International Tax Review is part of the Delinian Group, Delinian Limited, 8 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 00954730
Copyright © Delinian Limited and its affiliated companies 2023

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

New Zealand: New Zealand issues draft guidance on BEPS-related reforms

Sponsored by

sponsored-firms-russel-mcveagh.png
intl-updates-small.jpg

In June 2018, reforms intended to address BEPS became law in New Zealand with the enactment of the Taxation (Neutralising Base Erosion and Profit Shifting) Act 2018 (BEPS Act).

In June 2018, reforms intended to address BEPS became law in New Zealand with the enactment of the Taxation (Neutralising Base Erosion and Profit Shifting) Act 2018 (BEPS Act). Given the complexity of some of the reforms, the New Zealand Inland Revenue has taken the unusual step of issuing, and seeking feedback on, draft guidance regarding the application of the new rules.

New Zealand BEPS-related reforms

On August 3 2017, the New Zealand government announced its final policy decisions on proposals to address BEPS (see 'New Zealand's BEPS proposals go beyond OECD's recommendations' in the August 2017 edition of International Tax Review for our summary of the policy decisions.) The BEPS Act includes measures that:

  • Address hybrid mismatch arrangements;

  • Address arrangements that avoid creating a permanent establishment;

  • Further limit related-party interest deductions; and

  • Further strengthen the transfer pricing rules and Inland Revenue's enforcement powers more generally.

The BEPS Act reforms have been controversial in many respects, with concerns raised during the legislative process that the reforms go beyond what is necessary to implement the OECD's BEPS recommendations, and in certain respects depart from international norms, including provisions of New Zealand's double taxation agreements.

The reform process for the BEPS Act has also been controversial. This has been partly due to the ambitious legislative timetable which meant there were only a few days between enactment and certain measures taking effect on July 1 2018.

Inland Revenue's draft guidance regarding the BEPS Act

The Inland Revenue typically publishes guidance after the enactment of tax legislation. For the BEPS Act, the Inland Revenue has taken the unusual step of publishing draft guidance and seeking public feedback on that draft guidance.

One example of an explanation provided in the draft guidance concerns a rule which requires certain borrowers to assume (for transfer pricing purposes) the credit rating of the company in its worldwide group with the most long-term senior unsecured debt (i.e. not necessarily the parent). The draft guidance acknowledges that long-term senior unsecured debt is not defined in the BEPS Act and suggests that in many circumstances a borrower "will be able to consider non-current liabilities on each [group] member's balance sheet". Such an interpretation would be a pragmatic application of the rule, especially for a borrower that is part of a large worldwide group. The guidance, however, goes on to caution that such an approach "may not be sufficient to differentiate between long-term senior unsecured debt and other instruments as subordinated or secured debt…".

The above example illustrates the practical issues taxpayers face in complying with the BEPS Act. Because the new legislative provisions are so detailed and prescriptive, the Inland Revenue's guidance will necessarily be of limited value in some cases. Submissions on the draft guidance closed on September 28 2018.

more across site & bottom lb ros

More from across our site

‘Go on leave, effective immediately’, PwC has told nine partners in the latest development in the firm’s ongoing tax scandal.
The forum heard that VAT professionals are struggling under new pressures to validate transactions and catch fraud, responsibilities that they say should lie with governments.
The working paper suggested a new framework for boosting effective carbon rates and reducing the inconsistency of climate policy.
UAE firm Virtuzone launches ‘TaxGPT’, claiming it is the first AI-powered tax tool, while the Australian police faces claims of a conflict of interest over its PwC audit contract.
The US technology company is defending its past Irish tax arrangements at the CJEU in a final showdown that could have major political repercussions.
ITR’s Indirect Tax Forum heard that Italy’s VAT investigation into Meta has the potential to set new and expensive tax principles that would likely be adopted around the world
Police are now investigating the leak of confidential tax information by a former PwC partner at the request of the Australian government.
A VAT policy officer at the European Commission told the forum that the initial deadline set for EU convergence of domestic digital VAT reporting is likely to be extended.
The UK government shows little sign of cutting corporate tax, while a growing number of businesses report a decline in investment as a result of the higher tax burden.
Mariana Morais Teixeira of Morais Leitão overviews Portugal’s new tax incentive regime designed to boost the country’s capital-depleted private sector.