New legislation - 2006: Taxation (Depreciation, Payment Dates Alignment, FBT, and Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2006 [2006 No 3]
Treatment of distributions from cooperatives
Sections CD 1B, CD 24B and DV 10B of the Income Tax Act 2004 and section 74D of the Estate and Gift Duties Act 1968
To remove uncertainty in the treatment of payouts made by cooperatives to their members, an amendment to the dividend rules ensures that certain payouts are not treated as dividends but remain deductible to the cooperative and taxable in the hands of members at their marginal tax rate.
Background
Cooperatives can deduct distributions of profits arising from transactions with their members under the mutuality provisions contained in section HF 1 of the Income Tax Act 2004. Under the general deductibility provisions, however, it was not clear whether cooperatives could treat profits from activities not associated with members in the same manner – for example, investment activities that do not relate to the purchase or supply of product to or from the member.
The amendment clarifies the legislation and ensures that payouts from cooperatives, including value-added components from non-member transactions, will not be treated as dividends and will continue to be deductible subject to certain criteria.
The deductible treatment of payouts applies to most types of cooperatives, including those that receive payments from member shareholders and purchase product on their behalf (such as trading cooperatives).
Payouts from cooperatives to charities and exempt taxpayers will receive the same treatment as taxpaying shareholders. This means that payouts to exempt taxpayers will not be taxed. This treatment is in line with the policy objective of not taxing such organisations.
Key features
Section CD 24B ensures that New Zealand cooperative companies (or wholly owned subsidiaries of cooperative companies) may elect to exclude certain distributions made by or to members from being a dividend.
For the payout to be excluded from being a dividend and therefore deductible, it must be connected to the supply of trading stock traded between the cooperative and the member. This ties any payout from the cooperative to the member to the sale or receipt of goods. The principal purpose of holding any shares in a cooperative must be for the trade in a product with the cooperative. If a member holds shares in the cooperative and those shares are not required in order to trade with the cooperative, any distribution relating to those shares will be treated as a dividend.
The following further criteria must be met for a distribution to be excluded from being treated as a dividend:
- The cooperative company has reasonable grounds to believe that the member receiving the distribution is resident in New Zealand or has a fixed establishment in New Zealand at the time the distribution is made.
- The distribution must relate to the sale and purchase of tangible property. Payouts relating to the sale of intangibles, such as services and financing, will not be allowed to be deducted as trading stock by the cooperative.
- The distribution must relate to current trading stock that is not sold as part of the disposal of a business. Section DV 10B ensures that a payout from a cooperative will be treated as deductible expenditure to the cooperative if it meets the criteria outlined in section CD 24B.
Section 74D in the Estate and Gift Duties Act 1968 ensures that this type of payout made by a cooperative company to a member of that company is not treated as a dutiable gift.
Application date
The exclusion of payouts from the definition of a dividend will apply from the 2005–06 and subsequent income years.
Other pages in: Taxation (Depreciation, Payment Dates Alignment, FBT, and Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2006 [2006 No 3]
- Temporary exemption from tax on foreign income for new migrants and certain returning New Zealanders
- Clarification of treaty override power
- Rewrite amendments
- Reimbursement for the use of a private motor vehicle
- Organisation approved for charitable donee status
- Resident withholding tax on dividends paid by non-resident companies
- Amendments to disputes rules
- Miscellaneous technical amendments
- GST on goods outside New Zealand at the time of supply
- GST and distributions from a trust made for no consideration between associated registered persons
- GST and international postage stamps
- GST and credit contracts legislation
- Bloodstock write-down rates
- Duty on racing
- GST on goods and services supplied to security holders
- Trans-Tasman imputation credit-streaming
- Regrassing and fertilising expenditure
- The addition of Spain to the grey list
- Unacceptable tax position
- Reverse takeovers and continuity rules
- Increase in the child tax rebate
- Income tax exemption for gaming machine income of gaming trusts
- Tax consequences of natural disasters
- Taxation of foreign hybrids and foreign tax credit rules
- Exemption for rights to benefit from employment-related foreign superannuation schemes
- New disclosure and recordkeeping rules for foreign trusts
- ACC attendant care payments
- Venture capital investment alongside the Venture Investment Fund
- Corporate migration
- Allocation of research and development tax deductions
- Taxation of share-lending transactions
- Fringe benefit tax
- Depreciation rates
- Aligning provisional tax payments with GST
- PAYE subsidy for small businesses
Date published: 19 Jun 2006
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