Consolidation Reference Manual

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C2 Assets

C2-4 Worked examples - cost setting on entry

Entry Step D (adjust for over-depreciated assets)

C2-4-610 Reduction for over-depreciated assets (step D)

Description

This example shows how the tax cost setting amount for over-depreciated assets may be reduced (step D of cost setting process).

Commentary

After the joining entity's ACA is allocated among its reset cost base assets in proportion to their market values, and any necessary reductions are made for revenue-like assets (step C of cost setting process), a further reduction may be required for each over-depreciated asset (step D).

This further reduction will be required where all of the following tests are satisfied for the particular asset:

the asset is over-depreciated at the joining time
the head company's tax cost setting amount (calculated so far) is more than the joining entity's terminating value for the asset (its tax written down value) at the joining time
the joining entity paid an unfranked or partly franked dividend during the period from when it acquired the asset to the joining time
an amount representing the unfranked or partly franked dividend had not been further distributed as a dividend before the joining time to a recipient that was not entitled to the intercorporate dividend rebate, and
the dividends were paid out of profits that were sheltered from income tax, at least in part, by over-depreciation of the asset.

The amount of the reduction is the least of:

the over-depreciation amount - this is the lesser of the excess of market value of an asset over its adjustable value just before the joining time (tax written down value at the joining time), and the excess of the asset's cost over its adjustable value at that time
the amount of income that continues to be sheltered from tax, or
the amount by which the tax cost setting amount would, apart from this provision, exceed the joining entity's terminating value of the asset.

This reduction prevents an increase in the adjustable value of a depreciating asset where there has been a tax deferral resulting from its over-depreciation. The potential for indefinite deferral arises where a company holds an over-depreciated asset at the joining time, and the income sheltered from tax by the over-depreciation was distributed as an unfranked dividend to a recipient who was entitled to the intercorporate dividend rebate (i.e. the tax deferral amount). The example below shows how to work out the reduction for each over-depreciated asset.

Note - Transitional rule on formation
The tax deferral amount is increased to include any unfrankable undistributed profits accrued to the head company and included in ACA step 3 (under transitional rules) to the extent that:

those profits were not subject to tax because of deductions for depreciation representing over-depreciation, and
the deductions did not form part of a loss that reduced the ACA under step 5.

former subsection 701-30(3), Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 (IT(TP)A 1997)

In many cases taxpayers will not have sufficient information available to work out the reduction for over-depreciation on an asset-by-asset basis or in strict accordance with section 705-50. In other cases, taxpayers may be able to work out the amount of reduction accurately, but with significant costs of compliance. For these reasons, administrative short cut methods are available to work out the reduction amounts for over-depreciated assets. These short cut methods give a reasonable approximation of the reduction required by section 705-50 and will generally be accepted by the Tax Office, subject to certain constraints. → 'Reduction for over-depreciated assets (step D) - administrative short cuts', C2-4-640

Example

Facts

A joining entity, SubCo, has two depreciating assets, Plant 1 and Plant 2. Their details are shown in the table below. Profits of $20 were sheltered from income tax by the over-depreciation of Plant 1 and the whole amount was distributed unfranked to SubCo's parent company in a fully rebatable form.

Table 1: Depreciating assets
Cost Terminating value (TV) Market value (MV) Section 705-40 maximum amount Tax cost setting amounts after reduction
Plant 1 $500 $200 $220 $220 $220
Plant 2 $300 $160 $130 $160 $160

The amounts allocated to Plant 1 and Plant 2 are $220 and $160 respectively (no reduction was required for revenue-like assets).

Calculation

Now consider whether a further reduction to each payment amount is required for over-depreciated assets.

First it is necessary to determine whether the assets are over-depreciated.

Worksheet 1: For Plant 1 - is an asset over-depreciated?
Test for each depreciable asset
At the joining time:
Test satisfied?
Yes/No
Excess amount ($)
M Does market value exceed adjustable value? Yes 20
N Does the cost exceed adjustable value? Yes 300
If the answer is YES to both questions, the asset is over-depreciated by the lesser of M and N. 20

The market value of $220 exceeds the adjustable value of $200 by $20. The cost of $500 exceeds the adjustable value of $200 by $300. Under both tests for over-depreciation, Plant 1 is over-depreciated.

The tax cost setting amount for an over-depreciated asset is reduced by the least of the over-depreciation amount (calculated above), the excess of the tax cost setting amount over its terminating value, and the tax deferral amount (worksheet 2).

Worksheet 2: For Plant 1 - over-depreciation reduction
  Test for each over-depreciated asset $ $
amount
Over-depreciation amount
(a) Over-depreciation amount from previous table 20
Tax cost setting amount exceeds terminating value
(b) Excess of the tax cost setting amount over its value 20
Tax deferral amount
(c) Start with the amount of unfranked dividends paid by the joining entity before the joining time that were subject to the former section 46 or former section 46A rebate 20
(d) The amount of the profits paid as dividends in (c) above (the qualifying profits amount ) that were not subject to tax because of the over-depreciation of the asset, but count only to the extent they were not counted in ACA step 4 and to the extent the deductions for over-depreciation did not form part of a loss that reduced the ACA under step 5, were not counted in ACA step 4 (but the depreciation did not generate a tax loss to be subtracted from the entry ACA at step 5) 20
(e) The extent to which the dividend in (c) - adjusted to amount in (d) - was not further distributed (directly or indirectly) to a taxpayer who was not entitled to such a rebate. This is the tax deferral amount 20
Transitional rule on formation
(f) Add - The tax deferral amount is increased to include any unfrankable undistributed profits accrued to head company and included in ACA step 3 (under transitional rules) to the extent that those profits were not subject to tax because of deductions for depreciation representing over-depreciation, and the deductions did not form part of a loss that reduced the ACA under step 5 (former subsection 701-30(3), IT(TP)A 1997). 0
(g) Is there a tax deferral amount? How much? Yes 20
Reduction of tax cost setting amount is the lesser of (a), (b) and (g). 20

The tax cost setting amount for Plant 1 of $220 must be further reduced by $20 to $200. (However, the $20 reduction amount is not re-allocated among other assets.)

Worksheet 3: For Plant 2 - is an asset over-depreciated?
Test for each depreciable asset
At the joining time:
Test satisfied?
Yes/No
Excess amount ($)
M Does market value exceed adjustable value? No 0
N Does the cost exceed adjustable value? Yes 140
If the answer is YES to both questions, the asset is over-depreciated by the lesser of M and N. 0

The market value of $130 does not exceed the adjustable value of $160. The cost of $300 exceeds the adjustable value of $160 by $140. Plant 2 is not over-depreciated, so no further reduction in the payment amount of $160 is required.

Changes to the over-depreciation provisions
The over-depreciation provisions in the tax cost setting rules have been modified for an entity that becomes a member of a consolidated group between 9 May 2007 and 30 June 2009. In this case a head company will only need to look at five years of dividend history immediately before the joining time to determine whether an over-depreciation adjustment is required in relation to the joining entity's asset. Effective from 1 July 2009, the over-depreciation adjustment in section 705-50 has been repealed, so it will no longer apply to over-depreciated assets of entities that become subsidiary members of a consolidated group on or after that date. → Tax Laws Amendment (2010 Measures No. 1) Act 2010 (No. 56 of 2010)

References

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 , section 705-50 ; as amended by:

New Business Tax System (Consolidation) Act (No. 1) 2002 (No. 68 of 2002), Schedule 1
New Business Tax System (Consolidation, Value Shifting, Demergers and Other Measures) Act 2002 (No. 90 of 2002), Schedule 2

Explanatory Memorandum to New Business Tax System (Consolidation) Bill (No. 1) 2002, paragraphs 5.44-52

Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 701-30(3) ; as amended by New Business Tax System (Consolidation, Value Shifting, Demergers and Other Measures) Act 2002 (No. 90 of 2002), Schedule 7

Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 , Subdivision 705-E ; as inserted by Tax Laws Amendment (2004 Measures No. 6) Act 2005 (No. 23 of 2005), Schedule 1, Part 4

Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 , Subdivision 712-E ; as inserted by Tax Laws Amendment (2004 Measures No. 6) Act 2005 (No. 23 of 2005), Schedule 1, Part 4

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 , Subdivision 716-G ; as inserted by Tax Laws Amendment (2004 Measures No. 6) Act 2005 (No. 23 of 2005), Schedule 1, Part 5

Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 , Subdivision 716-G ; as inserted by Tax Laws Amendment (2004 Measures No. 6) Act 2005 (No. 23 of 2005), Schedule 1, Part 5

Explanatory Memorandum to Tax Laws Amendment (2004 Measures No. 6) Bill 2004, paragraphs 1.49 - 1.92

Explanatory Memorandum to Tax Laws Amendment (2004 Measures No. 6) Bill 2004, paragraphs 1.93 - 1.134

Tax Laws Amendment (Repeal of Inoperative Provisions) Act 2006 (No. 101 of 2006), which repealed:

section 701-30 of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 , and
sections 46 and 46A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 , section 705-50 and subsection 995-1(1) as amended by Tax Laws Amendment (2010 Measures No. 1) Act 2010 (No. 56 of 2010), Schedule 5, Part 6

Explanatory Memorandum to Tax Laws Amendment (2010 Measures No. 1) Bill 2010, Chapter 5

History

Revision History

Section C2-4-610 first published (excluding drafts) 2 December 2002 and updated 28 May 2003.

Further revisions are described below.

Date Amendment Reason
14.7.04 Note on proposed changes to consolidation rules, p. 2. Proposed legislative amendments.
27.1.05 Insertion of note on transitional rule on formation, p. 2. For clarification.
26.10.05 Update of notes on proposed changes to consolidation rules Legislative Amendments.
15.11.06 Updated references to inoperative provisions. Legislative amendment.
26.6.07 Note on proposed changes to the cost setting rules to phase out over-depreciation deductions, p. 5. Reflect announcement on 8 May 2007 by Assistant Treasurer in media release no. 50.
6.5.11 Note on proposed changes replaced to reflect the changed wording in section 705-50. Legislative amendment.

Current at 6 May 2011