Irish Budget 2016: 6.25% IP box and CbCR
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Irish Budget 2016: 6.25% IP box and CbCR

Michael Noonan, Irish finance minister, today delivered his Budget 2016 speech. Taxpayers around the world were keen to see how the country amended its international tax provisions in the wake of OECD recommendations in this area.

After last week's publication of the final OECD/G20 reports on base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS), the Irish Budget delivered on October 13 2015 contains the first government initiative on implementing some of the recommendations. Key features are the introduction of the first of its kind intellectual property tax regime called the Knowledge Development Box with a tax rate of 6.25%, country-by-country reporting (CbCR) and an update on Ireland's International Tax Strategy. Details of the Knowledge Development Box and CbCR remain sparse and are unlikely to emerge until the publication of the Finance Bill in the next six weeks or so.

BEPS, EU law and the Irish tax regime

At an early stage of the OECD/G20 BEPS initiative, the Irish tax regime was targeted for its approach to Irish incorporated but non tax resident companies. The Irish Government listened to the BEPS representations and liaised with key industry players and tax professionals. Tax law was duly amended. Moreover, as the Irish tax code has developed, Ireland has taken steps ahead of any BEPS initiative to ensure that it is at the forefront of ‘best-in-class’ international tax practice. For example, having regard to the use of Ireland as a key base for big ticket asset finance, some years ago, Ireland started to impose withholding tax on certain interest payments to countries that either do not have a double tax treaty with Ireland and/or do not generally tax such foreign source interest.

Ireland's latest Budget further cements the strong platform of using the Irish fiscal base to attract investment that has continued for more than half a century. Key long-term features of the Irish tax regime in light of the final BEPS reports include:

  • acceptance by the OECD/G20 that each country has a sovereign right to determine its own tax rate and by extension, Ireland's 12.5% tax rate is beyond international challenge;

  • acceptance by the OECD/G20 that there should be no ring-fencing of the digital economy within a separate international tax regime. Hence, acceptance that digital businesses can continue to establish and grow from an Irish incorporated base;

  • acceptance by the OECD/G20 that there is no requirement for Ireland to introduce a controlled foreign company regime that imputes taxable profits to an Irish parent company. Hence Ireland will continue to be a favourable holding company location for technology companies, pharmaceuticals and other groups;

  • acceptance by the OECD/G20 that any future discussion on a multilateral treaty will need to address EU law concerns. Ireland's EU membership should be a key factor on the extent to which any multilateral treaty might otherwise have limited the attractiveness of Ireland's growing network of double tax treaties and information exchange agreements; and

  • having regard to the OECD/G20 action plan on harmful tax competition, Ireland proposes a 6.25% tax rate on a modified nexus knowledge development box.

Knowledge Development Box

Under the modified nexus model advocated by the OECD, Ireland's Knowledge Development Box will apply to income arising from certain patents and copyrighted software which result from R&D carried on in Ireland. A tax rate of 6.25% will apply to such income. Where R&D is carried on outside of Ireland or arises from bought-in intellectual property (IP), the preferential rate of tax is unlikely to apply. We await the publication of the Finance Bill to ascertain the exact details of the new regime, the treatment of gains and its interaction with Ireland's 25% tax credit regime for R&D and IP amortisation tax regime.

Country-by-country reporting

Where a multinational enterprise (MNE) with consolidated group turnover of more than €750 million has an ultimate parent incorporated and tax resident in Ireland, the new country-by-country reporting obligation is likely to apply. Action 13 of the OECD BEPS project states:

"… large MNEs will be required to file a country-by-country report that will provide annually and for each tax jurisdiction in which they do business the amount of revenue, profit before income tax and income tax paid and accrued. It also requires MNEs to report their number of employees, stated capital, retained earnings and tangible assets in each tax jurisdiction. Finally, it requires MNEs to identify each entity within the group doing business in a particular tax jurisdiction and to provide an indication of the business activities each entity engages in."

We await the publication of the Irish Finance Bill for details of the compliance obligations that CbCR will bring.

Enhancing the Irish position

Ireland's attraction as a key location from which to conduct business should be further enhanced in the post-BEPS world. Changes announced in the Irish Budget demonstrate Ireland's commitment to have its tax regime be ‘best-in–class’ and free from challenge under either OECD principles or indeed EU law. While CbCR will create a further compliance burden for MNEs with an Irish holding company, accepting that a group's international tax affairs need to be capable of increased scrutiny is merely part of the new, more open world.

This is not just an initiative that will impact a company’s tax personnel. The Irish Companies Act 2014 puts a requirement on directors to produce an annual compliance statement on a company's Irish tax affairs. Such a statement will need to consider CbCR, maintenance of transfer pricing documentation and, by implication, a review on the overall tax strategy adopted by Irish incorporated companies.

Storm clouds may be growing in the region, with the European Commission's Action Plan for Fair and Efficient Corporate Taxation in the EU and a revised proposal on the common corporate tax base (CCTB) now being awaited. In the meantime, Ireland has once again dealt with the international agenda promoting openness and transparency of MNEs’ tax affairs while maintaining a stable tax environment to remain as one of the best locations worldwide to conduct corporate activities.

John Gulliver (+353 1 614 5007; jgulliver@mhc.ie), Robert Henson (+353 1 614 2314; rhenson@mhc.ie) and Maura Dineen (+353 1 614 2444; mdineen@mhc.ie) are tax partners at Mason Hayes & Curran.

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