, those leasing profits that are not dealt with
by the exclusive residence country taxing right in paragraph 1
of the shipping and air transport article in the United States
convention will fall outside the scope of that article and fall
for consideration under the business profits article of that
convention.59
The 1969 Japanese agreement and the Korean convention
174. There is no equivalent to the standard paragraph 2 in the
ships and aircraft articles in the 1969 Japanese agreement and
the Korean convention.60 Both
tax treaties, however, exclude 'profits from the operation of
ships or aircraft confined solely to places in that other
Contracting State' from paragraph 1 of the respective ships and
aircraft articles. Accordingly, such profits, including full
basis and bareboat leasing profits, will fall for consideration
under other articles of the respective tax treaties, for
example, the business profits article (where it is a standard
business profits article)61 or
the royalties article.
The Italian, French, Greek and Chinese APAs
175. There is also no equivalent to the standard paragraph 2 for
profits from leasing aircraft in Australia's APAs with Italy,
France and Greece (see Tables 1 and 3 of Appendix 3 at paragraph
219 of this Ruling). Similar to the Japanese agreement and the
Korean convention, these APAs are drafted so that they only
provide an exemption from a source country taxing right with
respect to aircraft operations in international traffic, and
they do not allocate any taxing rights to the source country
with respect to operations confined solely to places within the
source country. The profits from these internal operations would
be dealt with under other articles of the relevant comprehensive
tax treaty, if there is one in place.
176. The Chinese APA62 includes
an equivalent to the standard paragraph 2 of the standard ships
and aircraft article that provides a source country taxing right
for internal operations, but is limited to profits 'derived from
the carriage by aircraft of passenger, goods, etcetera'. This
taxing right does not cover 'leasing profits' as such profits
are not profits 'derived from' the carriage by aircraft (see
also paragraphs 171 to 173 of this Ruling in relation to the
same issue in the United States convention).
Italian, French and Chinese shipping articles
177. The shipping article in the respective tax treaties with
Italy, France (1976) and China63 includes
an equivalent to paragraph 2 of the standard ships and aircraft
article, which deals with both transport and non-transport ship
operations confined solely to places in a State.
Specific provisions dealing with
leasing profits
The South African agreement
178. Paragraph 2 of the ships and aircraft article of the South
African agreement64 adopts
the standard paragraph 2 approach. However, subparagraph 3(a) of
article 8 provides that the profits to which paragraph 2 applies
include profits from a bareboat basis lease where the lease is
merely incidental to the international operation of ships or
aircraft by the lessor provided the lessee uses the ship or
aircraft in international operations.
179. However, as paragraph 2 does not apply to international
operations, subparagraph 3(a) does not limit the situations
where paragraph 2 would apply to incidental bareboat leases.
The Taipei Agreement
180. Paragraph 2 of the ships and aircraft article of the Taipei
Agreement65 also
adopts the standard paragraph 2 approach. However, subparagraph
3(a) of article 8 provides that the profits to which paragraph 2
applies include profits from a full basis, voyage basis or
bareboat lease where the lease is merely incidental to the
international operation of ships or aircraft by the lessor
provided the lessee uses the ship or aircraft in international
operations.
181. However, as paragraph 2 does not apply to international
operations, subparagraph 3(a) does not limit the situations
where paragraph 2 would apply to incidental bareboat leases.
Rate limits on source country
taxing right
182. Certain paragraphs in the ships and aircraft article of
Australia's tax treaties with France,66 Finland
1984, Switzerland, Belgium, Netherlands and Germany67 limit
the rate of tax that can be applied under the source country
taxing right provided in paragraph 2 of those treaties to 5 per
cent of the amount paid or payable (net of rebates) in respect
of carriage.
183. Accordingly, the source country is limited to tax only 5
per cent of the gross lease payment that falls within this
source country taxing right.
184. This restriction, however, only applies to certain full
basis leasing profits that are considered to be payments 'in
respect of carriage'.68 All
other leasing profits that fall within the source country taxing
right of the relevant tax treaty are carved out of this rate
limit (see Table 8 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this
Ruling, where the second paragraph of each provision listed for
the relevant tax treaties refers to 'profits ... derived
otherwise than from the carriage of passengers, livestock, mail,
goods or merchandise', or such similar wording). These leasing
profits either continue to be subject to the source country
taxing right under the ships and aircraft article of the
relevant tax treaty69 or
expressly fall for consideration under the business profits
article of the relevant tax treaty.70
Variations in wording
185. In some of Australia's tax treaties, paragraph 2 of the
ships and aircraft article refers to 'such profits' rather than
'profits of an enterprise of a Contracting State derived from
the operation of ships or aircraft'. The reference to 'such
profits' is considered to refer to 'profits from the operation
of ships or aircraft' anyway. This would be the case even where
paragraph 1 refers to 'international traffic', because if such
profits also covered operations in international traffic, the
definition of which excludes internal operations, it would
render paragraph 2 ineffective. The variation is considered to
merely make it clearer how the provision applies, and does not
make any change to the operation of the paragraph.
186. In some cases, paragraph 2 may also refer to 'derived'
rather than 'extent'. The use of 'extent' merely emphasises that
the profits derived from the operation of ships or aircraft in
internal traffic may consist of profits from an internal leg
that is part of an international voyage. Again, the variation is
considered to merely make it clearer how the provision applies,
and does not make any change to the operation of the paragraph.
Other types of major
variations to the standard ships and aircraft article
The Philippine agreement
187. Paragraph 1 of the shipping article in the Philippines
agreement71 does
not provide an exclusive resident country taxing right. Rather
it merely places a restriction on the rate of tax the source
country can impose in relation to 'profits from the operation of
ships in international traffic'.
188. Accordingly, profits from the operation of ships or
aircraft in international traffic are dealt with in accordance
with the respective domestic laws of Australia and the
Philippines, except that any tax payable on profits from the
operation of ships in international traffic is subject to the
limit imposed by the shipping article of the Philippine
agreement. This limit is 1.5 per cent of the gross revenues (or
lower if the Philippines lower their domestic law rates on such
profits). Other profits from the operation of ships or aircraft
fall for consideration under the business profits article or the
royalties article of the Philippine agreement.
The Greek agreement
189. As Australia does not have a comprehensive tax treaty with
Greece, both Australia and Greece are free to apply their
domestic law to all ship leasing profits, and to those aircraft
leasing profits not covered by the Greek APA. Aircraft leasing
profits not covered by the Greek APA include:
-
·
-
full basis leasing profits derived from
transport operations conducted solely within the
Contracting State in which the lessor is not a resident
(the 'source State');
-
·
-
bareboat leasing profits which are not
ancillary to the lessor's international transport
operations; and
-
·
-
all leasing profits derived from
non-transport operations.
Extensions of source country
taxing rights - ship operations
190. While the ships and aircraft articles in Australia's tax
treaties with Kiribati, Sri Lanka and Thailand72 provide
an exclusive taxing right to the resident State under paragraph
1, they also extend the source country taxing right in paragraph
2 beyond profits from the operation of ships 'confined solely to
places in that State' to half of the tax that would otherwise be
payable in the source country on the profits from the operation
of ships other than confined solely to places in that State.
191. This means the source country:
-
·
-
is permitted to impose tax at the normal
domestic law rate where the profits are from the
operation of ships confined solely to places in that
other State (which is interpreted in accordance with
paragraphs 26 to 32 of this Ruling); and
-
·
-
must halve the domestic law amount of tax
that would otherwise be payable where the profits are
from the operation of ships in international traffic
(that is profits from all ship operations but excluding
the profits from the operation of ships confined solely
to places in that other State).
192. This extension will also apply to the relevant leasing
profits, which for these agreements applies in respect of both
transport and non-transport activities (see paragraphs 26 to 27
of this Ruling).
Part C: priority of the ships and aircraft article over the
business profits article and the royalties article
Business profits article
193. Where the relevant ships and aircraft article allocates
taxing rights over profits from leasing ships or aircraft, the
profits are considered to be dealt with by that article.
Although such profits will often also be considered to fall
within the scope of the business profits article of the relevant
tax treaty, the priority rule in the business profits article
(see for example paragraph (6) of article 7 of the United
Kingdom convention) provides that the ships and aircraft article
applies to the profits. Accordingly, it is not necessary to
consider whether an enterprise has a permanent establishment in
Australia as the business profits article does not apply to the
profits.
Royalties article
194. In certain circumstances, profits of a treaty partner
lessor from leasing a ship or aircraft on a bareboat basis can
fall within the scope of the ships and aircraft article as
'profits from the operation of ships or aircraft' and also fall
within the scope of the royalties article as a payment of an
'industrial, commercial or scientific equipment royalty' (if the
royalties article of the relevant tax treaty includes such a
payment within the royalty definition).
195. The same issue does not arise for profits from leasing a
ship on a full basis because such profits are from the provision
of services and are not 'royalties' (see Taxation Ruling TR
2003/2).
196. A bareboat lease will generally fall within the scope of
the ships and aircraft article where it is 'merely incidental'
or 'ancillary' to the treaty partner lessor's operations of the
ship or aircraft in international traffic (see paragraphs 23 to
25 of this Ruling).
197. Australia's tax treaties do not include an ordering rule to
determine which article takes priority in such overlap
situations. Applying treaty interpretation principles as set out
in Part 4: General treaty interpretation rules of TR 2001/13,
the priority between the ships and aircraft article and the
royalties article must be determined from the treaty context.
198. The ships and aircraft article deals specifically with
profits from the operation of ships and aircraft. The
international nature of these activities means that it is
inherently difficult to determine the source of such profits in
order to allocate taxing rights.73 The
ships and aircraft article is specific to this particular
industry and provides rules to make it easier for taxpayers in
this industry to determine which country has the taxing right
over their profits.
199. In particular, by extending exclusive residence country
taxation to profits from bareboat leases of ships and aircraft
where the lease is ancillary to the lessor's operations of ships
or aircraft in international traffic, the ships and aircraft
article reduces the compliance burden of the lessor as the other
country cannot assert a source country taxing right over such
leases. This prevents the lessor from having to distinguish
their ancillary leasing profits from their normal international
transport profits.
200. By comparison, the royalties article is not directed at
providing special rules for any particular industry because of
the nature of the activities undertaken by that industry. The
royalties article applies to all payments or credits that fall
within the definition of a royalty, and allows for both the
residence and source country to tax, with the later limited to a
certain rate of tax on the gross royalty payment.
201. In light of the above treaty context, the ships and
aircraft article is considered to take priority over the
royalties article in regard to profits from the operation of
ships and aircraft.74 This
context demonstrates that the intent of Australia's tax treaties
is that those bareboat leasing profits that are included within
the scope of the ships and aircraft article as 'profits from the
operation of ships or aircraft' are to be dealt with in
accordance with that article, rather than be treated as
royalties under the royalties article.
202. Therefore, in cases where profits from leasing a ship or
aircraft on a bareboat basis fall for consideration under both
the ships and aircraft article and the royalties article of the
relevant tax treaty, unless there are clear words to the
contrary, the leasing profit will be dealt with in accordance
with the ships and aircraft article only.
203. Accordingly, where the ships and aircraft article allocates
a taxing right over a bareboat leasing profit, it is considered
that the treaty has dealt with the profit under the ships and
aircraft article and the source country is not permitted to tax
the lease payment as a royalty under the royalties article.
204. Furthermore, subsection 17A(5) of the International
Tax Agreements Act 1953 prevents
section 128B of the ITAA 1936 (which deals with liability to
withholding tax) from applying to the leasing profits of the
lessor where:
-
·
-
the lease payment received by the lessor
falls within the definition of 'royalty' in subsection
6(1) of the ITAA 1936;
-
·
-
the lessor is a resident of one of
Australia's tax treaty partners; and
-
·
-
the relevant tax treaty does not treat the
lease amount paid to the lessor as a royalty.
205. Subsection 17A(5) of the International
Tax Agreements Act 1953 applies
in the circumstances outlined above because the conditions for
its operation are met in these scenarios. In particular the tax
treaty 'treats' the leasing profits of the lessor as 'profits
from the operation of ships or aircraft', not as a royalty.75
Part D: method of taxation in Australia
206. When exercising a taxing right afforded to Australia by the
ships and aircraft article, the amount of income that is taxable
in Australia under that Article is limited to the 'profits' from
the operation of the ship or aircraft in the relevant situation.
Subsection 3(2) of the International
Tax Agreements Act 1953 provides
that, for the purposes of that Act and the Assessment Acts (the
ITAA 1936 and the ITAA 1997), a reference in a tax treaty to
'profits' of an activity or business shall be read, for the
purposes of Australian tax, as a reference to 'taxable income'
derived from that activity or business.
207. Subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997 refers to section 4-15
of the ITAA 1997 for the definition of taxable income, being
assessable income less deductions. Accordingly, profits of an
Australian treaty resident lessor of a ship or aircraft that may
be taxed in Australia in accordance with the ships and aircraft
article are taxed on a net assessment basis under the ordinary
income assessment provisions for Australian residents
(subsection 6-5(2) of the ITAA 1997).
208. Similarly, profits of a treaty partner resident lessor of a
ship or aircraft that may be taxed in Australia in accordance
with the ships and aircraft article, where the profits have a
source in Australia76, are subject to tax on a net
assessment basis under the ordinary income assessment provisions
for foreign residents (subsection 6-5(3) of the ITAA 1997).
209. In some circumstances, profits derived by a lessor (who has
their place of business outside Australia) from leasing a ship
on a full basis will meet the requirements of section 129 of the
ITAA 1936 dealing with overseas ships (see paragraph 39 of
Taxation Ruling TR 2006/1 Income tax: the scope of and nature of
payments falling within section 129 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 ).
In such circumstances, section 129 of the ITAA 1936 deems 5 per
cent of the amount paid or payable in respect of the carriage to
be 'taxable income' derived by the lessor in Australia. This
deeming of a taxable income amount under section 129 of the ITAA
1936 removes the need to calculate the taxable income of the
lessor under subsection 4-15(1) of the ITAA 1997 by reference to
the assessable income and deductions of the lessor.
210. Therefore, in these circumstances section 129 of the ITAA
1936 will apply to determine the relevant taxable income of the
lessor of the ship, rather than the ordinary income assessment
provisions in subsections 6-5(2) and (3) of the ITAA 1997.
211. There may some circumstances, such as those outlined in
Example 5 of this Ruling, that require the adoption of a
reasonable basis of apportionment. An acceptable basis of
apportionment is one based on time similar to the time
apportionment basis contained in TR 2006/1 for ship time
charterparties. For example, with respect to Example 5 of this
Ruling, apportionment could be based on the aircraft's 'chock to
chock' route time between Brisbane and Sydney. It is up to
taxpayers to demonstrate that other circumstances may require
the adoption of some other reasonable basis of apportionment.
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 proposed binding public ruling. |
Meaning of 'operations' confined solely to places in that
other State
212. An alternative view to that expressed in paragraphs 114 to
118 and 123 to 129 of this Ruling, is that the term 'ship or
aircraft operations' in paragraph 2 of the ships and aircraft
article is used to describe a situation where the ships or
aircraft are operated wholly within a State, rather than a
situation where activities that constitute 'an operation' are
conducted wholly within that State. More specifically, in
determining whether profits are taxable in a State, it is
necessary to look at whether the ship or aircraft is operated on
a voyage which takes place wholly within that State. The
relevant question for purposes of paragraph 2 is therefore
whether the profits are derived from a voyage that is confined
solely to places in a State.
213. On this view, profits arising from the Australian leg of an
international voyage of a ship or aircraft are not profits from
ship or aircraft operations confined solely to places in
Australia, since the voyage does not take place wholly within
Australia. The profits from carriage of passengers or cargo who
only participate in that Australian leg are, however, caught by
paragraph 4 of the article. Although they are not profits from
'operations confined solely to places in (Australia)' within the
meaning of that term in paragraph 2, they are treated as such by
virtue of paragraph 4.
214. This view has not been adopted because it is inconsistent
with the interpretation of the specific words of paragraph 2
(see paragraph 118 of this Ruling).
Meaning of operations confined solely to 'places' in that
other State - non-transport activities
215. Another alternative view to that expressed at paragraphs
130 to 136 of this Ruling, is that profits from non-transport
operation of ships or aircraft will only constitute operations
confined solely to places in that State where the operations
begin and end in the source country and all of the operations
take place in that country's waters or airspace.
216. Under this view, the term 'places' refers to areas of a
general nature, which would include international waters or
airspace. Therefore, any activity or part of an activity that
takes place in areas of a general nature outside a State could
not be operations confined solely to places in that State.
217. The result of this alternative view, however, is that
profits from non-transport activities using a ship or aircraft
in international waters or airspace would not fall under either
the standard paragraphs 1 or 2 of Article 8 and would fall to be
considered under the business profits Article. Accordingly, the
profits from such non-transport ship or aircraft activities
would be taxable solely by the residence country unless the
profits are attributable to a permanent establishment in the
source country, in which case the source country would also be
permitted to tax the profits.
218. For Australia's tax treaties that do not include a
reference to international traffic in paragraph 1 of the ships
and aircraft Article,77 such
profits would fall within paragraph 1 of those tax treaties and
would be taxable exclusively by the country of residence.
Appendix 3 - Tables of differing wording of
the Ships and Aircraft Articles of Australia's Tax Treaties
219. This Appendix contains tables of differing wording of the
ships and aircraft articles of Australia's Tax Treaties.
|
Table 1: standard paragraph 1 wording |
|
Agreement, Convention or APA |
Relevant provision |
Relevant paragraph(s) of this Ruling |
|
United Kingdom |
1. Profits of an enterprise of a
Contracting State from the operation of ships or
aircraftin international traffic shall
be taxable only in that State. |
20-25,
94-108 |
|
Polish |
1. Profits from the operation of ships or
aircraft in
international traffic derived
by a resident of one of the Contracting States shall be
taxable only in that State. |
20-25,
94-108 |
|
Italian APA |
1. Profits derived by an enterprise of a
Contracting State from the operation ofaircraft in international
traffic or
arising from the carriage by air of persons, livestock,
goods or mail between places in that Contracting State, shall
be exemptfrom tax in the other Contracting State. |
20-25,
94-108 |
|
French APA |
(1) A French enterprise shall
be exempt from
Australian tax on:
(a) income from the operation of aircraft
in international traffic ;
and
(b) income and profits from the carriage by air of
passengers, cargo or mail between places in France.
(2) An Australian enterprise shall
be exempt from
French tax on:
(a) income from the operation of aircraft
in international traffic ;
and
(b) income and profits from the carriage by air of
passengers, cargo or mail between places in Australia. |
20-25,
94-108 |
|
Greek APA |
1. Profits derived by an enterprise of a
Contracting State from the operation ofaircraft in
international traffic or
arising from the carriage by air of persons, livestock,
goods or mail between places in that Contracting State, shall
be exemptfrom tax in the other Contracting State. |
20-25,
94-108 |
|
[France 2006], Norway (2006), Finland
(2006), [Japan 2008*]
(* the word 'Contracting' is included before the second
reference to 'State'). |
1. Profits of an enterprise of a
Contracting State derived from the operation of ships or
aircraft in
international traffic shall
be taxable only in that State. |
20-25,
94-108 |
|
Table 2 : standard
paragraph 2 wording |
|
Agreement or Convention |
Relevant provision |
Relevant paragraph(s) of this Ruling |
|
United Kingdom, Canadian, New Zealand,
Singapore, [Japan 2008#], French (1976* and 2006#),
Italian*, German, Netherlands, Belgian, Swiss,
Malaysian, Swedish, Danish, Irish, Norwegian (1982 and
2006#), Maltese, Finnish (1984 and 2006#), Chinese*,
Austrian, Papua New Guinea, Thai, Sri Lankan, Fijian,
Hungarian, Kiribati, Indian, Polish, Indonesian,
Vietnamese, Spanish, Czech, Slovak, Argentine, Romanian,
Russian, Mexican.
(# treaties follow the standard paragraph 2 wording)
(* the Shipping Article of the respective tax treaty
refers only to 'ships') |
2. Notwithstanding the provisions of
paragraph (1), such profits may be taxed in the other
Contracting State where they are profits from operations
of ships or aircraft confined solely to places in that
other State. |
26-32,
109-147 |
|
Table 3 : Major
variations from standard paragraph 1 wording - Reciprocal
exemption approach |
|
Agreement, Convention or APA |
Relevant provision |
Relevant paragraph(s) of this Ruling |
|
Philippine |
(1) The tax payable in a Contracting State
by a resident of the other Contracting State in respect
of profits from the operation of ships
in international traffic shall not exceed the
lesser of-
(a) one and one-half per cent of the gross revenues
derived from sources in that State; and
(b) the lowest rate of Philippine tax that may be
imposed on profits of the same kind derived under
similar circumstances by a resident of a third State. |
33,
148-149 |
|
German |
(1) A resident of a Contracting State shall
be exempt from
tax in the other Contracting State on profits from the
operation of ships or aircraft. |
33,
148-149 |
|
Japan 1969 |
(1) A resident of one of the Contracting
States shall
be exempt from
tax in the other Contracting State on profits from the
operation of ships
or aircraft other
than operations confined solely to places in that other
Contracting State. |
33,
148-149 |
|
Italian APA |
See Table 1 |
33,
148-149 |
|
French APA |
See Table 1 |
33,
148-149 |
|
Greek APA |
See Table 1 |
33,
148-149 |
|
Chinese APA |
(1) Profits and revenues from the operation
of aircraft ,
including sales of tickets and documents relating to
such operations, derived by an enterprise of one of the
Contracting States shall
be exempt
from tax in the other Contracting State. |
33,
148-149 |
|
Table 4 : Major
variations from standard paragraph 1 wording - Application
to non-transport activities |
|
Agreement or Convention |
Relevant provision |
Relevant Paragraph/s in Ruling |
|
Canadian, New Zealand, Singapore, 1976
French*, Italian*, Netherlands, Belgian, Swiss,
Malaysian, Swedish, Danish, Irish, Korean, Norwegian
(1982), Maltese, 1984 Finnish, Chinese*, Austrian, Papua
New Guinea, Thai, Sri Lankan, Fijian, Hungarian,
Kiribati, Indian, Indonesian, Vietnamese, Spanish,
Czech, Slovak, Argentine, Romanian, Russian, Mexican
(* the Shipping Article of the respective tax treaty
refers only to 'ships') |
1. Profits from the operation of ships or
aircraft derived by a resident of one of the Contracting
States shall be taxable only in that State. |
34-36,
150-158 |
|
Table 5 : Major
variations from standard paragraph 1 wording - Specific
provisions dealing with leasing profits |
|
Agreement or Convention |
Relevant provision |
Relevant Paragraph/s in Ruling |
|
United States |
1. Profits derived by a resident of one of
the Contracting States from the operation in
international traffic of ships or aircraft shall be
taxable only in that State. For the purposes of this
Article, profits from the operation in international
traffic of ships or aircraft include:
(a) profits from the lease on a full basis of ships or
aircraft operated in international traffic by the
lessee, provided that the lessor either operates ships
or aircraft otherwise than solely between places in the
other Contracting State or regularly leases ships or
aircraft on a full basis; and
(b) profits from the lease of ships or aircraft on a
bare boat basis, provided that such lease is merely
incidental to the operation in international traffic of
ships or aircraft by the lessor. |
37,
159-162 |
|
Taipei |
1. Profits derived by an enterprise of a
territory from the operation of ships or aircraft shall
be taxable only in that territory.
3. The profits to which the provisions of paragraphs 1
and 2 apply shall include profits from:
(a) the lease of ships or aircraft on a full time,
voyage or bareboat basis, and of containers and related
equipment, which is merely incidental to the
international operation of ships or aircraft by the
lessor, provided that the leased ships or aircraft, or
the containers and related equipment, are used in
international operations by the lessee; and
(b) the operation of ships or aircraft derived through
participation in a pool, a joint business or an
international operating agency. |
39,
163-166 |
|
South African |
1 Profits of an enterprise of a Contracting
State derived from the operation of ships or aircraft
shall be taxable only in that State.
3 The profits to which the provisions of paragraphs 1
and 2 apply shall include profits from:
(a) the lease of ships or aircraft on a bareboat basis,
and of containers and related equipment, which is merely
incidental to the international operation of ships or
aircraft by the lessor, provided that the leased ships
or aircraft, or the containers and related equipment,
are used in international operations by the lessee; and
(b) the operation of ships or aircraft derived through
participation in a pool service or other profit sharing
arrangement. |
38,
167-168 |
|
Table 6 : Major
variations from standard paragraph 2 wording - No
equivalent to paragraph 2 |
|
Agreement, Convention, or APA |
Relevant provision |
Relevant Paragraph/s in Ruling |
|
United States |
(4) For the purposes of this Article, profits
derived from the carriage by
ships or aircraft of passengers, livestock, mail, goods
or merchandise taken on board in a Contracting State for
discharge in that State shall not be treated as profits
from the operation in international traffic of ships or
aircraft and may be taxed in that State |
41-43,
171-173 |
|
Korean |
(1) Profits of a resident of a Contracting
State from the operation of ships
or aircraftin international traffic shall
be taxable only in
that State. |
41-43,
174 |
|
Japan 1969 |
See Table 3 |
41-43,
174 |
|
Italian APA |
See Table 1 |
41-43,
175-177 |
|
French APA |
See Table 1 |
41-43,
175-177 |
|
Greek APA |
See Table 1 |
41-43,
175-176 |
|
Chinese APA |
(2) Notwithstanding the provisions of
paragraph (1), such profits and revenues may be taxed in
the other Contracting State where they are profits and
revenues derived
from the carriage by aircraft of
passengers, livestock, mail, goods or merchandise solely
from one place in that other Contracting State to
another place in that State. |
41-43,
175-177 |
|
Table 7 : Major
variations from standard paragraph 2 wording - Specific
provisions dealing with leasing profits |
|
Agreement, Convention, or APA |
Relevant provision |
Relevant Paragraph/s in Ruling |
|
Taipei |
2. Notwithstanding the provisions of
paragraph 1, such profits shall be taxed in the other
territory to the extent that they are profits derived
directly or indirectly from ship or aircraft operations
confined solely to places in that other territory.
3. The profits to which the provisions of paragraphs 1
and 2 apply shall include profits from:
(a) the lease of ships or aircraft on a full time,
voyage or bareboat basis, and of containers and related
equipment, which is merely incidental to the
international operation of ships or aircraft by the
lessor, provided that the leased ships or aircraft, or
the containers and related equipment, are used in
international operations by the lessee. |
45,
180-181 |
|
South African |
2. Notwithstanding the provisions of
paragraph 1, those profits may be taxed in the other
Contracting State to the extent that they are profits
derived directly or indirectly from ship or aircraft
operations confined solely to places in that other
State.
3. The profits to which the provisions of paragraphs 1
and 2 apply shall include profits from:
(a) the lease of ships or aircraft on a bareboat basis,
and of containers and related equipment, which is merely
incidental to the international operation of ships or
aircraft by the lessor, provided that the leased ships
or aircraft, or the containers and related equipment,
are used in international operations by the lessee. |
44,
178-179 |
|
Table 8 : Variation
from standard paragraph 2 - rate
limits on source country taxing right |
|
Agreement or Convention |
Relevant provision |
Relevant Paragraph/s in Ruling |
|
1976 French |
4. The amount which shall be charged to tax
in a Contracting State under paragraph 2 shall not
exceed 5 per cent of the amount paid or payable (net of
rebates) in respect of the carriage.
5. Paragraph 4 shall not apply to profits from the
operation of ships derived by a resident of a
Contracting State if -
(a) his principal place of business is in the other
Contracting State; or
(b) those profits are derived from activities other than
the carriage of passengers, cargo or mail.
In such cases, the provisions of Article 6 shall apply. |
46-47,
182-184 |
|
[France 2006] (not yet in force) |
3. The amount which shall be charged to tax
in a Contracting State under paragraph 2 in respect of
transport operations of ships shall not exceed 5 per
cent of the amount paid or payable (net of rebates) in
respect of carriage.
4. The provisions of paragraph 3 shall not apply to
profits from the operation of ships, where the profits
are attributable to a permanent establishment of the
enterprise situated in the other Contracting State. |
46-47, 182-184 |
|
1984 Finnish |
(5) The amount which shall be charged to
tax in one of the Contracting States under paragraph (2)
shall not exceed 5 per cent of the amount paid or
payable (net of rebates) in respect of carriage in such
operations.
(6) Paragraph (5) shall not apply to profits from the
operation of ships derived by a resident of one of the
Contracting States if:
(a) his principal place of business is in the other
Contracting State; or
(b) those profits are derived from activities other than
the carriage of passengers, cargo or mail.
In such cases, the provisions of Article 7 shall apply. |
46-47,
182-184 |
|
Swiss |
(5) The amount which shall be charged to
tax in one of the Contracting States as profits from the
operation of ships or aircraft in respect of which a
resident of the other Contracting State may be taxed in
the first-mentioned State under paragraph (2) or (3)
shall not exceed 5 per cent of the amount paid or
payable (net of rebates) in respect of carriage in such
operations.
(6) Paragraph (5) shall not apply to profits derived
from the operation of ships or aircraft by a resident of
one of the Contracting States whose principal place of
business is in the other Contracting State, nor shall it
apply to profits derived from the operation of ships or
aircraft by a resident of one of the Contracting States
if those profits are derived otherwise than from the
carriage of passengers, livestock, mails, goods or
merchandise. In such cases, the provisions of Article 7
shall apply. |
46-47,
182-184 |
|
Belgian |
(5) The amount which shall be charged to
tax in one of the Contracting States as profits from
operations of ships or aircraft in respect of which a
resident of the other Contracting State may be taxed in
the first-mentioned State under paragraph (2) or (3)
shall not exceed 5 per cent of the amount paid or
payable (net of rebates) in respect of carriage in such
operations.
(6) Paragraph (5) shall not apply to profits derived
from the operation of ships or aircraft by a resident of
one of the Contracting States whose principal place of
business is in the other Contracting State, nor shall it
apply to profits derived from the operation of ships or
aircraft by a resident of a Contracting State if those
profits are derived otherwise than from the carriage of
passengers, livestock, mail, goods or merchandise. |
46-47,
182-184 |
|
Netherlands |
(5) The amount which shall be charged to
tax in one of the States as profits from the operation
of ships or aircraft in respect of which a resident of
the other State may be taxed in the first-mentioned
State under paragraph (2) or (3) shall not exceed 5 per
cent of the amount paid or payable (net of rebates) in
respect of carriage in such operations.
(6) Paragraph (5) shall not apply to profits derived
from the operation of ships or aircraft by a resident of
one of the States whose principal place of business is
in the other State, nor shall it apply to profits
derived from the operation of ships or aircraft by a
resident of a State if those profits are derived
otherwise than from the carriage of passengers,
livestock, mail, goods or merchandise. |
46-47,
182-184 |
|
German |
5. The amount which shall be charged to tax
in a Contracting State as profits from the operation of
ships or aircraft in respect of which a resident of the
other Contracting State may be taxed in the
first-mentioned State under paragraph (2) or (3) shall
not exceed 5 per cent of the amount paid or payable (net
of rebates) in respect of carriage in such operations.
6. Paragraph (5) shall not apply to profits derived from
the operation of ships or aircraft by a resident of a
Contracting State whose principal place of business is
in the other Contracting State, nor shall it apply to
profits derived from the operation of ships or aircraft
by a resident of a Contracting State if those profits
are derived otherwise than from the carriage of
passengers, livestock, mails, goods or merchandise. In
such cases, the provisions of Article 7 shall apply but
there shall be excluded from the profits on which any
such person is charged to Australian tax any amount of
profits taxed in the Territory of Papua or the Trust
Territory of New Guinea. |
46-47,
182-184 |
|
Table 9 : Other
major variations from the standard Ships and Aircraft
Article |
|
Agreement, Convention or APA |
Relevant provision |
Relevant Paragraph/s in Ruling |
|
Philippine |
See Table 3 |
49, 187-188 |
|
Kiribati |
1. Profits from the operation of aircraft
derived by a resident of one of the Contracting States
shall be taxable only in that State.
2. Profits from the operation of ships derived by a
resident of one of the Contracting States may be taxed
in that Contracting State and may also be taxed in the
other State, but the tax so charged in the other State
shall be reduced by an amount equal to one half of the
amount which would be payable in respect of those
profits but for this paragraph.
3. Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 1, such
profits may be taxed in the other Contracting State,
where they are profits from the operation of aircraft
confined solely to places in that other State; and
notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 2, such
profits may be taxed in the other Contracting State
without reduction, where they are profits from the
operation of ships confined solely to places in that
other State. |
51, 190-192 |
|
Sri Lankan |
(1) Profits from the operation of ships or
aircraft derived by a resident of one of the Contracting
States shall be taxable only in that State.
(2) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (1),
such profits may be taxed in the other Contracting State
where:
(a) they are profits from operations of ships or
aircraft confined solely to places in that other State;
or
(b) they are profits, other than profits to which
sub-paragraph (a) applies, from operations of ships in
that other State, in which case the tax payable in that
other State shall not exceed the lesser of:
-
(i)
-
half the amount which would be
payable in respect of those profits but for this
sub-paragraph; and
-
(ii)
-
the lowest amount, if any, of Sri
Lanka tax that may be imposed on profits of the
same kind derived under similar circumstances by
a resident of a third State.
|
51,
190-192 |
|
Thai |
1. Income or profits from the operation of
aircraft derived by a resident of one of the Contracting
States shall be taxable only in that State.
2. Income or profits from the operation of ships derived
by a resident of one of the Contracting States may be
taxed in that Contracting State and may also be taxed in
the other State, but the tax so charged in the other
State shall be reduced by an amount equal to one half of
the amount which would be payable in respect of that
income or those profits but for this paragraph.
3. Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 1, such
income or profits may be taxed in the other Contracting
State, where they are income or profits from the
operation of aircraft confined solely to places in that
other State; and notwithstanding the provisions of
paragraph 2 such income or profits may be taxed in the
other Contracting State without reduction, where they
are income or profits from the operation of ships
confined solely to places in that other State. |
51,
190-192 |
Appendix 4 - Detailed contents list
220. The following is a detailed contents list for this Ruling:
|
|
Paragraph |
|
What this Ruling is about |
1 |
|
Class of entities |
4 |
|
Scheme |
5 |
|
Related Rulings |
6 |
|
Background |
7 |
|
The standard ships and aircraft article |
11 |
|
Terminology |
14 |
|
Meaning of resident 'for tax treaty
purposes' |
14 |
|
Meaning of 'full basis' and 'bareboat
basis' leases |
15 |
|
Meaning of an 'exclusive residence country
taxing right' |
18 |
|
Meaning of a 'source country taxing right' |
19 |
|
Ruling |
20 |
|
Part A: the treatment of leasing profits
under the
standard ships and aircraft article |
20 |
|
Paragraph 1 |
20 |
|
Paragraph 2 |
26 |
|
Part B: the treatment of leasing profits
under
non-standard ships and aircraft articles |
33 |
|
Major
variations from the standard paragraph 1 |
33 |
|
Reciprocal
exemption approach |
33 |
|
Application
to non-transport profits |
34 |
|
Specific
provisions dealing with leasing profits |
37 |
|
The United States convention |
37 |
|
The South African agreement |
38 |
|
Taipei Agreement |
39 |
|
Major
variations from the standard paragraph 2 |
41 |
|
No
treatment of leasing profits under paragraph 2 |
41 |
|
Specific
provisions dealing with leasing profits |
44 |
|
The South African agreement |
44 |
|
Taipei Agreement |
45 |
|
Rate limits
on source country taxing right |
46 |
|
Variations
in wording |
48 |
|
Other types
of major variations to the standard ships
and aircraft article |
49 |
|
The
Philippine agreement |
49 |
|
The Greek
APA |
50 |
|
Extensions
of source country taxing right -
ship operations |
51 |
|
Part C: priority of the ships and aircraft
article over the
business profits article and the royalties article |
52 |
|
Business
profits article |
52 |
|
Royalties
article |
53 |
|
Part D: method of taxation in Australia |
56 |
|
Examples |
59 |
|
Part A: the treatment of leasing profits
under the
standard ships and aircraft article |
59 |
|
Example 1 : leasing
profits subject to an exclusive residence
country taxing right - the
standard paragraph 1 wording -
the United Kingdom
convention |
59 |
|
Example 2 : leasing
profits subject to a source country
taxing right - the
standard paragraph 2 wording -
the 2006 Norwegian
convention |
62 |
|
Example 3 : leasing
profits subject to a source country
taxing right - the
standard paragraph 2 wording -
A voyage to nowhere - the
Singapore agreement |
65 |
|
Example 4 : leasing
profits subject to a source country
taxing right - the
standard paragraph 2 wording -
a voyage to nowhere - the
Netherlands agreement |
67 |
|
Example 5 : leasing
profits subject to a source country taxing
right - the
standard paragraph 2 wording - an
internal leg
of an international
voyage - the
Canadian convention |
69 |
|
Part B: the treatment of leasing profits
under
non-standard ships and aircraft articles |
72 |
|
Example 6 : leasing
profits subject to an exclusive
residence country taxing
right - major
variation to
paragraph 1 wording - the
United States convention |
72 |
|
Example 7 : leasing
profits (if any) subject to a source
country taxing right - major
variation - no
equivalent to
paragraph 2 - the
Korean convention |
75 |
|
Example 8 : major
variation providing rate limits on
source country taxing
right - the
Belgian agreement |
78 |
|
Example 9 : major
variation extending source country
taxing rights for ship
operations - the
Thai agreement |
81 |
|
Part C: priority of the ships and aircraft
article over the
business profits article and the royalties article |
83 |
|
Example 10 the
Mexican agreement |
83 |
|
Part D: method of taxation in Australia |
88 |
|
Example 11 : the
United Kingdom convention |
88 |
|
Date of effect |
91 |
|
Appendix 1 - Explanation |
92 |
|
Undefined terms |
92 |
|
Part A: the treatment of leasing profits
under the
standard ships and aircraft article |
94 |
|
Paragraph 1 |
94 |
|
Meaning of ' international
traffic' |
96 |
|
Application
to leasing |
101 |
|
Paragraph 2 |
109 |
|
Meaning of ' operations
confined solely to
places in that other
state' |
114 |
|
Operations of ships or aircraft |
114 |
|
Transport activities |
119 |
|
Non-transport activities |
123 |
|
Voyages to
nowhere |
130 |
|
Application to leasing |
137 |
|
Ancillary activity - bareboat
leasing profits
covered by paragraph 2 |
142 |
|
Part B: the treatment of leasing profits
under
non-standard ships and aircraft articles |
148 |
|
Major
variations from the standard paragraph 1 |
148 |
|
Reciprocal
exemption approach |
148 |
|
Application
to non-transport profits |
150 |
|
Specific
provisions dealing with leasing profits |
159 |
|
The United States convention |
159 |
|
The Taipei Agreement |
163 |
|
The South African agreement |
167 |
|
Variation
from the standard paragraph 2 |
169 |
|
No
treatment of leasing profits under paragraph 2 |
169 |
|
The United States convention |
171 |
|
The 1969 Japanese agreement and
the Korean convention |
174 |
|
The Italian, French, Greek and Chinese
APAs |
175 |
|
Italian, French and Chinese shipping
articles |
177 |
|
Specific
provisions dealing with leasing profits |
178 |
|
The South African agreement |
178 |
|
The Taipei Agreement |
180 |
|
Rate limits
on source country taxing right |
182 |
|
Variations
in wording |
185 |
|
Other types
of major variations to the standard ships
and aircraft article |
187 |
|
The
Philippine agreement |
187 |
|
The Greek
agreement |
189 |
|
Extensions
of source country taxing rights -
ship operations |
190 |
|
Part C: priority of the ships and aircraft
article over the
business profits article and the royalties article |
193 |
|
Business
profits article |
193 |
|
Royalties
article |
194 |
|
Part D: method of taxation in Australia |
206 |
|
Appendix 2 - Alternative
views |
212 |
|
Meaning of 'operations' confined solely to
places
in that other State |
212 |
|
Meaning of operations confined solely to
'places'
in that other State - non-transport activities |
215 |
|
Appendix 3 - Tables
of differing wording of the ships
and aircraft articles of Australia's Tax Treaties |
219 |
|
Appendix 4 - Detailed
contents list |
220 |
Footnotes
[1]
The articles of Australia's tax treaties which deal with profits
from the operation of ships or aircraft or both are generally
headed 'ships and aircraft article'. There are a number of
variations in the wording of the headings of the applicable
articles and some have no heading at all. For ease of reference,
this Ruling will refer to these articles as the 'ships and
aircraft article' when mentioning more than one of these
articles collectively. When referring to this type of article in
a particular tax treaty individually, this Ruling will state the
actual heading and/or article number of the relevant article in
that particular tax treaty.
[2]
In addition to Australia's comprehensive tax treaties, Australia
also has four airline profit agreements (APA) with France,
Italy, Greece and the People's Republic of China. In addition,
the Australian Commerce and Industry Office entered into an
agreement with the Economic and Cultural Office of Taipei
(hereinafter referred to as the Taipei Agreement). For ease of
reference only, when referring generally to Australia's
comprehensive tax treaties, airline profit agreements and the
Taipei Agreement, this Ruling uses the term 'tax treaties'.
[3]
This includes residents under agreements that, while not being
tax treaties, have a similar effect for tax purposes, for
example, the Taipei Agreement.
[4]
Some of the ships and aircraft articles in Australia's tax
treaties also require that the resident ship or aircraft
operator be carrying on an enterprise. Australia's tax treaty
with Romania requires that the ship or aircraft operator have
its place of effective management in Australia or Romania. This
Ruling does not deal with these requirements as they do not
impact on the issue of determining what ship or aircraft leasing
profits fall within the scope of the article.
[5]
See paragraph 4 of the Commentary on article 8 of the OECD
Model.
[6]
OECD Committee on Fiscal Affairs for the Organisation for
Economic Development (OECD), Model Tax Convention on Income and
Capital.
[7]
See paragraph 6.2 of the Commentary on article 3 of the OECD
Model, concerning internal traffic and paragraph 17.1 of the
Commentary on article 8 of the OECD Model concerning
non-transport activities.
[8]
See paragraph 38 of the Commentary on article 8 of the OECD
Model.
[9]
See Australia's tax treaties with Poland, the 2006 tax treaty
with Norway (Norway 2006), the 2006 treaty with Finland (Finland
2006), the 2006 treaty with France (France 2006) and the 2008
treaty with Japan (Japan 2008) (note the French and Japanese
treaties have not entered into force). Note also that article 8
in Australia's tax treaty with the United Kingdom is considered
to have the same effect as the standard article 8,
notwithstanding that the text of some of the provisions is
different.
[10]
This is also explained at paragraph 1.99 of the Explanatory
Memorandum to the International Tax Agreements Amendment Bill
2003 (which incorporates the 2003 United Kingdom convention).
[11]
See paragraph 2.13 of the Explanatory Memorandum to the
International Tax Agreements Amendment Bill 2001 (which
incorporates the 2001 Protocol amending the United States
convention) which refers to a bareboat lease as being
'generally, without crew'.
[12]
See Table 1 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[13]
Refer to the standard definition of 'international traffic' in
article 3 at paragraph 13 of this Ruling.
[14]
Note that this outcome is subject to paragraph 2 of article 8.
See paragraphs 26 and 27 of this Ruling.
[15]
See paragraph 145 of this Ruling for further detail on the
factors that the Commissioner considers relevant in determining
whether the leasing activity is 'ancillary' to the operation of
ships or aircraft.
[16]
See Table 2 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[17]
Australia's tax treaties with the Philippines, Japan 1969 and
Germany, and Australia's airline profits agreements with Italy,
France, Greece and China (see Table 3 of Appendix 3 at paragraph
219 of this Ruling).
[18]
See Table 4 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[19]
See Table 5 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[20]
See Table 5 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[21]
See Table 5 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[22]
This is the only exception to the general position in this
Ruling that voyage charter-parties are not leases (see paragraph
17 of this Ruling).
[23]
Australia's tax treaties with the United States, Japan 1969, and
Korea, and Australia's airline profits agreements with Italy,
France, Greece and China - see Table 6 of Appendix 3 at
paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[24]
Some tax treaties that have a business profits article may not
deal with leasing profits under that provision, for example, the
1969 Japanese agreement.
[25]
See Table 7 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling. for
the relevant provisions in the South African agreement.
[26]
See Table 7 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling for
the relevant provisions in the Taipei agreement.
[27]
This limitation only applies to profits from the operation of
'ships' under the shipping article of the 1976 French agreement
and the equivalent article in the 2006 French treaty (not yet in
force).
[28]
See Table 8 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[29]
This is the case for the Belgian and the Netherlands agreements.
[30]
This is the case for the French, Finnish 1984, Swiss and German
agreements.
[31]
See Table 3 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[32]
See Table 9 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[33]
The royalties article in Australia's tax treaties is usually
located in article 12 of the treaty.
[34]
Many of Australia's tax treaties include deemed source rules, or
alternatively there are also deemed source rules for certain
countries in the International
Tax Agreements Act 1953 (legislative
source provisions). In the absence of a treaty deemed source
rule or legislative source provisions, Australia's common law
rules for determining source will apply (see paragraph 38 of
Taxation Ruling TR 2001/13 Income tax: interpreting Australia's
Double Tax Agreements).
[35]
For example, paragraph 3 of article 3 of the United Kingdom
convention states:
As regards the application of this Convention at any time by a
Contracting State, any term not defined therein shall, unless
the context otherwise requires, have the meaning that it has at
that time under the laws of that State for the purposes of the
taxes to which this Convention applies, any meaning under the
applicable tax laws of that State prevailing over a meaning
given to the term under other laws of that State.
[36]
See paragraph 12 of this Ruling.
[37]
Australia's tax treaties with the United Kingdom and Poland and
the corresponding paragraphs in Australia's APAs with Italy,
France and Greece - see Table 1 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219
of this Ruling.
[38]
See paragraph 12 of this Ruling.
[39]
The term 'international traffic' is defined in article 3
(General Definitions) of the respective tax treaties, and in
article 2 of the respective APAs.
[40]
Paragraph 6.3 of the Commentary on article 3 of the OECD Model -
Note that article 3 of the OECD Model also uses the words
'between places', and the words 'from a place' have been added
in the Australian text merely for clarity.
[41]
Paragraph 6.1 of the Commentary on article 3 of the OECD Model.
[42]
See paragraph 12 of this Ruling.
[43]
See Table 2 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[44]
This is consistent with Australia's reservation to the OECD
Model, see paragraph 10 of this Ruling.
[45]
See the general definitions article (usually article 3) in
Australia's tax treaties which provides that any term not
defined in the treaty shall, unless the context requires
otherwise, have the meaning that it has under the applicable
domestic laws.
[46]
Concise Oxford English Dictionary, 11th Edition, 2006, the
definition of 'operation'.
[47]
Concise Oxford English Dictionary, 11th Edition, 2006, the
definition of 'place'.
[48]
Paragraph 6.3 of the Commentary on article 3 of the OECD Model.
[49]
See Taxation Ruling TR 2003/2 Income tax: the royalty
withholding tax implications of ship chartering arrangements.
[50]
See paragraph 5 of the Commentary on article 8 of the OECD
Model.
[51]
See Table 4 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[52]
See paragraphs 4, 4.2, 4.3 and 5 of the Commentary on article 8
of the OECD odel.
[53]
See Table 5 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[54]
See paragraphs 21 to 23 of TR 2007/10.
[55]
See Table 5 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[56]
See Table 5 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[57]
See Table 6 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[58]
See Table 6 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[59]
The royalties article of the United States convention is not
relevant in these circumstances, because payments for the 'right
to use industrial commercial or scientific equipment' are not
included in the definition of royalties in that article.
Accordingly, profits from a bareboat lease are not royalties
under the United States convention.
[60]
See Table 6 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[61]
Article 4 of the 1969 Japanese agreement is not a business
profits article. Subparagraph (5)(b) of article 4 excludes
'income from operating ships or aircraft' from the scope of that
article.
[62]
Paragraph (2) of article 3 of the APA - see Table 6 of Appendix
3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[63]
See Table 2 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[64]
See Table 7 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[65]
See Table 7 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[66]
This limitation only applies to profits from the operation of
'ships' under the shipping article of the 1976 French Agreement
and the equivalent article in the 2006 French treaty (not yet in
force).
[67]
See Table 8 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[68]
This will generally only be profits from a time charter-party
where the shipper is also the charterer. This view is consistent
with paragraph 38 of TR 2006/1.
[69]
This is the case for the Belgian and the Netherlands Agreements.
[70]
This is the case for the French, 1984 Finnish, Swiss and German
agreements.
[71]
See Table 3 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[72]
See Table 9 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
[73]
See comments by Klaus Vogel at page 482, paragraph no. 23,
'Klaus Vogel on Double Taxation Conventions', Third Edition,
Kluwer Law International, 1997.
[74]
This is consistent with comments by Klaus Vogel at page 486,
paragraph no. 32, 'Klaus Vogel on Double Taxation Conventions',
Third Edition, Kluwer Law International, 1997, which is also
referred to at paragraph 89 of TR 2003/2.
[75]
This is consistent with the Explanatory Memorandum to the
International Tax Agreements Amendment Bill (No. 1) 2002 (which
inserted subsection 17A(5) into the International
Tax Agreements Act 1953) ,
in particular see paragraph 3.7.
[76]
Many of Australia's tax treaties include deemed source rules, or
alternatively there are also deemed source rules for certain
countries in the International
Tax Agreements Act 1953. For
those tax treaties that do not include a deemed source rule,
Australia's common law rules for determining source will apply
(see paragraph 38 of Taxation Ruling TR 2001/13).
[77]
See Table 4 of Appendix 3 at paragraph 219 of this Ruling.
TR 2008/D3
References
ATO references:
NO 2006/4601
ISSN: 1039-0731
Related Rulings/Determinations:
TR 2001/13
TR 2003/2
TR 2006/1
TR 2006/10
TR 2007/10
Subject References:
aircraft
aviation
cross border leasing
double tax agreements
international transactions
royalties
shipping
transport industry
Legislative References:
ITAA 1936
ITAA 1936 6(1)
ITAA 1936 128B
ITAA 1936 129
ITAA 1997
ITAA 1997 4-15
ITAA 1997 4-15(1)
ITAA 1997 6-5(2)
ITAA 1997 6-5(3)
ITAA 1997 995-1(1)
ITAA 1953
ITAA 1953 3(2)
ITAA 1953 17A(5)
ITAA 1953 Sch 1
ITAA 1953 Sch 2
ITAA 1953 Sch 2A
ITAA 1953 Sch 3
ITAA 1953 Sch 3A
ITAA 1953 Sch 4
ITAA 1953 Sch 4A
ITAA 1953 Sch 5
ITAA 1953 Sch 5A
ITAA 1953 Sch 6
ITAA 1953 Sch 7
ITAA 1953 Sch 8
ITAA 1953 Sch 9
ITAA 1953 Sch 10
ITAA 1953 Sch 11
ITAA 1953 Sch 11A
ITAA 1953 Sch 12
ITAA 1953 Sch 13
ITAA 1953 Sch 13A
ITAA 1953 Sch 14
ITAA 1953 Sch 15
ITAA 1953 Sch 16
ITAA 1953 Sch 16A
ITAA 1953 Sch 17
ITAA 1953 Sch 18
ITAA 1953 Sch 20
ITAA 1953 Sch 21
ITAA 1953 Sch 22
ITAA 1953 Sch 23
ITAA 1953 Sch 24
ITAA 1953 Sch 25
ITAA 1953 Sch 26
ITAA 1953 Sch 27
ITAA 1953 Sch 28
ITAA 1953 Sch 29
ITAA 1953 Sch 30
ITAA 1953 Sch 31
ITAA 1953 Sch 32
ITAA 1953 Sch 33
ITAA 1953 Sch 34
ITAA 1953 Sch 35
ITAA 1953 Sch 36
ITAA 1953 Sch 37
ITAA 1953 Sch 38
ITAA 1953 Sch 39
ITAA 1953 Sch 40
ITAA 1953 Sch 41
ITAA 1953 Sch 42
ITAA 1953 Sch 43
ITAA 1953 Sch 44
ITAA 1953 Sch 45
ITAA 1953 Sch 46
ITAA 1953 Sch 47
TAA 1953
Other References
The Concise Oxford English Dictionary, 11th Edition, 2006
OECD Committee on Fiscal Affairs for the Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, Model Tax Convention on
Income and Capital, Paris, Condensed Version 15 July 2005
Klaus Vogel on Double Taxation Conventions, Third Edition,
Kluwer Law International 1997
Explanatory Memorandum to the International Tax Agreements
Amendment Bill 2003
Explanatory Memorandum to the International Tax Agreements
Amendment Bill (No. 1) 2002
Explanatory Memorandum to the International Tax Agreements
Amendment Bill 2001
Explanatory Memorandum to the International Tax Agreements
Amendment Bill 1999
|