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ITR31
Issued
06 Mar 2020

2020 International tax disclosure exemption

Determination setting out the 2020 international tax disclosure exemption.

TIB Volume 32 No 3 April 2020

Introduction

Section 61 of the Tax Administration Act 1994 ("TAA") requires taxpayers to disclose interests in foreign entities.

Section 61(1) of the TAA states that a person who has a control or income interest in a foreign company or an attributing interest in a foreign investment fund ("FIF") at any time during the income year must disclose the interest held. In the case of partnerships, disclosure needs to be made by the individual partners in the partnership. The partnership itself is not required to disclose.

Section 61(2) of the TAA allows the Commissioner of Inland Revenue to exempt any person or class of persons from this requirement if disclosure is not necessary for the administration of the international tax rules (as defined in section YA 1) contained in the Income Tax Act 2007 ("ITA").

To balance the revenue forecasting and risk assessment needs of the Commissioner with the compliance costs of taxpayers providing the information, the Commissioner has issued an international tax disclosure exemption under section 61(2) of the TAA that applies for the income year corresponding to the tax year ended 31 March 2020. This exemption may be cited as "International Tax Disclosure Exemption ITR31 "("the 2020 disclosure exemption") and the full text appears at the end of this item.

Scope of exemption

The scope of the 2020 disclosure exemption is the same as the 2019 disclosure exemption.

Application date

This exemption applies for the income year corresponding to the tax year ended 31 March 2020.

Summary

In summary, the 2020 disclosure exemption removes the requirement of a resident to disclose:

  • An interest of less than 10% in a foreign company if it is not an attributing interest in a FIF or if it falls within the $50,000 de minimis exemption (see section CQ 5(1)(d) and section DN 6(1)(d) of the ITA). The de minimis exemption does not apply to a person that has opted out of the de minimis threshold by including in the income tax return for the income year an amount of FIF income or loss.
  • If the resident is not a widely-held entity, an attributing interest in a FIF that is an income interest of less than 10%, if the foreign entity is incorporated (in the case of a company) or otherwise tax resident in a treaty country or territory, and the fair dividend rate or comparative value method of calculation is used.
  • If the resident is a widely-held entity, an attributing interest in a FIF that is an income interest of less than 10% if the fair dividend rate or comparative value method is used for the interest. The resident is instead required to disclose the end-of-year New Zealand dollar market value of all such investments split by the jurisdiction in which the attributing interest in a FIF is held or listed.

The 2020 disclosure exemption also removes the requirement for a non-resident or transitional resident to disclose interests held in foreign companies and FIFs.

Commentary

Generally, residents who hold an income interest or a control interest in a foreign company, or an attributing interest in a FIF are required to disclose these interests to the Commissioner. These interests are considered in further detail below.

Attributing interest in a FIF

A resident is required to disclose an attributing interest in a FIF if FIF income or a FIF loss arises through the use of one of the following calculation methods:

  • attributable FIF income, deemed rate of return or cost methods; or
  • fair dividend rate or comparative value methods, if the resident is a "widely-held entity"; or
  • fair dividend rate or comparative value methods, if the resident is not a widely-held entity and the attributing interest is incorporated or otherwise tax resident in a country or territory with which New Zealand does not have a double tax agreement in force as at 31 March 2020.

The 40 countries or territories with which New Zealand does have a double tax agreement in force as at 31 March 2020 are listed below.

Australia
Austria
Belgium
Canada
Chile
China
Czech Republic
Denmark
Fiji
Finland
France
Germany
Hong Kong
India
Indonesia
Ireland
Italy
Japan
Korea
Malaysia
Mexico
Netherlands
Norway
Papua New Guinea
Philippines
Poland
Russian Federation
Samoa
Singapore
South Africa
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Taiwan
Thailand
Turkey
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom
United States of America
Viet Nam

For the avoidance of doubt, the term "double tax agreement" does not include tax information exchange agreements or collection agreements and is limited to the double tax agreements negotiated with the 40 countries or territories listed in this 2020 disclosure exemption.

No disclosure is required by non-widely-held taxpayers for attributing interests in FIFs that are income interests of less than 10% and are incorporated or otherwise tax resident in a tax treaty country or territory, if the fair dividend rate or comparative value methods of calculation are used.

A "widely-held entity" for the purposes of this disclosure is an entity which is a:

  • portfolio investment entity (this includes a portfolio investment-linked life fund); or
  • widely-held company; or
  • widely-held superannuation fund; or
  • widely-held group investment fund ("GIF").

Portfolio investment entity, widely-held company, widely-held superannuation fund and widely-held GIF are all defined in section YA 1 of the ITA.

The disclosure required, by widely-held entities, of attributing interests in FIFs which use the fair dividend rate or the comparative value method of calculation is that, for each calculation method, they disclose the end-of-year New Zealand dollar market value of investments split by the jurisdiction in which the attributing interest in a FIF is held, listed, organised or managed. In the event that tax residence is not easily determined, a further option of a split by currency in which the investment is held will also be accepted as long as it is a reasonable proxy - that is at least 90-95% accurate - for the underlying jurisdiction in which the FIF is held, listed, organised or managed. Investments denominated in euros will not be able to meet this test and so euro-based investments will need to be split into the underlying jurisdictions.

FIF interests

The types of interests that fall within the scope of section 61(1) of the TAA are:

  • rights in a foreign company or anything deemed to be a company for the purposes of the ITA (eg, a unit trust)
  • an entitlement to benefit from a foreign superannuation scheme, if a person acquired the interest before 1 April 2014 and treated the interest as a FIF interest in a return of income filed before 20 May 2013 and for all subsequent income years
  • an entitlement to benefit from a foreign superannuation scheme, if a person’s interest in the scheme was first acquired whilst the person was tax resident of New Zealand
  • an entitlement to benefit from a foreign life insurance policy
  • an interest in an entity specified in schedule 25, part A of the ITA.

However, the following interests are exempt (under sections EX 31 to EX 43 of the ITA) from being an attributing interest in a FIF and do not have to be disclosed:

  • certain interests in Australian resident companies included on the official list of the Australian Stock Exchange and required to maintain a franking account (refer to Inland Revenue's website www.ird.govt.nz (keyword: other exemptions))
  • certain interests in an Australian unit trust that has a New Zealand RWT proxy with either a high turnover or high distributions
  • an interest held by a natural person in a foreign superannuation scheme that is an Australian approved deposit fund, Australian exempt public sector superannuation scheme, Australian regulated superannuation fund or Australian retirement savings account
  • an income interest of 10% or more in a controlled foreign company ("CFC") (although separate disclosure is required of this as an interest in a foreign company)
  • certain interests of 10% or more in a foreign company that is treated as resident, and subject to tax, in Australia (although separate disclosure is required of this as an interest in a foreign company)
  • an interest in certain venture capital investments in New Zealand resident start-up companies that migrate to a grey-list country
  • an interest in certain grey-list companies owning New Zealand venture capital companies
  • an interest in certain grey-list companies resulting from shares acquired under a venture investment agreement
  • an interest in certain grey-list companies resulting from the acquisition of shares under an employee share scheme
  • certain interests held by a natural person in a foreign entity located in a country where exchange controls prevent the person deriving any profit or gain or disposing of the interest for New Zealand currency or consideration readily convertible to New Zealand currency.
  • an interest held by a natural person who is a non-resident or transitional resident
  • a beneficial interest in a foreign superannuation scheme which was first acquired whilst the person was not a tax resident of New Zealand and which has not been treated as an attributing interest in a FIF by the person
  • certain foreign pensions or annuities (see Inland Revenue's guide Overseas pensions and annuity schemes (IR257) for more information)

De minimis

Interests in foreign entities held by a natural person not acting as a trustee also do not have to be disclosed if the total cost of the interests remains under $50,000 at all times during the income year. This disclosure exemption is made because no FIF income under section CQ 5 of the ITA or FIF loss under section DN 6 of the ITA arises in respect of these interests.

This de minimis exemption does not apply to a person who has opted out of the de minimis threshold by including in the income tax return for the year FIF income or loss. Please note that a person opting out of the de minimis threshold is generally required to continue to apply the FIF rules in each subsequent tax year. Where a person has previously opted out of the de minimis threshold, they will be required to apply the FIF rules unless they have less than $50,000 of attributing interests in FIFs for the current year, and for each of the four previous tax years:

  • the person had no attributing interests in FIFs (for example, they had no foreign shares, or only had foreign shares which were exempt from the FIF rules); and/or
  • the person had more than $50,000 in attributing interests in FIFs (note that for these years they would have been required to apply the FIF rules).

Format of disclosure

The forms for the disclosure of FIF interests are as follows:

  • IR443 form for the deemed rate of return method
  • IR447 form for the fair dividend rate method (for individuals or non-widely-held entities)
  • IR448 form for the comparative value method (for individuals or non-widely-held entities)
  • IR449 form for the cost method
  • IR458 spreadsheet form (this spreadsheet form can be used to make electronic disclosures for all methods).
  • myIR income tax return attachment form (this form can be used to make electronic disclosures for all methods)

The IR458 spreadsheet and myIR income tax return attachment forms, which reflect the disclosure options for fair dividend rate and comparative value for widely-held entities, must be filed online. As discussed above these disclosures are by country rather than by individual investment as is the general requirement of section 61 of the TAA. In order to be exempt from the general requirement, these disclosures must be made electronically.

As noted above, all other disclosures may be filed using the IR458 spreadsheet or myIR income tax return attachment form options.

If you choose the spreadsheet option you will be able to save the form as a working paper on your computer. When completed, submit the form by logging into your myIR account and uploading it as part of the electronic income tax return filing process, or by logging into your myIR account and attaching it to a web message with ‘FIF disclosure’ in the subject line.

Alternatively, you can complete the myIR income tax return attachment disclosure form online when preparing your income tax return electronically in myIR.

The IR443, IR447, IR448, IR449 and IR458 forms can be found at the File a foreign investment fund disclosure page. Click ‘Other ways to do this’ on this web page to access the IR458 spreadsheet form.

Income interest of 10% or more in a foreign company

A resident is required to disclose an income interest of 10% or more in a foreign company. This obligation to disclose applies to all foreign companies regardless of the country of residence. For this purpose, the following interests need to be considered:

  1. an income interest held directly in a foreign company
  2. an income interest held indirectly through any interposed foreign company
  3. an income interest held by an associated person (not being a CFC) as defined by subpart YB of the ITA.

To determine whether a resident has an income interest of 10% or more for CFCs, sections EX 14 to EX 17 of the ITA should be applied. To determine whether a resident has an income interest of 10% or more in any entity that is not a CFC, for the purposes of this exemption, sections EX 14 to EX 17 should be applied to the foreign company as if it were a CFC.

Format of disclosure

The forms for disclosure of all interests in a CFC are:

  • IR458 spreadsheet form, or
  • myIR income tax return attachment form

If you choose the spreadsheet option you will be able to save the form as a working paper on your computer. When completed, submit the form by logging into your myIR account and uploading it as part of the electronic income tax return filing process.

Alternatively, you can complete the myIR income tax return attachment disclosure form online when preparing your income tax return electronically in myIR.

The IR458 spreadsheet form must be accessed online at www.ird.govt.nz (keyword: ir458).

Please note that electronic filing is a mandatory requirement for CFC disclosure.

Overlap of interests

It is possible that a resident may be required to disclose an interest in a foreign company which also constitutes an attributing interest in a FIF. For example, a person with an income interest of 10% or greater in a foreign company that is not a CFC is strictly required to disclose both an interest held in a foreign company and an attributing interest in a FIF.

To meet disclosure requirements, only one form of disclosure is required for each interest. If the interest is an attributing interest in a FIF, then the appropriate disclosure for the calculation method, as discussed previously, must be made.

In all other cases, where the interest in a foreign company is not an attributing interest in a FIF, the IR458 spreadsheet form or myIR income tax return attachment form for CFCs must be filed.

Interests held by non-residents and transitional residents

Interests held by non-residents and transitional residents in foreign companies and FIFs do not need to be disclosed.

This would apply for example to an overseas company operating in New Zealand (through a branch) in respect of its interests in foreign companies and FIFs; or to a transitional resident with interests in a foreign company or an attributing interest in a FIF.

Under the international tax rules, non-residents and transitional residents are not required to calculate or attribute income under either the CFC or FIF rules. Therefore disclosure of non-residents' or transitional residents' holdings in foreign companies or FIFs is not necessary for the administration of the international tax rules and so an exemption is made for this group.

Persons not required to comply with section 61 of the Tax Administration Act 1994

This exemption may be cited as "International Tax Disclosure Exemption ITR31".

1. Reference

This exemption is made under section 61(2) of the Tax Administration Act 1994 (“TAA”). It details interests in foreign companies and attributing interests in foreign investment funds (“FIFs”) in relation to which any person is not required to comply with the requirements in section 61 of the TAA to make disclosure of their interests, for the income year ended 31 March 2020.

2. Interpretation

For the purpose of this disclosure exemption:

  • to determine an income interest of 10% or more, sections EX 14 to EX 17 of the Income Tax Act 2007 (“ITA”) apply for interests in controlled foreign companies ("CFCs"). In the case of attributing interests in FIFs, those sections are to be applied as if the FIF were a CFC, and
  • double tax agreement means a double tax agreement in force as at 31 March 2020 in one of the 40 countries or territories as set out in the commentary.

The relevant definition of "associated persons" is contained in subpart YB of the ITA.

Otherwise, unless the context requires, expressions used have the same meaning as in section YA 1 of the ITA.

3. Exemption

  1. Any person who holds an income interest of less than 10% in a foreign company, including interests held by associated persons, that is not an attributing interest in a FIF, or that is an attributing interest in a FIF in respect of which no FIF income or loss arises due to the application of the de minimis exemption in section CQ 5(1)(d) or section DN 6(1)(d) of the ITA , is not required to comply with section 61(1) of the TAA for that interest and that income year.
  2. Any person who is a portfolio investment entity, widely-held company, widely-held superannuation fund or widely-held GIF, who has an attributing interest in a FIF, other than a direct interest of 10% or more in a foreign company that is not a foreign PIE equivalent, and uses the fair dividend rate or comparative value calculation method for that interest, is not required to comply with section 61(1) of the TAA in respect of that interest and that income year, if the person discloses the end-of-year New Zealand dollar market value of investments, in an electronic format prescribed by the Commissioner, split by the jurisdiction in which the attributing interest in a FIF is held or listed.
  3. Any person who is not a portfolio investment entity, widely-held company, widely-held superannuation fund or widely-held GIF, who has an attributing interest in a FIF, other than a direct income interest of 10% or more, and uses the fair dividend rate or comparative value calculation method is not required to comply with section 61(1) of the TAA in respect of that interest and that income year, to the extent that the FIF is incorporated or tax resident in a country or territory with which New Zealand has a double tax agreement in force at 31 March 2020.
  4. Any non-resident person or transitional resident who has an income interest or a control interest in a foreign company or an attributing interest in a FIF in the income year corresponding to the tax year ending 31 March 2020, is not required to comply with section 61(1) of the TAA in respect of that interest and that income year if either or both of the following apply:
    • no attributed CFC income or loss arises in respect of that interest in that foreign company under sections CQ 2(1)(d) or DN 2(1)(d) of the ITA; and/or
    • no FIF income or loss arises in respect of that interest in that FIF under sections CQ 5(1)(f) or DN 6(1)(f) of the ITA.

This exemption is made by me acting under delegated authority from the Commissioner of Inland Revenue pursuant to section 7 of the TAA.

This exemption is signed on 6 March 2020.

Haydn Clark
Technical Specialist