Australia ramps up strategy to hit aggressive int’l tax plans

Australia’s tax avoidance taskforce has set out a new strategy to target aggressive international trust planning, having already raised over A$279m (£182m, €197m) over the last four years through its fight against “tax avoidance or evasion by privately owned and wealthy groups”.

Australia ramps up strategy to hit aggressive int’l tax plans

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The government tax office funded Tax Avoidance Taskforce identified in a detailed update statement a number of cases of aggressive tax planning and tax evasion using trust structures, including:

  • trafficking in losses through the use of trusts
  • active exploitation of the lack of transparency associated with trusts
  • trusts distributing income to chains of trusts (some sharing the same corporate trustee), but where the beneficiaries fail to lodge income tax returns reporting that income
  • documents being falsified to gain a concession or benefit

It also revealed over A$948m in liabilities had so far been issued as a result of its efforts to date.  

Eight arrangements attract attention

The Australian Government announced in the 2013–14 Budget, that it would provide funding over four years for a multi-agency taskforce. This taskforce would take compliance action against taxpayers involved in tax avoidance or evasion using trusts.

From 1 July 2017, the work has continued under the operational umbrella of the ‘Tax Avoidance Taskforce’.

In the update, the taskforce spells out eight specific arrangements that “attract its attention” including:

  • trusts or their beneficiaries who have received substantial income are not registered, or have not lodged tax returns or activity statements
  • there are offshore dealings involving secrecy or low tax jurisdictions
  • agreements with no apparent commercial basis that direct income entitlements to a low-tax beneficiary while the benefits are enjoyed by others
  • there are artificial adjustments to trust income, so that tax outcomes do not reflect the economic substance – for example, where parties receive substantial benefits from a trust while the tax liabilities corresponding to the benefit are attributed elsewhere or where the full tax liability is passed to entities without any capacity or intention to pay
  • revenue activities are mischaracterised to achieve concessional capital gains tax treatment – for example, by using special purpose trusts in an attempt to re-characterise mining or property development income as discountable capital gains
  • changes have been made to trust deeds or other constituent documents to achieve a tax planning benefit, with such changes not credibly explicable for other reasons
  • transactions have excessively complex features or sham characteristics, such as round robin circulation of income among trusts
  • new trust arrangements have materialised that involve taxpayers or promoters linked to previous non-compliance – for example, people connected to liquidated entities that had unpaid tax debts.

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