Companies with a turnover of up to $50 million a year will receive a tax cut, applicable to this financial year, taking the rate down from 30% to 27.5%. Small business gets a step-up
The tax cut will be staggered, with an immediate cut in 2016-17 for companies with an annual turnover up to $10 million, followed by a cut for companies turning over up to $25 million in 2017-18, and up to $50 million in 2018-19.
The tax cut announcement is in line with the intention of the original bill, “Treasury Laws Amendment (Enterprise Tax Plan) Bill 2016”, to have an eventual reduction to 25%, no matter the turnover, in stages up until the 2026-27 year.
The government’s intention with its original 10-year company tax reduction “roadmap” from the 2016 Federal Budget, which ultimately targets a 25% company tax rate for all companies, no matter what the turnover, has not been agreed upon. This is still the Coalition’s stated policy, with the current tax rate reduction being negotiated on the floor of Parliament in exchange for welfare concessions.
Those on welfare stand to benefit from a one-off payment, aimed to ease the pressure of energy costs. Single taxpayers receiving the age pension, disability pension or parenting payment will receive $75, and couples $125. Specific arrangements to put this measure into affect are set to be explained in the Federal Budget in May.
Threshold increase The government has announced that the threshold at which a business is identified as a “small business” is to be increased to $10 million, with retrospective effect from July 1, 2016. Here is a media releasefrom the Small Business Minister Michael McCormack, dated yesterday, announcing the change.
There will therefore be an increase in the number of “small businesses” that can now avail themselves of relevant concessions available to small business. Importantly, note however that the threshold for eligibility for the small business CGT concessions will still remain at $2 million and the threshold for eligibility for the unincorporated small business tax discount stays at an annual turnover of $5 million (although the discount will increase to 8%).
Transitional speed humps In the interim however, the reduced tax rate for some businesses, dependant on the size of turnover, brings with it some other problems. One among these is the reality of a two-tiered tax system, and concerns that companies approaching the $50 million threshold may opt for tax-driven strategies rather than pure business growth. There are also concerns in that this may drive splitting larger operations into multiple companies to ensure they stay below either the $10 million of $50 million thresholds.
At a practical level, having different tax rates can also have implications for business owners’ decisions on whether to incorporate, the tax-adjusted yield from certain investments, the affect on franked dividends and valuations of certain assets and liabilities. More guidance will be expected in the imminent Federal Budget papers.
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