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TR 2009/5
Income tax: trading stock -
treatment of discounts, rebates and other trade incentives
offered by sellers to buyers
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Please note that the PDF version is the authorised
version of this ruling. |
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There is a Compendium for this document. TR 2009/5EC |
FOI status: may be released
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Contents |
Para |
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What this Ruling is about |
1 |
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Ruling |
4 |
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Examples |
15 |
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Date of effect |
65 |
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NOT LEGALLY BINDING SECTION: |
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Appendix 1: Explanation |
66 |
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Appendix 2: Alternative views |
109 |
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Appendix 3: Detailed contents list |
120 |
Preamble
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This
publication provides you with the following level of
protection:
This publication (excluding appendixes) is a public
ruling for the purposes of the Taxation
Administration Act 1953.
A public ruling is an expression of the Commissioner's
opinion about the way in which a relevant provision
applies, or would apply, to entities generally or to a
class of entities in relation to a particular scheme or
a class of schemes.
If you rely on this ruling, we must apply the law to you
in the way set out in the ruling (unless we are
satisfied that the ruling is incorrect and disadvantages
you, in which case we may apply the law in a way that is
more favourable for you - provided we are not prevented
from doing so by a time limit imposed by the law). You
will be protected from having to pay any underpaid tax,
penalty or interest in respect of the matters covered by
this ruling if it turns out that it does not correctly
state how the relevant provision applies to you. |
What this Ruling is about
1. This Ruling applies to a seller who sells trading stock to a
buyer and to a buyer who purchases trading stock from a seller
where:
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trade incentives in the form of
discounts, rebates or other incentives are paid by the
seller to the buyer in connection with the buyer's
purchase of trading stock;
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trade incentives or other payments not
directly connected with the buyer's purchase of trading
stock are paid by the seller to the buyer:
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in consideration for the buyer
providing a service in relation to the trading
stock; or
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to secure a real commercial
benefit for the seller in relation to its brand
or the future sale of its goods.
2. This Ruling clarifies the taxation treatment of transactions
associated with trading stock for both the seller and the buyer.
It deals with:
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the application of Division 70 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA
1997)1 to
trade incentives; and
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the extent to which, and the time at
which:
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income is derived for the
purposes of section 6-5; and
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deductible outgoings or losses
are incurred for the purposes of section 8-1.
3. In this Ruling:
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'buyer' means any entity that purchases
trading stock from a seller for the purposes of resale.
The buyer may receive from the seller:
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a trade incentive in the form of
a discount, rebate or other incentive in
connection with the purchase of its trading
stock;
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a payment not directly connected
to the purchase of trading stock such as a
payment received to undertake promotional
activities to bolster sales of the relevant
trading stock; or
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a payment which secures a real
commercial benefit for the seller in relation to
its brand or the future sale of its goods;
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'payment' of a trade incentive includes a
credit allowed by a seller against a current or future
liability of the buyer, or any application of an
incentive amount by the seller at the direction of or
for the benefit of the buyer;
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'seller' means an entity that sells
trading stock to a buyer and that:
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provides trade incentives to the
buyer in the form of discounts, rebates or other
incentives in connection with the sale of
trading stock; or
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makes payments to the buyer in
connection with doing business with the buyer
which secure for the seller a real commercial
benefit in relation to its brand or the future
sale of its goods.
Ruling
Taxation consequences for the buyer
4. Trade incentives that relate directly to the purchase of
trading stock, so as to reduce the purchase price, are treated
as a reduction in the cost of acquiring the trading stock for
the buyer for the purposes of section 8-1 and Division 70.
5. An incentive that is subject to a condition that has not been
satisfied at the time of the purchase does not relate directly
to the purchase of trading stock and does not reduce the cost of
acquiring trading stock for a buyer.
6. A seller may provide a trade incentive that subsidises,
compensates, reimburses or rewards a buyer for carrying out
activities or performing services (such as promotional services)
or, in the absence of such activities or services, secures a
real commercial benefit for the seller in relation to its brand
or future sales of its goods. Such a trade incentive does not
relate directly to the purchase of the trading stock and does
not reduce the cost of acquiring trading stock for the buyer.
7. Where a trade incentive does not reduce the buyer's cost of
acquiring trading stock, the trade incentive is ordinary income
of the buyer. On the assumption that the buyer returns income on
an accruals basis, the income will be derived in the income year
in which it is earned.
8. Where a trade incentive is provided in respect of future acts
and/or services (such as promotional services) to be performed
by a buyer, and where the buyer is required to repay or in
practice repays any part of the trade incentive attributable to
any acts and/or services not performed, the trade incentive will
be derived by the buyer for the purposes of section 6-5 at the
time that the relevant acts and/or services are performed.
Taxation consequences for the seller
9. Trade incentives that relate directly to the sale of trading
stock, so as to reduce the sale price, are treated as a
reduction of the sale proceeds for the seller for the purposes
of section 6-5 and Division 70.
10. With one exception, an incentive that is subject to a
condition that has not been satisfied at the time of the sale
does not relate directly to the sale of trading stock and does
not reduce the proceeds of sale for the seller. The exception is
where there is virtual certainty at the time of sale that the
condition will be satisfied. For example, a settlement discount
that is always taken by the buyer will reduce the sale price for
the seller. Similarly a volume rebate subject to a rebate
threshold that has not been met but is certain to be met will
reduce the sale price for the seller. In both instances the
seller's assessable income from the sale will be the reduced
amount.
11. A seller may provide a trade incentive that subsidises,
compensates, reimburses or rewards a buyer for carrying out
activities or performing services (such as promotional services)
or, in the absence of such activities or services, secures a
real commercial benefit for the seller in relation to its brand
or future sales of its goods. Such a trade incentive does not
relate directly to the sale of the trading stock and does not
reduce the selling price and the proceeds of disposal for the
seller.
12. Where a trade incentive does not reduce the selling price of
trading stock for the seller, the seller deducts the amount of
the trade incentive as a business expense in the income year in
which it is incurred.
Whether the trade incentive directly relates to trading stock
13. Factors relevant to whether a trade incentive reduces the
cost of acquiring trading stock for a buyer and the proceeds of
disposal for the seller include:
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the terms of trading between the parties
and other sales and transaction documentation, such as
invoices, incentive claim forms and credit notes;
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an objective assessment of the intention
of the parties; and
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any other relevant circumstances
surrounding the payment of the incentive.
14. Where in substance a trade incentive is paid for more than
one purpose, each purpose is considered in determining the
extent to which the payment reduces the cost of acquiring
trading stock for the buyer and the proceeds on disposal of the
trading stock for the seller. If apportionment between each
purpose cannot be accurately measured, the buyer should return
the full amount of the trade incentive as income and the seller
should return the full amount of the trade incentive as a
business expense.
Examples
Example 1 - upfront volume rebate not subject to aggregate
volume threshold - buyer and seller
15. Under its terms of trade with a seller, a buyer is entitled
to receive a volume rebate of 5 per cent for all purchases of
5,000 or more items of trading stock. The buyer purchases 10,000
items of trading stock with a cost price of $20 per item subject
to the 5 per cent rebate.
16. The volume rebate is intended to reduce the selling price of
the goods under the terms of trade in accordance with ordinary
business practice. It is treated as a reduction in the cost of
the purchase of trading stock by the buyer.
17. The volume rebate reduces the buyer's acquisition cost of
the trading stock. The buyer's acquisition cost of the trading
stock for income tax purposes is $190,000.
18. Similarly the volume rebate reduces the sale proceeds of the
seller for income tax purposes to $190,000.
19. Whether or not the volume rebate is included on the sales
invoice or is separately invoiced would not affect the income
tax consequences. In the circumstances the volume rebate is in
substance simply a reduction in the purchase/sale price, and the
manner in which it is invoiced would not alter its character.
Example 2 - volume rebate subject to aggregate volume
threshold - buyer and seller
20. Under its terms of trade with a seller, a buyer is entitled
to receive a volume rebate of 2 per cent on its purchases of a
particular item of trading stock subject to the buyer purchasing
100,000 items of the trading stock in an income year.
21. The parties initially proceed on the basis that the rebate
is uncertain and treat the purchases as undiscounted at the time
of purchase. The undiscounted purchase price of $20 per item is
paid by the buyer.
22. After six months, during which the buyer purchases 80,000
items of the trading stock, the parties conclude that it is
certain that the volume rebate level will be achieved. From the
seventh month the buyer pays the discounted purchase price of
$19.60 per item.
23. The number of items purchased by the buyer reaches 100,000
during the eighth month. At that time the seller credits the
volume rebate of $32,000 attributable to the first 80,000 items
purchased by the buyer. The rebate is shown as a credit due to
the buyer on the seller's sales invoice for the eighth month.
24. Throughout the year, including the periods after which the
volume rebate threshold is considered certain and after which
the volume rebate threshold is achieved, the undiscounted
purchase/sale price is shown on invoices and other documentation
as the trading stock price and the volume rebate is shown
separately.
25. The rebates applicable to the first 80,000 items do not
reduce the cost of acquiring trading stock for the buyer and the
proceeds of sale for the seller. The rebates are subject to a
condition that has not been satisfied at the time of the sale,
and it is not certain at the time of sale that the condition
will be satisfied. A later satisfaction of that condition does
not retrospectively alter the purchase/sale price applicable to
earlier transactions at the time the transactions were
undertaken.
26. The rebates applicable to the next 20,000 items do not
reduce the cost of acquiring trading stock for the buyer but
reduce the proceeds of sale for the seller. Whilst the rebates
are subject to a condition that has not been satisfied at the
time of the sale, it is certain in a practical sense at the time
of sale that the condition will be satisfied. The seller treats
the volume rebates as a reduction in the sale price of the
trading stock in accordance with the principles as set out in
Taxation Ruling TR 96/20 for settlement discounts.
27. The rebates applicable to all items purchased/sold after the
100,000 items threshold is achieved reduce the cost of acquiring
trading stock for the buyer and the proceeds of sale for the
seller as the rebates are not subject to a condition that has
not been satisfied at the time of the sale.
28. The rebate of $32,000 applicable to the first 80,000 items
is derived as ordinary income of the buyer and incurred as an
expense of the seller at the time when the seller credits the
buyer's account with the $32,000. In this example the crediting
occurs when the number of items purchased by the buyer reaches
100,000. The rebate applicable to the next 20,000 items is
ordinary income derived by the buyer when the number of items
purchased by the buyer reaches 100,000 in accordance with the
principles as set out in TR 96/20 for settlement discounts.
Example 3 - ullage allowance - buyer and seller
29. Under its terms of trade with a seller a buyer is entitled
to an ullage allowance of 1.5 per cent on all delivered stock.
The allowance is taken off the invoiced price of the goods. The
buyer is entitled to return damaged stock for a refund, but the
ullage allowance saves the buyer and the seller the cost of
administering returns and refunds within the normal range of
stock breakages.
30. The ullage allowance is paid in effect as consideration for
short deliveries of marketable stock due to damage and is a
reduction in the cost of stock. The buyer takes into account the
reduction of 1.5 per cent in determining the deductible outgoing
it incurs in acquiring stock from the seller.
31. The income of the seller is the list price less the 1.5 per
cent ullage allowance.
Example 4 - characterisation of trade incentive - settlement
discount where buyer always pays within discount period - buyer
and seller
32. Over a number of years a buyer's terms of trade with a
seller have included an entitlement to a prompt payment discount
where payment is made within 30 days. The buyer has always paid
within the 30 day discount period.
33. Although the buyer always pays within the discount period,
the prompt payment discount is an incentive subject to a
condition that has not been satisfied at the time of purchase
and will not reduce the cost of acquiring trading stock for the
buyer. The amount incurred by the buyer for the purposes of
section 8-1 is determined by the contractual terms of trade
between the parties, and at the time the transaction is
implemented the buyer has no right to the prompt payment
discount. Whilst the buyer always pays within the discount
period, the payment nevertheless occurs after the buyer has
subjected itself to the contract price. In these circumstances
the discount does not reduce the amount that the buyer has
incurred under the contract.
34. The buyer will include the amount of the discount in its
assessable income in the income year in which its entitlement to
the discount arises.
35. As it is virtually certain that the buyer will be entitled
to the prompt payment discount, the prompt payment discount will
reduce the sale price for the seller. The seller's assessable
income from the sale will be the reduced amount. To include the
gross sale price in the assessable income of the seller would,
as per Ballarat
Brewing Co v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation ,2 ( Ballarat
Brewing ) produce
a 'misleading' result.
Example 5 - characterisation of trade incentive - settlement
discount always allowed - buyer and seller
36. Over a number of years a buyer's terms of trade with a
seller have included an entitlement to a prompt payment discount
where payment is made within 30 days. The buyer has always
claimed the prompt payment discount whether or not it pays the
invoice within 30 days, and the seller allows the discount
without objection.
37. Despite what occurs in practice the prompt payment discount
is an incentive subject to a condition that has not been
satisfied at the time of purchase and will not reduce the cost
of acquiring trading stock for the buyer. The amount incurred by
the buyer for the purposes of section 8-1 is determined by the
contractual terms of trade between the parties, and at the time
the transaction is implemented the buyer has no right to the
prompt payment discount. The fact that the seller always allows
the prompt payment discount is something that occurs later and
does not reduce the amount that the buyer has incurred under the
contract.
38. The buyer will include the amount of the discount in its
assessable income in the income year in which its entitlement to
the discount arises.
39. As it is certain that the prompt payment discount will be
taken by the buyer and allowed by the seller, the prompt payment
discount will reduce the sale price for the seller. The seller's
assessable income from the sale will be the reduced amount. To
include the gross sale price in the assessable income of the
seller would, as per Ballarat
Brewing ,3 produce
a 'misleading' result.
Example 6 - characterisation of trade incentive - promotional
rebate - buyer and seller
40. Under its terms of trade with a seller, a buyer is entitled
to receive a promotional rebate for keeping a prominent display
of the seller's range of products in its stores. The amount of
the rebate is calculated as a percentage of the sale price of
goods purchased.
41. Other promotional rebates paid by the seller include a
payment for generic shelving, a payment for placing the goods in
an advantageous position, for example on a gondola end, or a
non-specific payment for promotion at the discretion of the
buyer.
42. The promotional rebate is payment for services provided by
the buyer to the seller. Even though the amount of the rebate is
calculated by reference to the volume of stock purchased by the
buyer, it is properly characterised as a payment for services.
The rebate is ordinary income of the buyer and does not reduce
the buyer's cost of acquisition of trading stock from the seller
for the purposes of Division 70.
43. For the seller, the payment of the rebate is a deductible
loss or outgoing. The payment does not reduce the proceeds from
the sale of stock to the buyer or the income the seller derives
from the sale transaction.
Example 7 - promotional rebate derived/incurred upfront -
buyer and seller
44. On 31 May a buyer purchases trading stock from a seller and
receives from the seller a trade incentive in consideration for
promotional services to be performed by the buyer over the
following three months. The seller and the buyer have a long
standing business relationship, the trade incentive payment is
not linked to any specific services to be performed by the
buyer, and nor is there any provision for any repayment of the
trade incentive having regard to the level of services actually
performed by the buyer.
45. The buyer performs the promotional services over the three
months period in accordance with the agreement with the seller.
46. The incentive is derived by the buyer for the purposes of
section 6-5 on 31 May. The monies received or receivable by the
buyer as at 31 May are not subject to the discharge by the buyer
of any future obligations.
47. The seller incurs a deduction for the incentive on 31 May.
Example 8 - promotional rebate derived when services
performed - buyer; promotional rebate incurred when liability
arises - seller
48. On 31 May a buyer purchases trading stock from a seller and
receives from the seller a trade incentive in consideration for
promotional services to be performed by the buyer over the
following three months. To the extent that the services are not
performed the buyer is required to make a pro rata repayment of
the trade incentive to the seller.
49. The buyer performs the promotional services evenly over the
three months period in accordance with the agreement with the
seller.
50. The incentive is derived by the buyer for the purposes of
section 6-5 over the three months period. One third of the
amount paid is derived as at 30 June with the remaining two
thirds derived in the following income year. Any monies received
or receivable by the buyer as at 31 May are subject to the
discharge by the buyer of certain future obligations. The
assessable income of the buyer as at 30 June will include that
proportion of the trade incentive representing obligations
discharged, and therefore income earned, as at 30 June.
51. The seller incurs a deduction for the incentive on 31 May.
In the event that the buyer did not fully perform the relevant
services and was required to repay or credit a part of the
promotional rebate representing the unperformed services, the
amount repaid or credited to the seller would be ordinary income
and assessable income of the seller.
Example 9 - apportioned bundled rebate - buyer and seller
52. Under its terms of trade with a seller, a buyer is entitled
to a 5 per cent rebate on certain major brand goods in
consideration for the volume of goods purchased and for the
buyer's commitment to achieve an increased level of sales. While
the buyer is under no obligation to undertake any specific
promotion of the seller's goods, the parties understand that the
buyer will promote the seller's goods throughout the year in
order to achieve the increased sales. In its ordinary
promotional activity the buyer conducts promotions of major
brand goods, including the seller's products, more intensively
than lesser brands.
53. The fact that the buyer conducts a higher level of
promotional activity for the major brand goods of the seller and
has committed to increase its sales of those goods indicates
that the parties intend some part of the rebate to be paid as
consideration for promotional activities, even though the
greater part of the rebate may relate to the volume of stock
purchased.
54. Having regard to all the relevant factors, such as the
amount the buyer usually charges for undertaking specific
promotions on behalf of a seller and the relative frequency of
promotions of the seller's goods, the buyer determines that 40%
of the rebate is paid as consideration for promotional activity.
This part of the rebate does not reduce the cost of acquiring
trading stock from the seller for the purposes of Division 70.
55. For an item of stock with a sale price of $100 there will be
a $5 rebate. The 'promotional activity' component of the rebate
will be $2 and the 'volume' component of the rebate will be $3.
The volume rebate will reduce the buyer's cost of acquiring the
item of trading stock to $97.
56. On the assumption that the seller obtained information from
the buyer on the proportion that relates to promotional
activity, the proportions which apply to the buyer would apply
to the seller. Accordingly the seller would show sale proceeds
of $97 and claim a deduction for $2. If the seller cannot obtain
information from the buyer on the proportion that relates to
promotional activity, it must determine that proportion on all
the relevant information available to it, including its cost of
purchasing other promotional activities from the buyer.
Example 10 - unapportioned bundled rebate - buyer and seller
57. Under its terms of trade with a seller, a buyer is entitled
to a 4 per cent rebate on certain major brand goods. The rebate
is intended to cover a range of trade incentives and, in the
interests of administrative efficiency and to minimise costs,
the parties do not dissect the rebate into its component parts.
58. As neither the buyer nor the seller can make a bona
fide estimate of
the amount attributable to the promotional activity, the buyer's
cost of an item of trading stock is the undiscounted amount and
the seller treats the undiscounted amount as the sale proceeds.
The buyer should return the 4 per cent rebate as income and the
seller should claim the 4 per cent rebate as a business expense.
Example 11 - advertising allowance - buyer and seller
59. Under its terms of trade with a seller, a buyer is entitled
to an advertising allowance for including the seller's products
in its advertising material a minimum number of times a year.
The allowance is expressed as a percentage reduction in the
price of goods on all of the seller's invoices.
60. The advertising allowance is a payment for services which
the buyer provides to the seller. For the buyer the allowance is
ordinary income and is not a reduction in the cost of
acquisition of trading stock for Division 70 purposes.
61. For the seller, the advertising allowance is a payment for
services provided to it by the buyer. The allowance does not
reduce the proceeds from the sale transaction and accordingly
does not reduce the amount of income the seller derives on the
disposal of trading stock to the company. It is a business
expense.
Example 12 - transport rebate - buyer
62. A seller makes a contribution to the buyer's transport costs
in recognition of the buyer's capacity to widely distribute the
seller's goods and for the use of the buyer's distribution
centre.
63. For the buyer, if the rebate is merely a contribution to the
overall transport and distribution cost, the payment is either a
reduction in that cost or ordinary income.
64. However, if the amount of the rebate can be directly linked
to and is dependent on the number of units purchased, it would
be treated as a reduction in the cost of acquisition of trading
stock.
Date of effect
65. This Ruling applies to years of income commencing both
before and after its date of issue. However, the Ruling will not
apply to taxpayers to the extent that it conflicts with the
terms of settlement of a dispute agreed to before the date of
issue of the Ruling (see paragraphs 75 to 77 of Taxation Ruling
TR 2006/10).
Commissioner of Taxation
9 September 2009
Appendix 1 - Explanation
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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. |
Scheme of Division 70
66. The payment of trade incentives by sellers to buyers is a
common feature of the business conducted between them.
67. Section 70-1 states that Division 70 deals with 'amounts you
can deduct, and amounts included in your assessable income'
where 'you acquire an item of trading stock'.
68. Section 70-5 states that the purpose of income tax
accounting for trading stock is to produce an overall result
that properly reflects 'your activities with your trading stock
during the income year.' The three key features of this tax
accounting regime are:
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gross outgoings and earnings, rather than
net profits or losses on disposal, are brought to
account;
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those gross outgoings and earnings are on
revenue account, with gross outgoings being usually
deductible as general deductions under section 8-1 and
gross earnings usually assessable as ordinary income
under section 6-5; and
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any difference between the value of
trading stock on hand at the start and at the end of the
income year is brought to account as assessable income
(if the difference is positive) or as a deduction (if
the difference is negative).
69. Section 70-15 provides a timing rule to ensure that
deductions for an item of trading stock are available only in
the income year in which the item is first on hand or in which
it produces income on disposal.
70. Subsection 70-15(1) refers to 'an outgoing incurred in
connection with acquiring an item of trading stock.' The
deductible amount (the 'gross outgoing' referred to in section
70-5) is the actual cost to the trader of acquiring the item.
All elements that contribute to the actual cost of the item of
trading stock, such as trade incentives that in reality reduce
the cost, are intended to be taken into account.
71. The expression 'incurred in connection with acquiring' means
that amounts unconnected with the acquisition of the item, such
as selling costs or amounts received in connection with
providing services or maintaining a business relationship, are
not included in the cost of the trading stock for the purposes
of Division 70. These amounts are directed at an end other than
the acquisition of the trading stock.
72. In summary, the scheme of Division 70 requires a trader to
apply a tax accounting methodology to its trading stock that
effectively defers a deduction on the acquisition of an item of
trading stock to the income year in which income from that item
is assessed. The scheme recognises the trader's profits and
losses that inhere in its trading stock on hand.
73. Dealings with trading stock will ordinarily result in the
derivation of ordinary income under section 6-5 and the
deductibility of expenses under section 8-1. Nothing in Division
70 reveals an intention that the application of section 6-5 and
section 8-1 is modified for trading stock.
Sections 6-5 and section 8-1 apply generally to incentives in
accordance with the principles set out in TR 96/20
Seller
74. TR 96/20 addresses the income tax treatment of settlement
discounts by analysing them in terms of the law applying to the
derivation of income and the deductibility of outgoings. TR
96/20 requires certain other incentives to be treated in the
same way as settlement discounts.
75. Under TR 96/20, when a seller sells trading stock to a buyer
that is subject to trade incentives, the income that the seller
derives from the transaction is the contract price, net of any
incentives that reduce the contract price.
76. With one exception, a trade incentive that is subject to a
condition that has not been satisfied at the time of the sale
does not reduce the contract price of the trading stock.
Accordingly, and subject to that exception, the seller has
derived the full amount of the contract or sale price as
assessable income.
77. The exception is where, even though the incentive may be
subject to a condition satisfied at a later date, there is
virtual certainty at the time of sale that the incentive will be
paid. For example, the buyer may always take a settlement
discount regardless of when the buyer pays for the trading
stock. In this scenario the seller will have no expectation that
anything other than the reduced price (contract price less
settlement discount) will be paid. The income tax consequences
for the seller are as set out in Ballarat
Brewing ,4 where
Fullager J considered whether the taxpayer should include the
discounted price (the 'company's figure') or the undiscounted
contract price (the 'commissioner's figure') in its assessable
income:
Which figure - the Commissioner's or the company's -
represents, or more nearly represents, the truth and reality
of the situation? The company's figure brings into account
what the company will, in the light of all past experience
and policy, almost certainly receive in respect of book
debts - no more and no less. The commissioner's figure
brings into account sums which the company will certainly,
or almost certainly, not receive in respect of book debts. A
trading account and profit and loss account based on the
latter figure would be misleading, and there is nothing in
the Act which requires the assessment of income on the basis
of accounts which would be misleading in this respect.5
78. TR 96/20 also addresses the treatment of cash discounts,
trade discounts and quantity or bulk discounts, where the
conditions for payment are satisfied at the time of the
purchase/sale. These incentive payments reduce the contract
price of the goods and, as a consequence, the loss or outgoing
incurred by the buyer and the assessable income of the seller.
79. The principles under which ordinary income is derived under
section 6-5 and outgoings or losses are incurred under section
8-1 are well established.
80. It is also well established that accounting standards and
principles do not affect the taxation consequences where the
taxation principles are clear.
81. In Queensland
Independent Wholesalers Limited v. Commissioner of Taxation ,6 ( Queensland
Independent Wholesalers )
Hill J (with whom Davies and Lee JJ agreed) considered the
relevance of accounting standards to the sales tax treatment of
certain trade incentives directed towards particular ends:
While in my view it is not necessary that the amount of a
rebate be given contractually to reduce the amount at which
the goods are sold, it is clear that the factual
circumstances must be such that it is apparent that the
rebate does effect a reduction in the sale price as a matter
of commercial reality and that it is not directed at some
other end. The cash component of the 1985 rebate clearly
enough satisfies such a test. However, I think that other
considerations arise when one considers that part of the
rebate, which was credited and provided a mechanism for
ensuring an additional capital injection for RSDF, should it
be needed. The rebate, while it could be said in one sense
to reduce the sale price of the goods, went far beyond that.
It was not a mere rebate against the price of the goods, but
rather was directed at another end. In those circumstances
the non-cash component did not operate to reduce the amount
for which the goods were sold to customers.7
82. Similarly in Colgate-Palmolive
Pty Ltd v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation 8 ( Colgate-Palmolive )
the Full Federal Court stated that:
A characterisation of the co-operative allowance as a
payment directed towards providing a discount to Woolworths
does not give adequate expression to the factual context in
which the allowance was paid. As the trial judge correctly
recognised (at p 4762), Woolworths was able to derive
revenue from making available to its sellers marketing
opportunities with little or no marginal cost to it. Viewed
in that light, the co-operative allowance was not in the
nature of a rebate off the price of goods for some matter
incidental to the sale transaction. Rather it was a sum paid
to secure a benefit to Colgate in relation to its brand, or
in relation to the sale of goods in the future.
Whilst the manner in which Colgate and Woolworths accounted
for the co-operative allowance is a relevant factor in
assessing the price at which Colgate's products were sold to
Woolworths, it cannot be determinative of that question.
When regard is had to the substance of the relationship
between the parties, the accounting treatment cannot alter
the fact that the co-operative allowance was directed at
another end than the payment of a discount to Woolworths,
namely the securing of a real independent commercial benefit
to Colgate.9
83. The Commissioner's view is that the principles as stated in Queensland
Independent Wholesalers and Colgate-Palmolive ,
whilst expressed in a sales tax context, also apply in an income
tax context. It can be accepted that accounting standards will
be of assistance in considering when income is derived by a
business for the purposes of section 6-5 in circumstances where
neither the legislation nor judicial authority provides any
assistance. However where, on the particular facts, trade
incentives are directed towards particular ends, those ends will
ordinarily determine the income tax outcomes. For example, where
an entity makes a payment in consideration for obtaining a
service, that payment cannot be characterised as a reduction in
the sale proceeds of trading stock and/or as a reduction in the
cost of acquiring trading stock for income tax purposes merely
because the applicable accounting standards permit or require
such a characterisation in the entity's statutory accounts.
84. Where the trade incentive does not relate directly to its
sale of trading stock, the seller includes the contract price
for the trading stock in its assessable income and claims a
deduction for each incentive paid in the income year in which
the expense is incurred.
85. If an incentive which is ordinarily paid as a matter of
course ( Ballarat
Brewing scenario)
and reduces the sale proceeds is subsequently not paid, the
seller derives the amount of the incentive as income when it
becomes certain that the amount will not be paid.
Buyer
86. Section 6-5 applies to the seller in accordance with the
decision in Ballarat
Brewing .
However, it does not follow that because income is assessed to
the seller in a particular way for the purposes of section 6-5,
the section 8-1 deductions allowable to the buyer will
correspond in both quantum and timing to the income assessed to
the seller. Notwithstanding the position of the seller, the
position of the buyer remains as set out in paragraphs 11 and 57
of TR 96/20. Paragraph 57 states:
Although the opportunity for the customer to avail itself of
the discount is provided in the contract of sale and,
therefore, exists at the time of sale, the right to the
discount itself does not. The right to the discount is only
triggered by the payment of the discounted price within the
discount period. At the time of sale, the right to a
discount is a contingency only which may be satisfied at a
later time by the occurrence of a specified event. The
effect of the occurrence of that later event cannot operate
to alter retrospectively the position which existed at the
time of sale. The availability of a discount provides no
more than an opportunity for the customer to acquire the
goods at an actual cost less than their contracted price. In
these circumstances, the incurrence of the liability under
the contract of sale and the later satisfaction of that
liability are two separate, albeit related events.
87. In relation to the buyer, TR 96/20 provides that the
undiscounted contract price is the presently existing liability
and the deductible outgoing from the purchase, as this amount is
not uncertain or contingent. The settlement discount merely
provides the buyer with an opportunity to vary the contract
price of the goods and does not reduce the liability to which
the buyer is definitively committed at the time of sale.
88. Should the buyer later become entitled to the settlement
discount by satisfying its conditions, the discount is ordinary
income assessable to the buyer under section 6-5.
89. At the time TR 96/20 was issued, settlement discounts did
not reduce the cost of purchase under the accounting standards
for inventories. Under the current Australian accounting
standards, consistent with the international financial reporting
standards, that position has been reversed. However, while the
accounting standard for inventories now states that 'trade
discounts, rebates and other similar items are deducted in
determining the costs of purchase',10 such
a change does not of itself alter the interpretation and
application of income tax law.
90. The Commissioner's view is that accounting standards and
principles are not relevant to the characterisation of trade
incentives for the purposes of section 8-1. The decisions in Queensland
Independent Wholesalers and Colgate-Palmolive as
discussed in paragraphs 81 to 83 of this Ruling in an income
derivation context are equally applicable in a section 8-1
'incurred' context.
91. Moreover, court decisions suggest that accounting standards
and principles will be of less relevance in determining when a
'loss or outgoing ... is incurred' than when income is derived.
For example, in Federal
Commissioner of Taxation v. Citylink Melbourne Ltd ,11 Crennan
J stated that 'accruals based tax accounting and the
jurisprudence in respect of the test for deductibility could not
always be reconciled with a commercial or accounting approach'.12 Crennan
J referred to a number of cases which demonstrate that
'incurred' has a precise legal meaning. There are no suggestions
in any of the cases that the meaning of 'incurred' would change
in parallel with changes in relevant accounting standards.
92. A buyer disregards a trade incentive that does not relate
directly to its purchase of trading stock and claims the
contract price as the deduction. Where a trade incentive relates
directly to its purchase of trading stock the buyer deducts the
trade incentive from the contract price and claims the net
(discounted) amount as the deduction.
93. A buyer includes any trade incentive that does not relate
directly to its purchase of trading stock as assessable income
in the income year in which it is derived.
Unearned income of buyer
94. Under the heading 'Receipt of fee in advance of work done',
Taxation Ruling TR 93/11 states that 'A professional person will
sometimes receive fee income in advance of the work to which it
relates. If the contract or arrangement requires that the fee be
paid in advance, the fee income is derived in the income year in
which the professional person completes the work (or the part of
the work) to which the fee relates. On the other hand, if the
client simply pays early, the fee income is derived when a
recoverable debt arises or would have arisen if the client had
not paid early ....' This statement relies on the decision in Arthur
Murray (NSW) Pty Ltd v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation 13 where
it was held that income received in advance for the provision of
services to be rendered in future income years and 'subject to
the contingency that the whole or some part of it may have in
effect to be paid back, even if only as damages, should the
agreed quid
pro quo not be
rendered in due course'14 is
not derived until the services are rendered.
95. The principles applicable to a 'professional person' in
relation to prepaid and unearned fee income would also apply to
an unearned trade incentive that is ordinary income of a buyer.
To the extent that a trade incentive received by or owing to a
buyer is a fee for future services and will be repaid to the
seller should the relevant services not be performed, the trade
incentive would be unearned income of the buyer to be derived
for the purposes of section 6-5 at the time the services are
performed.
Standard trade incentives
Upfront volume rebates not
subject to aggregate volume threshold
96. Where a buyer purchases trading stock that is subject to a
volume rebate at the time of purchase based on the quantity
purchased, the purchase/sale price of the trading stock is the
net amount.
97. The volume rebate is not a condition that has not been
satisfied at the time of the purchase/sale. The volume rebate
relates directly to the purchase/sale and the price of the
trading stock, is a benefit provided to the buyer at the time of
purchase for entering into a contract to purchase a particular
quantity, and is essentially a reduction in the contract price.
Accordingly it reduces the purchase price of the buyer and the
sale price of the seller.
Promotional incentives
98. A promotional incentive is an example of a trade incentive
paid as consideration for, or in recognition of, things that a
buyer does for the benefit of a seller.
99. Product promotion is an important factor in commerce and can
be linked directly to the volume of sales. Promotions therefore
benefit the seller as well as the buyer. It is common for buyers
to seek financial contributions from sellers for promoting the
seller's products.
100. Promotional incentives can take different forms. A buyer
may charge a specific amount for a specific product promotion. A
buyer may claim a percentage rebate on its purchase of the
seller's goods for undertaking general promotions of the
seller's goods over a particular period in order to increase the
buyer's sales of the seller's goods. Whilst the buyer may retain
complete discretion as to the timing and nature of these
promotions, it is understood that a certain level of promotion
will be necessary to achieve the increased sales.
101. The fact that the buyer must undertake promotions as part
of its ordinary retail operations in order to remain competitive
does not affect the nature of the incentive payments. They are
amounts paid by the seller on the understanding that the buyer
carries out promotional activity from which the seller expects
to benefit. Promotions are necessarily preferential, and the
seller pays the incentive in recognition that its products will
enjoy preferential promotional treatment in accordance with the
incentive to the extent necessary to achieve increased sales.
102. Although in the course of its normal retail activities a
buyer may be expected to promote certain popular brands of goods
more intensively than other brands, if the buyer claims an
incentive payment from a seller in association with the buyer's
promotional activities, it is reasonable to conclude that the
buyer is being rewarded by the seller for services performed in
relation to the seller's goods from which the seller is
benefiting.
103. A seller's purpose in paying a promotional incentive is to
increase its sales and sales revenue. This purpose is directed
to things that occur after the seller sells the trading stock to
the buyer. For this reason a promotional rebate lacks the
necessary connection to the sale to be categorised as an
adjustment to the sale price. The promotional rebate does not
reduce the sales proceeds for the seller or the outgoing
incurred by the buyer in acquiring the trading stock.
104. The fact that a trade incentive may be calculated as a
percentage of the selling price of goods may indicate that more
careful consideration of its real purpose is required, but it
does not prevent its characterisation as a promotional payment,
that is, as a payment for services that does not reduce the
purchase/sale price of the goods.
105. In summary, where:
-
·
-
an incentive is paid to promote sales of
the seller's products;
-
·
-
the parties have a mutual understanding
that increased sales will not occur unless the buyer
carries out a certain level of promotional activity or a
certain promotional program; and
-
·
-
the buyer carries out that level of
promotional activity or that promotional program,
it is reasonable to conclude that the seller pays the incentive
as consideration for the buyer promoting the seller's products
with a view to increasing sales.
Bundled incentives
106. A bundled incentive may be described as a consolidated or
combined incentive that relates to a number of types of
incentive.
107. Where the component parts of a bundled incentive are not
valued, the parties must determine on an objective basis what
proportion of the bundled incentive relates to each type of
incentive. In determining these proportions, the parties need to
have regard to the reasons for the payment of the bundled
incentive including any services performed by the buyer for the
seller and the benefits obtained by the seller in consideration
for the making of the payment.
108. If the component parts of a bundled incentive cannot be
accurately measured, the buyer should return the full amount of
the bundled incentive as income and the seller should return the
full amount of the bundled incentive as a business expense.
Division 70 deals with 'an outgoing incurred in connection with
acquiring an item of trading stock' (refer subsection 70-15(1)).
Where no component of a bundled trade incentive can be
quantified and attributed to 'acquiring an item of trading
stock', the bundled incentive will be income of the buyer and a
business expense of the seller.
Appendix 2 - Alternative views
|
This
Appendix sets out alternative views and explains why
they are not supported by the Commissioner. It does not
form part of the binding public ruling. |
Alternative view - settlement discounts and volume rebates
which are certain and which reduce the sale proceeds of the
seller also reduce the buyer's cost of trading stock
109. Where the sales income of the seller is reduced under the Ballarat
Brewing principle
it should follow that the deduction allowable to the buyer under
section 8-1 in respect of its purchase of trading stock is
correspondingly reduced.
110. In characterising a trade incentive for the purposes of
Division 70, it is important to identify the real character of
the payment and whether the payment is integral to the sale
transaction or is a separate transaction in its own right.
111. For example, where in a practical sense it is certain that
a volume rebate level will be achieved at the time of the
purchase/sale, the parties would deduct the amount of the rebate
from the gross purchase/sale price in determining the purchase
price of the buyer and the sale price of the seller for the
purposes of Division 70.
112. Where achievement of the volume rebate level is uncertain,
it would be expected that the parties would treat the gross
purchase/sale price as the purchase/sale price of the trading
stock and treat the volume rebate, should it arise, as a
separate transaction.
113. Where a volume rebate level previously considered uncertain
is achieved or is considered certain to be achieved, amounts
paid by the seller to the buyer representing rebates
attributable to the period during which the volume rebate level
was uncertain would be ordinary income of the buyer which would
not reduce the buyer's cost of the trading stock, and would be a
revenue expense of the seller which would not reduce the
seller's disposal proceeds. A later legal obligation to make
payment of a volume rebate applicable to an earlier
purchase/sale transaction would not retrospectively reduce the
purchase/sale price applicable to the earlier transaction.
114. From the time commencing when the volume rebate level is
achieved, or when it is certain that it will be achieved, it
would be expected that the parties would deduct the amount of
the rebate from the gross purchase/sale price and treat the net
amount as the actual purchase/sale price of the trading stock.
115. The Commissioner does not accept this view. The position of
the buyer is set out in TR 96/20. The then applicable accounting
standards were not considered relevant to the amount of the
deduction allowable to the buyer in respect of its purchase of
trading stock, and any changes to the accounting standards made
since TR 96/20 was issued are similarly not relevant to the
amount of the deduction now allowable to the buyer in respect of
its purchase of trading stock consistent with the discussion of Queensland
Independent Wholesalers and Colgate-Palmolive in
paragraphs 81 to 83 of this Ruling.
116. The Commissioner does not accept that trade incentives that
apply to all transactions under the terms of trade reduce the
purchase/sale price of the trading stock. The Commissioner's
view is that where the buyer's entitlement to a trade incentive
is dependent on the buyer fulfilling one or more conditions, the
incentive payment is earned and is income of the buyer and,
similarly, is a loss or outgoing and a deductible expense of the
seller. BHP
Billiton Petroleum (Bass Strait) Pty Ltd & Anor v. Commissioner
of Taxation 15 ( BHP
Billiton )
involved a question of when income was derived for the purposes
of section 6-5 where, having regard to the terms of the
contracts between the relevant parties, there was neither
judicial precedent nor any specific legislative provision.
117. The Commissioner recognises the importance of commercial
and accounting principles in certain contexts including the BHP
Billiton context.
For example, Taxation Ruling TR 2006/8 deals with the valuation
of cost of trading stock on hand at cost and refers to judicial
authority to support the view that cost is determined having
regard to accounting standards and principles. TR 2006/8 quotes
Mason J's view ( Federal
Commissioner of Taxation v. St Hubert's Island Pty Ltd (in liq ))16 ( St
Hubert's Island )
that:
as the definition of 'trading stock' contained in section
6(1)[17] is not an exclusive definition, it
requires us to give effect to the ordinary, and in this case
that happens to be the commercial, meaning of the expression
....
and Jenkinson J's assumption ( Philip
Morris Ltd v. Commissioner of Taxation )18 ( Phillip
Morris ):
that the legal conception of what is required, or permitted,
by subsection 31(1)[19] when a manufacturer
exercises his option to value an article of trading stock at
cost may be enlarged or varied by proof of relevant changes
in accounting principle or practice ....
118. BHP
Billiton, St Hubert's Island and Philip
Morris confirm
the relevance of commercial and accounting principles in
resolving taxation questions in certain contexts. However, in
the Commissioner's view, commercial and accounting principles
are necessarily subordinate to taxation principles where they
differ and where the taxation principles are clear. Where as a
matter of fact a particular trade incentive is paid for a
particular purpose, that purpose will determine the taxation
consequences. Treating certain trade incentives as income of the
buyer and business expenses of the seller does not, in the words
of Hill and Heerey JJ, 'produce a misleading result'.20
119. The Commissioner's view is that there is no basis for
preferring a taxation outcome based on an accounting treatment
in accordance with current accounting standards over a taxation
outcome based on the application of well established legal
principles to a particular set of facts.
Appendix 3 - Detailed contents list
120. The following is a detailed contents list for this Ruling:
|
|
Paragraph |
|
What this Ruling is about |
1 |
|
Ruling |
4 |
|
Taxation consequences for buyer |
4 |
|
Taxation consequences for seller |
9 |
|
Whether trade incentive directly relates to
trading stock |
13 |
|
Examples |
15 |
|
Example 1 - upfront volume rebate not
subject to aggregate volume threshold - buyer and seller |
15 |
|
Example 2 - volume rebate subject to
aggregate volume threshold - buyer and seller |
20 |
|
Example 3 - ullage allowance - buyer and
seller |
29 |
|
Example 4 - characterisation of trade
incentive - settlement discount where buyer always pays
within discount period - buyer and seller |
32 |
|
Example 5 - characterisation of trade
incentive - settlement discount always allowed - buyer
and seller |
36 |
|
Example 6 - characterisation of trade
incentive - promotional rebate - buyer and seller |
40 |
|
Example 7 - promotional rebate
derived/incurred upfront - buyer and seller |
44 |
|
Example 8 - promotional rebate derived when
services performed - buyer and incurred when liability
arises - seller |
48 |
|
Example 9 - apportioned bundled rebate -
buyer and seller |
52 |
|
Example 10 - unapportioned bundled rebate -
buyer and seller |
57 |
|
Example 11 - advertising allowance - buyer
and seller |
59 |
|
Example 12 - transport rebate - buyer |
62 |
|
Date of effect |
65 |
|
Appendix 1 - Explanation |
66 |
|
Scheme of Division 70 |
66 |
|
Sections 6-5 and 8-1 apply generally to
incentives in accordance with the principles set out in
TR 96/20 |
74 |
|
Seller |
74 |
|
Buyer |
86 |
|
Unearned
income of buyer |
94 |
|
Standard trade incentives |
96 |
|
Upfront volume rebates not subject to
aggregate volume threshold |
96 |
|
Promotional incentives |
98 |
|
Bundled incentives |
106 |
|
Appendix 2 - Alternative views |
109 |
|
Alternative view - settlement discounts and
volume rebates which are certain and which reduce the
sale proceeds of the supplier also reduce the buyer's
cost of trading stock |
109 |
|
Appendix 3 - Detailed contents list |
120 |
Footnotes
[1]
All subsequent legislative references are to the ITAA 1997
unless otherwise stated.
[2]
(1951) 82 CLR 364 at 369; (1951) 9 ATD 254 at 258.
[3]
(1951) 82 CLR 364 at 369; (1951) 9 ATD 254 at 258.
[4]
(1951) 82 CLR 364; (1951) 9 ATD 254.
[5]
(1951) 82 CLR 364 at 369; (1951) 9 ATD 254 at 258.
[6]
91 ATC 4492; (1991) 22 ATR 45.
[7]
91 ATC 4492 at 4500; (1991) 22 ATR 45 at 54.
[8]
99 ATC 4289; (1999) 41 ATR 357.
[9]
99 ATC 4289 at 4293-4294; (1999) 41 ATR 357 at 362.
[10]
AASB 102.11 (operative 1 July 2007).
[11]
2006 ATC 4404; (2006) 62 ATR 648.
[12]
2006 ATC 4404 at 4424-4425; (2006) 62 ATR 648 at 675.
[13]
(1965) 114 CLR 314; (1965) 14 ATD 98.
[14]
(1965) 114 CLR 314 at CLR 319; (1965) 14 ATD 98 at 100.
[15]
2002 ATC 5169; (2002) 51 ATR 520.
[16]
78 ATC 4104 at 4113; (1978) 8 ATR 452 at 462).
[17]
Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA
1936).
[18]
79 ATC 4352 at 4357; (1979) 10 ATR 44 at 48.
[19]
ITAA 1936.
[20]
2002 ATC 5169 at 5182; (2002) 51 ATR 520 at 536.
TR 2009/D2
References
ATO references:
NO 2008/13540
ISSN: 1039-0731
Related Rulings/Determinations:
TR 93/11
TR 96/20
TR 2006/8
TR 2006/10
Subject References:
acquisition of trading stock discounts
promotional rebates
trading stock
volume rebates, deferred credits, trade incentives
Legislative References:
ITAA 1936 6(1)
ITAA 1936 31(1)
ITAA 1997
ITAA 1997 6-5
ITAA 1997 8-1
ITAA 1997 Div 70
ITAA 1997 70-1
ITAA 1997 70-5
ITAA 1997 70-15
ITAA 1997 70-15(1)
TAA 1953
Case References:
Arthur Murray (NSW) Pty Ltd v.
Federal Commissioner of Taxation
[1965] HCA 58
114 CLR 314
14 ATD 98
Ballarat Brewing Co v. Federal
Commissioner of Taxation
[1951] HCA 35
82 CLR 364
25 ALJ 220
9 ATD 254
[1951] ALR 603
BHP Billiton Petroleum (Bass
Strait) Pty Ltd & Anor v. Commissioner of Taxation
[2002] FCAFC 433
126 FCR 119
2002 ATC 5169
51 ATR 520
Colgate-Palmolive Pty Ltd v.
Federal Commissioner of Taxation
(1999) 41 ATR 357
99 ATC 4289
Federal Commissioner of Taxation
v. Citylink Melbourne Ltd
[2006] HCA 35
2006 ATC 4404
62 ATR 648
Federal Commissioner of Taxation
v. St Hubert's Island Pty Ltd (in liq)
[1978] HCA 10
138 CLR 210
52 ALJR 367
19 ALR 1
78 ATC 4104
8 ATR 452
Philip Morris Ltd v.
Commissioner of Taxation
(1979) 10 ATR 44
79 ATC 4352
Queensland Independent
Wholesalers Limited v. Commissioner of Taxation
(1991) 22 ATR 45
91 ATC 4492
Other References
Australian Accounting Standard AASB 102
|