Taxation Ruling

TR 2001/10

Income tax: fringe benefits tax and superannuation guarantee: salary sacrifice arrangements

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FOI status:

may be releasedFOI number: I 1023379

Contents Para
What this Ruling is about
Legislative Framework
Terms used
Date of effect
Ruling
Explanations
Examples
Detailed contents list

Preamble

The number, subject heading, Class of person/arrangement, Date of effect and Ruling parts of this document are a 'public ruling' for the purposes of Part IVAAA of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 and are legally binding on the Commissioner. The remainder of the document is administratively binding on the Commissioner. Taxation Rulings TR 92/1 and TR 97/16 together explain when a Ruling is a public ruling and how it is binding on the Commissioner.

What this Ruling is about

Class of persons/arrangement

1. Providers of personal services and the entities that receive those services have long concerned themselves with how the service providers are appropriately remunerated for the services that they provide. Various arrangements have been developed to deal with this issue, including what are known commonly as salary sacrifice arrangements (SSAs).

2. For the purposes of this ruling, we regard SSAs as remuneration arrangements involving PAYG withholding amount payers and payees covered by sections 12-35 (salary, wages, commission, bonuses or allowances paid to an individual as an employee), 12-40 (remuneration of company directors) or 12-45 (salary, wages, etc. paid to certain office holders) of Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (TAA 1953). This Ruling does not address whether remuneration arrangements involving PAYG withholding amount payers and payees covered by sections 12-115 (Commonwealth education or training payments) or 12-120 (compensation, sickness or accident payments) of Schedule 1 to the TAA can be the subject of a SSA.

3. For the purposes of this ruling:

the relevant PAYG withholding amount payer is called an employer;
the relevant PAYG withholding amount payee is called an employee; and
the withholding amount payments paid under sections 12-35, 12-40 and 12-45 of Schedule 1 to the TAA are called salary or wages.

4. This Ruling considers:

if amounts received by an employee, or dealt with by the employer on behalf of the employee, under a SSA, should be included in the employee's assessable income under section 6-5 or 6-10 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) (formerly section 19 and subsection 25(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936)) or paragraph 26(e) of the ITAA 1936;
the implications for an employer under the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986 (FBTAA) and Part 2-5 of Schedule 1 to the TAA (collection of PAYG withholding amounts from particular withholding payments) of entering into a SSA with an employee;
if superannuation contributions made by an employer under a SSA to a complying superannuation fund or to a retirement savings account (RSA) qualify as employer contributions for the purposes of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 (SGAA); and
if the superannuation contributions made by a taxpayer under a SSA qualify as allowable deductions under sections 82AAC to 82AAF of the ITAA 1936.

5. The views set out in this Ruling apply both to employers and employees whose personal service relationship is governed by appointments, statute and award conditions and to those whose personal service relationship is governed by individual contracts, collective contracts, enterprise workplace agreements or similar agreements or a combination of these.

6. This Ruling explains when benefits provided are considered to be 'salary or wages' and, therefore, not subject to fringe benefits tax (FBT) because of the operation of paragraph (f) of the definition of a 'fringe benefit' in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA (refer paragraph 8 of this Ruling). However, it does not consider the position where benefits provided by an employer fall outside the application of the FBTAA because of the operation of paragraphs (h) to (q†) of the definition of fringe benefit in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA, with the exception of paragraph (j) (see paragraphs 8 and 11).

7. The implications under Part 3-1 of the ITAA 1997 (capital gains tax) of entering into SSAs are not addressed.

Legislative Framework

8. An employer (being a person who pays, or is liable to pay, 'salary or wages' for the purposes of the FBTAA) is liable to pay FBT on the taxable value of all fringe benefits provided during a year of tax. In general terms, a fringe benefit is defined in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA as a benefit provided to an employee (being a person who receives, or is entitled to receive, 'salary or wages') or an associate of the employee by the employer or an associate of the employer in respect of the 'employment' of the employee. The definition of 'fringe benefit' in subsection 136(1) does not, however, include:

a payment of 'salary or wages' or a payment that would be 'salary or wages' if 'salary or wages' included exempt income for the purposes of the ITAA 1936 (paragraph (f) of the definition of fringe benefit in the FBTAA);
an exempt benefit (paragraph (g) of the definition); or
a payment to a complying superannuation fund, to a non-resident superannuation fund (in limited circumstances), or to a RSA (paragraph (j) of the definition), in respect of an employee.

9. 'Salary or wages' is defined in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA and means a payment, to the extent that it is assessable income, from which an amount must be withheld under either section 12-35, 12-40, 12-45, 12-115 or 12-120 of Schedule 1 to the TAA. Whether a person is an employee at common law, for the purposes of section 12-35, depends on the nature of the relationship between the person who engages another to perform work and the person who is engaged. Taxation Ruling TR 2000/14 provides a detailed explanation of the circumstances in which a person is an employee for the purposes of section 12-35 of Schedule 1 to the TAA.

10. If a 'fringe benefit', as defined by subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA, or an exempt benefit under the FBTAA, is ordinary income or statutory income derived under the ITAA 1997, section 23L of the ITAA 1936 provides that the income is exempt income. Therefore, even though the fringe benefit or exempt benefit may be income in nature, it is exempt income and subsection 6-15(2) of the ITAA 1997 ensures that it does not form part of the assessable income of the employee under section 6-5 or 6-10 of the ITAA 1997.

11. Subparagraphs 26(e)(iv) and 26(e)(v) of the ITAA 1936 specifically exclude amounts that are fringe benefits or exempt benefits from being included in a taxpayer's assessable income under paragraph 26(e). However paragraph (j) of the definition of fringe benefit in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA excludes payments to complying superannuation funds, payments to non-resident superannuation funds in respect of persons who are exempt visitors to Australia for the purposes of section 517 of the ITAA 1936 and payments to a RSA from the definition of a fringe benefit (see paragraph 8 of this Ruling). Taxation Laws Amendment (Superannuation Contributions) Act 2001 has amended paragraph (j) to ensure that payments made after 7 September 2000 for the benefit of associates of an employee are not excluded from the definition of fringe benefit. This Ruling, therefore, considers the application of paragraph 26(e) to superannuation contributions made in respect of a taxpayer.

12. An employee's taxable income for a year of income is his or her assessable income less allowable deductions (refer subsection 4-15(1) of the ITAA 1997). An employee may derive income directly when it is paid to him or her or income may be taken to have been received under subsection 6-5(4) or 6-10(3) of the ITAA 1997 because it is otherwise dealt with on behalf of the employee.

13. Subject to paragraphs 17 and 18 of this Ruling, taxable income forms the basis for calculating certain liabilities, e.g.,:

for individual taxpayers including employees - Medicare levy (paragraph 251S(1)(a) of the ITAA 1936) and Medicare Levy Surcharge (Medicare Levy Act 1986);
for individual taxpayers including employees - child support liability (sections 36 and 38 of the Child Support (Assessment) Act 1989);
for individual taxpayers including employees - HECS debts (section 106Q of the Higher Education Funding Act 1988);
for superannuation providers - liability under the Superannuation Contributions Tax (Assessment and Collection) Act 1997 (subsections 7(2), 10(2), 15(1) and section 43) for the superannuation contributions surcharge.

14. The taxable income of an individual taxpayer including an employee also forms the basis for determining the individual's entitlement to certain tax concessions, e.g., the low income rebate (section 159N of the ITAA 1936), the private health insurance incentive tax offset (Subdivisions 61-G and 61-H of the ITAA 1997) and family tax assistance (Division 5 of the Income Tax Rates Act 1986), and, subject to the changes referred to in paragraphs 17 and 18 of this Ruling, is used in the calculation of entitlement to some social security benefits such as AUSTUDY. Entitlement to the personal superannuation contributions rebate (section 159SZ of the ITAA 1936) and the rebate for superannuation contributions made in relation to a spouse (section 159T of the ITAA 1936) are based, respectively, in part on the assessable income of the individual taxpayer and spouse.

15. Amounts that must be withheld under either section 12-35, 12-40 or 12-45 of Schedule 1 to the TAA form the basis for calculating any PAYG withholding liability that the employer as a PAYG payer may have.

16. An employer which is a taxpayer may be entitled to claim deductions under sections 82AAC to 82AAF of the ITAA 1936 for payments made to a superannuation fund for the purpose of making provision for superannuation benefits for employees, or for deposits made to small superannuation accounts under the Small Superannuation Accounts Act 1995 for employees.

A New Tax System changes to the law

17. Changes to the law resulting from changes announced in the Government's tax reform plan, Tax reform: not a new tax, a new tax system have altered the legislative framework that affects SSAs. The A New Tax System (Fringe Benefits Reporting) Act 1999 requires employers, from 1 April 1999, to allocate the taxable value of certain benefits provided to recipient employees or their associates. When the total taxable value of such benefits relating to an employee exceed $1,000 for a FBT year, the employer must gross-up that value and include the grossed-up amount on the employee's payment summary for the corresponding year of income. The amount is not included in the employee's assessable income. However, it is included in a number of income tests used for determining liability for various tax charges, levies and other income related obligations.

18. Under the A New Tax System (Fringe Benefits) Act 2000, from the 2000-01 FBT year, the concessional treatment given to benefits provided to an employee of a public hospital, a non-profit hospital or a non-government public hospital is limited to $17,000 of the total grossed up value per employee. Any benefit provided above this limit will be subject to normal FBT treatment. Under that same Act, from the 2001-02 FBT year, the concessional treatment given to benefits provided to an employee of a public benevolent institution (other than a hospital) or an FBT rebatable organisation will be limited to $30,000 of total grossed-up value per employee.

Terms used

19. ' Salary sacrifice arrangement' - in this Ruling, the term salary sacrifice arrangement means an arrangement under which an employee agrees to forego part of his or her total remuneration, that he or she would otherwise expect to receive as salary or wages, in return for the employer or someone associated with the employer providing benefits of a similar value. The main assumption made by the parties is that the employee is then taxed under the income tax laws only on the reduced salary or wages and that the employer is liable to pay FBT, if any, on the benefits provided.

20. The type of benefits provided in SSAs by employers to employees includes superannuation contributions, the provision of motor vehicles and expense payment fringe benefits, such as payment of school fees, childcare costs or loan repayments.

21. ' Effective SSA' - an effective SSA involves the employee agreeing to receive part of his or her total amount of remuneration as benefits before the employee has earned the entitlement to receive that amount as salary or wages.

22. ' Ineffective SSA' - an ineffective SSA involves the employee directing that an entitlement to receive salary or wages that has been earned (see paragraph 23 of this Ruling) is to be paid in a form other than as salary or wages.

23. ' Entitlement to receive salary or wages that have been earned' - personal services remuneration arrangements usually provide that the employee is entitled to be paid salary or wages at fixed intervals when he or she has performed services for the employer over a fixed period. To the extent that services for that period have been performed, everything has been done by the employee in earning the entitlement to salary or wages. Personal services remuneration arrangements may also provide that the employee may become entitled to be paid salary or wages such as bonuses or commissions if particular events occur or conditions are satisfied. The condition precedent to earning such variable salary or wages is met when those events occur or those conditions are satisfied. An entitlement to be paid has been earned even if the employee will not be paid until a later time. For annual and long service leave, an entitlement to be paid salary or wages is earned as the leave accrues, being when the relevant qualifying period of service is completed.

Date of effect

24. This Ruling applies to years commencing both before and after its date of issue. However, the Ruling does not apply to taxpayers to the extent that it conflicts with the terms of a settlement of a dispute agreed to before the date of issue of the Ruling (see paragraphs 21 and 22 of Taxation Ruling TR 92/20).

Ruling

Employees - derivation of income

25. An employee does not derive ordinary or statutory income from the provision of personal services until the income either has been received by him or her or is taken by subsection 6-5(4) or 6-10(3) of the ITAA 1997 to have been received when the employer deals with the amount in some other way on behalf of the employee. Once an employee has earned an entitlement to receive an amount of salary or wages, any ordinary or statutory income later received by the employee from that entitlement or taken to be received on behalf of the employee is derived as salary or wages income. By section 11-5 of Schedule 1 to the TAA, salary or wages are taken to be paid to the employee when the employer deals with the amount in any way on the employee's behalf or as the employee directs.

26. An effective SSA may provide that an employee's entitlement to salary or wages is reduced below the minimum entitlement under industrial law by providing a benefit in the place of salary or wages. Benefits so provided are exempt income under section 23L of the ITAA 1936 if derived as ordinary or statutory income. However, as the employee may retain a minimum entitlement to salary or wages under industrial law, notwithstanding the terms of an effective SSA, any balance of that entitlement is, if later derived, assessable income of the employee under section 6-5 or 6-10 of the ITAA 1997.

Ineffective SSA

27. Payments made under an ineffective SSA to, or on account of, an employee are ordinary or statutory income derived by the employee at the time of payment for the reasons stated in paragraph 25 above. Benefits provided under an ineffective SSA are assessable income of the employee under section 6-5 or 6-10 of the ITAA 1997 and they are not exempt income under section 23L of the ITAA 1936. Remuneration related to a leave entitlement that has accrued before the issue of the SSA cannot be the subject of an effective SSA.

Effective SSA

28. Benefits provided to or on behalf of an employee under an effective SSA may be derived as ordinary or statutory income by the employee. Any such benefits that are convertible to money are derived by the employee as ordinary or statutory income. However, these benefits are not assessable income of the employee under section 6-5 or 6-10 of the ITAA 1997 because they are exempt income under section 23L of the ITAA 1936. Leave that will accrue from the provision of future services may be the subject of an effective SSA.

29. An entitlement to a bonus or other performance remuneration may be the subject of an effective SSA, provided the SSA is entered into prior to the employee earning the entitlement to be paid the bonus.

30. An effective SSA has the same effect for tax law purposes in relation to benefits provided, as noted at paragraph 28 above, even though it may provide that any residual amount not taken as expense payment fringe benefits can be received as cash. Any such residual cash receipts would be assessable as salary or wages to the employee under section 6-5 or 6-10 of the ITAA 1997 when they are received by the employee. Where the residual amount is otherwise applied or dealt with on behalf of the employee the amount may constitute a fringe benefit.

31. An employer's contributions under an effective SSA to a superannuation fund on behalf of an employee is not assessable income of the employee under paragraph 26(e). The sums contributed have not been allowed, given or granted to the employee, but are paid to the administrators of the fund. Also, the scheme of superannuation and taxation law is such that the contributions are not assessable income of the employee.

Employers - income tax, fringe benefits tax, PAYG withholding liabilities and superannuation guarantee

32. Benefits provided under an effective SSA are not 'salary or wages' within the meaning of that term in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA and, accordingly, the employer has no PAYG withholding liabilities in relation to the benefits.

33. However, benefits provided under an ineffective SSA are 'salary or wages' for the purposes of subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA. Accordingly, the employer has PAYG withholding liabilities in relation to the benefits if the other conditions of Part 2-5 of Schedule 1 to the TAA are met.

34. Superannuation contributions made by an employer (who derives assessable income or is engaged in a business) under an effective SSA are properly considered as employer contributions to the superannuation fund or RSA for the purposes of the SGAA and sections 82AAC to 82AAF of the ITAA 1936. Superannuation contributions made by an employer (who does not derive assessable income or is not engaged in a business) under an effective SSA are properly considered as employer contributions to the superannuation fund or RSA for the purposes of the SGAA.

35. However, superannuation contributions made after 4:00 PM (by legal time in the Australian Capital Territory) on 30 June 2000 to non-complying superannuation funds are not deductible to the taxpayer that makes the contribution, as section 82AAE was repealed by Taxation Laws Amendment (Superannuation Contributions) Act 2001. As such contributions are not excluded from the definition of 'fringe benefit' in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA, the employer may have a FBT liability in relation to the making of the contributions to a non-complying superannuation fund.

36. Superannuation contributions made by an employer (whether or not deriving assessable income or engaged in a business) under an ineffective SSA do not represent employer contributions to the superannuation fund or RSA for the purposes of the SGAA. As the contributions are undeducted member contributions of the employee, the employer is not entitled to a deduction under sections 82AAC to 82AAF of the ITAA 1936.

37. Taxation Laws Amendment (Superannuation Contributions) Act 2001 has now ensured that superannuation contributions made under an effective SSA after 7 September 2000, for the benefit of persons other than an employee, are not excluded from the definition of 'fringe benefit' in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA by paragraph (j) of that definition.

38. It is possible for an employee to enter into an effective SSA where the employer makes a superannuation contribution in respect of someone other than the employee, e.g., spouse. However, any such superannuation contribution will be a fringe benefit.

Explanations

Employees - derivation of income

Industrial law

39. One method by which State and Federal Industrial Relations Commissions establish employment rights is by an award. An award is a legal instrument, usually taking the form of a binding pronouncement, dealing with rates of pay and conditions of employment.

40. Awards regulate the future conduct of employees and employers by setting out their rights and obligations at the workplace. Awards usually provide for minimum rights only. Employers and employees can, however, agree to employment conditions that are more favourable than an award.

41. Some jurisdictions provide that employers can, by agreement with employees, modify the rights and obligations existing under an award. The agreements must be certified by the relevant Industrial Relations Commission or similar body before they come into operation.

42. Apart from awards, the industrial relations system also provides for a separate process by which employment conditions can be determined outside the award system. The formal name of these agreements varies between jurisdictions and includes certified agreements, enterprise flexibility agreements, workplace agreements, enterprise agreements and individual and collective employment agreements. The process involves an employer and its employees or a single employee reaching a binding agreement at the workplace on wages, conditions and work practices.

43. In most jurisdictions, provided award employees are not disadvantaged by a reduction of any entitlements or protection under an award, a certified agreement prevails over the terms of the award.

44. In most jurisdictions, workplace or similar agreements must be registered or certified with a supervising body before the agreements can be binding on the parties involved.

45. Thus, where the parties to an award agree to substitute an employee's award based remuneration with conditions in a workplace or similar agreement, the employee's contractual right to salary, wages or allowances is then governed by the certified agreement.

46. However, not all employees are covered by workplace or similar agreements and awards. In such cases, the relationship between the employees and their employer will be governed solely by the contract of employment entered into between the parties.

47. There is also industrial legislation in each jurisdiction that establishes a range of employment rights. These rights, generally, include minimum conditions and, in some jurisdictions, the right to the payment of remuneration other than in cash.

Remuneration agreements with employees, directors and office holders

Employees

48. The relationship between an employer and an employee commences with the entering into of a contract of employment prior to personal services being performed. An employment agreement can be entered into between the employer and one employee or a group of employees. The employment contract is usually in writing, although it may be entered into orally.

49. A contract of employment may include the fixed remuneration the employee is entitled to receive; any variable remuneration component such as bonuses, commissions and other performance payments; and an agreed amount of cash remuneration and the value of non-cash remuneration.

50. A contract of employment may be amended during the course of an employee's employment to reflect changes made to employment conditions and remuneration arrangements, such as by a SSA.

Directors

51. As the term 'director' is not a defined term for the purposes of section 12-40 of Schedule 1 to the TAA, it should take its ordinary meaning. As a guide, the term is widely defined in section 9 of the Corporations Law as follows: 'Director of a company or other body means:

(a)
a person who:

(i)
is appointed to the position of a director; or
(ii)
is appointed to the position of an alternate director and is acting in that capacity; regardless of the name that is given to their position; and

(b)
unless the contrary intention appears, a person who is not validly appointed as a director if:

(i)
they act in the position of a director; or
(ii)
the directors of the company or body are accustomed to act in accordance with the person's instructions or wishes.'

52. The terms of remuneration that a director receives will usually be set out in a written agreement between the director and the company. With smaller companies, especially where the directors are directly or indirectly the controlling shareholders of the company, the terms of remuneration often may be agreed to orally.

53. A director's entitlement to remuneration may include fixed remuneration; a variable remuneration component such as bonuses, commissions and other performance payments; and an agreed amount of cash remuneration and the value of non-cash remuneration.

54. The remuneration agreements may be amended during the director's term of office to reflect changes made to responsibilities and remuneration arrangements, such as by a SSA.

Office holders

55. An office may be created under the Constitution or a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory. The duties of the office may be set out in the instrument that creates the office or may be determined by the entity to whom the office holder reports.

56. However appointed, terms of remuneration that an office holder is to receive will usually be set out in either the instrument that creates the office or more likely in a written agreement between the office holder and the entity to whom the office holder reports.

57. If the terms of remuneration for the office holder are set out in the instrument that creates the office, it may not be possible for the office holder to enter into an effective SSA. Where the instrument permits the relevant entity to enter into a remuneration agreement with the office holder, the agreement may be amended during the period that the office holder occupies the office to reflect changes made to responsibilities and remuneration arrangements, such as by a SSA.

Conflict between employment agreements and industrial law, awards or workplace agreements

58. Awards set minimum employment terms and conditions, but do not stop an employment contract from providing additional benefits (see Kilminster v. Sun Newspapers Ltd (1931) 46 CLR 284; (1931) 5 ALJ 285). A similar position applies to a workplace or similar agreement. If the employment agreement provides that salary or wages entitlements are below the minimum entitlements under the relevant industrial law, award or workplace agreement, and non-cash payments are made, the employee may retain a legal entitlement to receipt of the minimum level of salary or wages. Where an employer and an employee enter into a SSA that so provides, we accept that the income tax law takes the factual situation that exists between the two parties as it finds it. However, the employee may have rights to enforce payment of an underpayment of salary or wages under industrial law. For example, the Federal Court of Australia in Poletti v. Ecob (No. 2) (1989) 31 IR 321 gave a direction for the payment of an under payment of wages where the appellant (employer) had provided the respondent (employee) a package of benefits rather than the salary or wages as required by the relevant award. Where a Court gives an order concerning payment of under paid wages, the amounts awarded are assessable income of the employee under either section 6-5 or 6-10 of the ITAA 1997.

59. As a consequence of industrial reforms in recent years, awards in a number of industries have been amended to allow an employee and an employer to enter into an agreement to change part of the employee's salary or wages into non-cash benefits. The amended entitlements of an award employee, when viewed objectively, must be no less favourable than his or her entitlements under the relevant awards or agreements.

60. There is no restriction under industrial relations law on the extent of benefits that can be provided to an employee if there is no limit on the provision of benefits in the applicable industrial law, award or workplace or similar agreement.

Interaction between the FBTAA and the ITAA

61. The second reading speech of the then Treasurer, Mr Keating, in introducing the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Bill 1986, acknowledged that the introduction of the Bill was designed to overcome problems in applying the ITAA 1936 to taxing fringe benefits in the hands of employees. In particular, there had been difficulty in making case by case subjective judgements under paragraph 26(e) about the taxable value of fringe benefits provided to individual employees (see Hill J in Roads and Traffic Authority of NSW v. FC of T 93 ATC 4508 at 4510; (1993) 26 ATR 76 at 79-80).

62. The FBTAA recognises that employees are often rewarded for their services with both cash and non-cash benefits. The effect of section 23L (see paragraph 10) and subparagraphs 26(e)(iv) and 26(e)(v) of the ITAA 1936 (see paragraph 11) is to ensure that the FBTAA deals exclusively with certain benefits. The benefits affected are those that meet the definition of a 'fringe benefit' in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA or benefits that would be a fringe benefit under subsection 136(1) but for the operation of paragraph (g) of the definition of fringe benefit.

Ordinary or statutory income derived by employees from their employment

63. Section 6-5 of the ITAA 1997 includes in the assessable income of a person income according to ordinary concepts, termed 'ordinary income', 'derived' by that person during the year of income. Section 6-10 includes in the assessable income of a person 'statutory income', being amounts included in assessable income under other provisions about assessable income. Subsection 6-15(2) of the ITAA 1997 provides that if an amount is exempt income it is not assessable income.

64. As discussed in paragraph 23, personal services remuneration arrangements usually provide that the employee is entitled to be paid at fixed intervals when he or she has performed services for the employer over a fixed period. This ordinary or statutory income from the provision of personal services is derived by the employee, usually, at the time of receipt (see Brent v. FC of T (1971) 125 CLR 418; 71 ATC 4195; (1971) 2 ATR 563; Case U152 87 ATC 894; Case R23 84 ATC 215; Case 77 (1984) 27 CTBR (NS) 604; and Case V49 88 ATC 381; AAT Case 4188 (1988) 19 ATR 3336).

65. However, an employer may deal with payments of income in some other way after it has been derived by the employee. In this situation, subsection 6-5(4) or 6-10(3) of the ITAA 1997 applies so that the amounts paid or benefits provided are taken to have been received by the employee as soon as they are applied or dealt with.

66. Support for this view can be found in the statements in obiter dicta of Latham CJ in Gair v. FC of T (1944) 71 CLR 388 at 393-4; (1944) 7 ATD 443 at 446-7. His Honour provided an example of the operation of the former section 19 of the ITAA 1936 (now subsections 6-5(4) and 6-10(3) of the ITAA 1997) to the dealing with of salary or wages, in which he held that, if a right to salary or wages is transferred by an employee to another person, then the employee would be assessable on the amount of salary at the time the employer makes the payment to the other person.

67. For an amount received to be income according to ordinary concepts, it must be money or something that can be converted into money (see Alexander Tennant v. Robert Sinclair Smith [1892] 3 TC 158; [1892] AC 150; FC of T v. Cooke & Sherden 80 ATC 4140; (1980) 10 ATR 696). Accordingly, if a benefit provided in an effective SSA is convertible into money, the amount will form part of the employee's ordinary or statutory income and, as discussed in paragraphs 69 to 78, will be derived as either 'salary or wages' assessable income or 'fringe benefits' exempt income.

Derivation of salary or wage assessable income or 'fringe benefit' exempt income

68. An employee derives ordinary and statutory income as an employee according to the principles discussed in paragraphs 63 to 67 above. That income can either be derived as salary or wages assessable income under section 6-5 or section 6-10 of the ITAA 1997 or as 'fringe benefits' exempt income under section 23L of the ITAA 1936. The character of the ordinary and statutory income is determined by whether the income is paid as salary or wages or is provided as 'fringe benefits' (within the meaning of that term in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA) at the time it is derived.

Payment of salary or wages

69. Generally, salary or wages are paid at the time that money or money's worth is received by the employee. If the salary or wages are applied or dealt with by the employer on behalf of the employee or as the employee has directed, subsections 6-5(4) and 6-10(3) of the ITAA 1997 ensure that the salary or wages are taken to have been derived at the time of that application or dealing. Section 11-5 of Schedule 1 to the TAA treats amounts that have been applied or dealt with by the employer on behalf of the employee or as the employee has directed as having been paid to the employee at the time of the application or dealing.

70. The decision of Dixon J in FC of T v. Steeves Agnew & Co (Vic) Pty Ltd (1951) 82 CLR 408; (1951) 9 ATD 259 considered when there was a payment of salary or wages for the purposes of the PAYE provisions in the ITAA 1936. In that case, the managing director of the taxpayer company was entitled to remuneration that consisted wholly of a share of profits from the taxpayer's insurance broking business. Under his first employment contract, there was no provision for advances or drawings on account of the remuneration. The second contract enabled the manager to make monthly drawings in anticipation of his remuneration, with the necessary balancing adjustments to be made on a half-yearly basis. The issue was whether the taxpayer was liable, under the then form of section 221C of the ITAA 1936, to make deductions from the drawings when they were made.

71. His Honour had no difficulty (at 82 CLR 414; 9 ATD 262) with considering the manager's remuneration to be in the nature of 'salary or wages' under subsection 221A(1) of the ITAA 1936. However, (at 82 CLR 414-6 and 418; 9 ATD 262-4) his Honour found that the character of the payments actually made (the drawings) was properly considered to be advances made in anticipation of an expected, but then uncertain, entitlement to salary or wages. His Honour then went on to hold (82 CLR 416-9; 9 ATD 263-5) that the taxpayer was not liable to make deductions from the drawings, as the manager was not entitled to receive salary or wages 'in respect of any week or part thereof', as was required by the then form of section 221C.

72. The Commissioner put a further argument to Dixon J that, after the ascertainment of the amount of remuneration to which the manager had become entitled, there was a payment of salary or wages when the taxpayer and the manager made the balancing adjustments in the accounts. His Honour held (82 CLR 421; 9 ATD 266) that there was no definite transaction between the parties that would amount to such a payment. His Honour noted that section 221C appeared to be directed to the making of deductions from sums of money paid over and not to the discharge of an obligation for salary or wages by other means. However, his Honour commented (at 82 CLR 421-2; 9 ATD 266-7) that there could be definite transactions after remuneration is ascertained that might amount to payments of 'salary or wages' under section 221C.

73. The Steeves Agnew case was referred to in Temple Wholesale Flower Supplies Pty Ltd v. FC of T 90 ATC 4610; (1990) 21 ATR 556. In that case, eight related employees of the taxpayer company became entitled, by resolution of the directors, to receive a bonus. Later, entries were made in the taxpayer's accounts which credited the loan accounts maintained by the employees with the taxpayer. The issue was whether salary or wages had been paid to the employees when the crediting occurred. Davies J held that payment had occurred as it effected an agreement between the taxpayer and its employees as to the payment of the taxpayer's obligation. His Honour rejected a submission from the taxpayer's counsel that payment means payment in cash or equivalent and said that, unless the context so requires, payment may include the passing of a benefit in discharge of an obligation for services performed. He concluded that the Steeves Agnew case did not require him to find that the crediting did not constitute payment.

74. Although the decision of Davies J was later overturned by the Full Court of the Federal Court of Australia on the basis that mere journal entries do not amount to payment (91 ATC 4387; (1991) 21 ATR 1606), his more general discussion of what might amount to payment was not disturbed by the Full Court. In particular, the Full Court referred to the passage from the Steeves Agnew case about the need to have a definite transaction after remuneration was ascertained before there could be payment.

75. We consider the Steeves Agnew case supports the view that an entitlement to be paid salary or wages that has been earned can be properly characterised as an entitlement to be paid salary or wages for the purposes of sections 12-35, 12-40 and 12-45 of Schedule 1 to the TAA. We also consider the Temple Wholesale Flower Supplies case recognises there could be definite transactions, after that entitlement arises, that might amount to payments of salary or wages.

76. Therefore, under an ineffective SSA, when services are performed under a personal services remuneration arrangement for which the reward is salary or wages, any subsequent payment or provision of a benefit in lieu of payment has the character of salary or wages.

77. However, if an employee enters into an effective SSA, he or she foregoes an expected entitlement to an amount of salary or wages, before that entitlement has been earned, in return for benefits of a similar value. We accept that, when personal services have been performed by an employee in that situation, he or she becomes entitled to the agreed value of benefits. The benefits, when provided, are ordinary or statutory income provided by way of 'fringe benefits' within the meaning of subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA. The benefits, therefore, are not assessable income under section 6-5 or 6-10 of the ITAA 1997.

78. The character of personal services remuneration is governed by the arrangement under which work is performed. As personal services are performed and the employee earns an entitlement to the income, any attempt by the employee to deal later with that entitlement will not change its salary or wage character.

Payments and set-offs of cross liabilities between employers and employees

79. The most common situation that would amount to 'payment' is where the benefits are paid directly by the employer to an employee.

80. Between the employer and the employee, there may be some scope for the operation of the doctrine of 'set-off' referred to in the Steeves Agnew case. As Dixon J recognised (82 CLR 420; 9 ATD 266):

'If cross-liabilities in sums certain of equal amounts immediately payable are mutually extinguished by an agreed set-off, that amounts to payment for most common law and statutory purposes'.

81. For the doctrine of 'set-off' to apply there has to be mutual liabilities of equal amounts presently payable between two parties. It is not enough, as held in FC of T v. P Iori & Sons Pty Ltd 87 ATC 4775; (1987) 19 ATR 201 and in Lend Lease Corporation Ltd v. FC of T 90 ATC 4401; (1990) 21 ATR 402, that there be a liability on one hand and a voluntary payment on the other. In addition, as the Full Court recognised in the Temple Wholesale Flower Supplies case, there must be agreement between the parties to adopt the set-off method of payment of debts. A unilateral action by one of the parties, such as a mere entry in books of account, does nothing to change the liabilities between the parties.

82. An example of where a set-off arrangement could arise in an ineffective SSA context is where an employee has a debit balance in a loan account with the employer. The employer and the employee might agree to set off the value of the liabilities owed by the employee to the employer against the employer's liability to pay 'salary or wages' to the employee.

83. Such a set-off would amount to a payment of salary or wages. The above situation is to be contrasted with the situation where the payment of the employee's liability is made under an effective SSA in respect of salary or wage which is yet to be derived, in which case the set-off would amount to an expense payment fringe benefit.

Payments to an employee by associates of the employer

84. Amounts paid to an employee under an ineffective SSA by someone associated with the employee's common law employer are payments of salary or wages. It is our view that an employer includes a person who pays salary or wages to an employee for services rendered to his or her common law employer under his or her employment contract, regardless of whether or not the person making the payment is the common law employer. Section 12-35 of Schedule 1 to the TAA requires that an entity withhold an amount from salary, wages, commissions, bonuses or allowances that it pays to an individual as an employee (whether of that or another entity).

85. The decision of Merkel J in Dean & Anor v. FC of T 97 ATC 4762; (1997) 37 ATR 52 supports this view. His Honour found that the employee retention payments made by a company associated with the common law employer were 'salary or wages' and agreed with comments by Hill J in Newcastle Club Ltd v. FC of T 94 ATC 4594 at 4595; (1994) 29 ATR 216 at 218-9 that the definition of salary or wages clearly contemplates payments from persons other than the common law employer.

Payments by employers to a person on behalf of an employee

86. Amounts paid under an ineffective SSA that are not paid directly to the employee, but to someone else on behalf of the employee, are payments of 'salary or wages'. Subsection 6-5(4) of the ITAA 1997 ensures that salary or wages that have been applied or dealt with in any way on behalf of the employee or at the direction of the employee are the employee's ordinary income as soon as it is applied or dealt with. Section 11-5 of Schedule 1 to the TAA treats an amount that has been applied or dealt with on the employee's behalf or as the employee directs as an amount that has been paid by the employer.

87. The recipient is merely receiving a payment of salary or wages to which the employee is already entitled. The recipient merely 'stands in the shoes' of the employee, such that receipt by the recipient is effectively receipt by, or discharge of the liability to, the employee. Examples of salary or wages that may be directly remitted include union subscriptions, health fund membership fees and child support payments that are required to be deducted from salary or wages by the Child Support (Registration and Collection) Act 1988.

Reduction of entitlement to salary or wages below minimum conditions under industrial law

88. Arrangements, in which an employee seeks to forego expected salary or wages in exchange for benefits, may reduce the employee's salary or wage entitlement below the employee's minimum entitlement under the relevant industrial award or workplace or other agreement. Such an arrangement may be effective at reducing the employee's assessable income from salary or wages. Depending on the terms of the relevant industrial award or workplace or other agreement, a Court may order the employer to pay the wage entitlement to the extent that it is below the minimum entitlement (see paragraph 58). When complying with the Court order, the employer, as a PAYG payer, is required to withhold from the payment. The employee will be assessed on the back payment of salary or wages under either section 6-5 or section 6-10 of the ITAA 1997.

SSAs that involve leave entitlements

89. Once an employee has completed the relevant qualifying period of employment and has an entitlement to take annual leave, long service or sick leave, the employee has an entitlement to be paid salary or wages. An entitlement to take leave is synonymous with an entitlement to be paid salary or wages because the employee has done everything necessary, apart from taking the leave, to be entitled to be paid.

90. It then follows that a SSA exchanging an entitlement to take leave that is accruing, or that has accrued, for past services performed in return for benefits is ineffective. Benefits paid under an ineffective SSA are payments of salary or wages and form part of the employee's assessable income under section 6-5 or 6-10 of the ITAA 1997.

91. We recognise that a SSA exchanging any expected entitlement to leave that will accrue for future services rendered in return for benefits will be effective. While benefits provided under an effective SSA may be derived as ordinary or statutory income by the employee (see paragraph 28 above), the income is exempt because of the operation of section 23L of the ITAA 1936.

92. Whether the conditions necessary for the taking of leave have been met is a question of fact. Statute, award conditions, individual contracts, enterprise workplace agreements or similar agreements may be relevant to determining whether the conditions have been met. Where there is a lengthy qualifying period which must be completed before any entitlement to leave accrues (as is generally the situation for long service leave entitlements), until that qualifying period has been completed, the conditions have not been met. Most employees must complete a minimum period of service before any entitlement to long service leave accrues. If the employee terminates employment prior to completing the required minimum period of service, the employee has no enforceable right to payment in lieu of long service leave. Some employees' employment conditions give a pro rata entitlement to be paid salary or wages once a lesser period of service has been completed, if employment terminates after that lesser period but before the full qualifying period. An employee who has not completed sufficient service to be entitled to take long service leave or receive a pro rate entitlement of salary or wages on termination of employment can enter into an effective SSA. Once the conditions for taking long service leave have been met, the employee can only enter into an effective SSA in respect of future entitlements to take long service leave.

Alternative view - SSAs that involve leave entitlements

93. There is an alternative view that the entitlement to take annual leave, long service leave and sick leave arises as an employee performs services, even though the employee cannot take such leave until the completion of the qualifying period of employment. It is then argued that an employee does not have an entitlement to be paid salary or wages until the leave is taken or some other event, eg., termination of employment or death of the employee, occurs.

94. Obiter dicta comments in Nilsen Development Laboratories Pty. Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1981) 144 CLR 616, 81 ATC 4031, 11 ATR 505 are said to support this view. The issue that the High Court addressed in that case was whether a company was entitled to a deduction in respect of accrued annual leave and long service leave of its employees. At 144 CLR 627-628, 81 ATC 4036-7, 11 ATR 512, Gibbs J said:

If these principles are applied to the present case, the question is whether the taxpayer was under a present liability to make a payment to its employees in respect of leave. The answer is that it was not. The employees were entitled to leave, but they were not entitled to payment. The entitlement to payment would not arise until the employees took leave (or died or left the employment). The event on which the entitlement of the employees to payment depended had not occurred. There was a certainty that a liability to make payments in respect of leave would arise in the future, but it had not arisen. The present is not a case in which there was an immediate obligation to make payment in the future, or a defeasible obligation to pay, or a present obligation which as a matter of law was unenforceable - there was no accrued obligation to make any payment at all. There was no loss or outgoing "incurred" within s 51(1).

95. Barwick CJ expressed a similar view at 144 CLR 624, 81 ATC 4035, 11 ATR 509-510:

It was suggested in argument that a liability to make such a payment was accruing during the time the employee was serving the period qualifying him for leave. But, in my opinion, it is not a precise or proper use of language to so describe the circumstance that an employee is becoming progressively qualified by length of service to be able to require that he be given leave of one sort or another. In my opinion, no liability is "accruing" in a proper sense of the word during the time that the employee is serving his qualifying period nor has it accrued when he has served that qualifying period.
All that then can really be said is that it has become certain that, in due course when further events occur, that is to say, the time for the taking of leave is fixed and the period of leave is entered upon, a liability to pay money will arise. It is quite wrong, in my opinion, in this connection to treat any liability as either accruing or having accrued at any time prior to the time when the employee enters upon the leave, whether it be annual or long service.

96. However, we consider that the obiter comments of Gibbs J and Barwick CJ must be seen in the context of addressing the question as to when the employer was entitled to claim a deduction for a loss or outgoing. As has long been recognised, symmetry of treatment of a transaction is not needed on the income and deductions sides. While an employee does not derive the salary or wages that is associated with the entitlement to leave until the leave is taken, we consider that the comments of Gibbs J and Barwick CJ do not support the proposition that the employee who has served the qualifying period of employment can be paid in a form other than as salary or wages.

SSAs that involve bonus entitlements

97. An entitlement to a bonus under an employee performance payment plan may be satisfied by the provision of salary or wages by the employer or the provision of other benefits. Bonuses under such plans that will be paid in the form of salary or wages, or for which the choice exists for payment to be made in such a form, may be the subject of an effective SSA, provided that an entitlement to be paid the bonus does not yet exist. An entitlement to be paid a bonus which is payable where certain conditions are met exists once those conditions are met. Where a bonus is discretionary, the decision to pay a bonus creates an entitlement to be paid salary or wages. In accordance with the position stated at paragraph 77 above, benefits provided in exchange for bonuses payable in the form of salary or wages under an effective SSA do not form part of the assessable income of the employee under section 6-5 or 6-10 of the ITAA 1997.

98. Once there is an entitlement to be paid a bonus, which under the employment contract is to be paid as salary or wages, then such an amount cannot be the subject of an effective SSA. That the bonus is not paid for a period of time may effect the time of derivation of income but does not affect its nature as assessable income. If the bonus is held in any reserve or account until released at the direction of the employee, it will be taken to have been received by the employee under subsection 6-5(4) of the ITAA 1997. Any provision of benefits in lieu of payment would be an ineffective SSA and the amount of the benefit would have the character of salary or wages.

SSA in which the employee retains a residual entitlement to salary or wages

99. A SSA may provide that the employee is able to be paid cash for any unspent portion of any benefit entitlement of his or her remuneration package. Such an arrangement is an effective SSA to the extent that the employee has benefits provided to him or her, or for his or her benefit, by the employer. The benefits provided do not form part of the assessable income of the employee under section 6-5 or 6-10 of the ITAA 1997. Any benefit entitlements that are satisfied by the payment of cash form part of his or her salary or wages under section 6-5.

SSA in which the employee retains a residual entitlement to benefits

100. A SSA may provide that the employee remains entitled to any unspent portion of any benefit entitlement of their remuneration package. Such an arrangement is an effective SSA to the extent that the employee has benefits provided to him or her, or for his or her benefit, by the employers. The benefits, when provided, do not form part of the assessable income of the employee under section 6-5 or 6-10 of the ITAA 1997. Benefit entitlements satisfied by the payment of cash will form part of the employee's salary or wages under section 6-5.

Application of paragraph 26(e)

101. We consider that paragraph 26(e) does not apply to a salary sacrificed amount received by an employee under an effective SSA. There is a view that, as paragraph (j) of the definition of 'fringe benefit' in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA excludes employer contributions to complying superannuation funds, those payments are outside the exclusion of subparagraph 26(e)(iv) and could be assessable to an employee under paragraph 26(e) (see paragraph 11). In our view, however, an employer's contributions under an effective SSA to a complying superannuation fund on behalf of an employee are not assessable income of the employee under paragraph 26(e).

102. In Constable v. FC of T (1952) 86 CLR 402; (1952) 5 AITR 371; (1952) 10 ATD 93, it was only after the administrators of the provident fund in question exercised a discretion to allocate assets of the fund to the employee members' accounts that the members became presently entitled to the moneys credited. In those circumstances, the obiter comments of the majority of the High Court of Australia in that case were to the effect that the sums contributed by the employer to the fund were not allowed, given or granted to an employee but instead were paid to the administrators of the fund. While the members did not have a vested and indefeasible right to the employer contributions in that case (they could be forfeited in certain circumstances), we consider that the Court's comments support the view that paragraph 26(e) does not apply to the making of contributions to a superannuation fund by an employer for the employees' benefit.

103. We note that Webb J in Constable (86 CLR at 422; 5 AITR at 378; 10 ATD at 98) commented that contributions by the employer to the superannuation fund were assessable to the employee under paragraph 26(e). This view was not favoured by the other judges in the case.

104. Since the decision in Constable, the scheme of superannuation and taxation law has been prefaced on the view that a contribution by an employer to a superannuation fund is not the income of the employee. Section 23 of the SGAA can only achieve its purpose if an employer can contribute to a complying superannuation fund or RSA for the benefit of an employee. The purpose of the SGAA is to encourage employers to provide a minimum level of superannuation support for employees[F1] or pay the Superannuation Guarantee Charge (SGC). If the employer contributions were assessable to the employees under paragraph 26(e) it would not be possible for the employer to reduce the SGC to nil.

105. Subdivision AA of Division 3 of Part III of the ITAA 1936 provides the framework in which an employer can claim a deduction for a contribution to a superannuation fund in respect of an eligible employee. Subdivision AA of Division 2 of Part III of the ITAA 1936, dealing with the taxation of superannuation and kindred payments, implicitly recognises that there is a distinction between employer contributions and undeducted employee contributions to a superannuation fund or RSA in respect of ETP components and the undeducted purchase price of an annuity. Part IX of the ITAA 1936 brings to account employer contributions as taxable contributions (subparagraph 274(1)(a)(i)) and, hence, assessable income of the superannuation fund (sections 281 and 288). Much of this income tax law would be largely redundant if employer contributions were the assessable income of employees when the contributions were made.

106. Employer contributions are defined at subregulation 1.03(1) of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Regulations 1994 (SISR) and subregulation 1.03(1) of the Retirement Savings Account Regulations 1997 (RSAR). Whether a contribution is an employer contribution is relevant to whether it is a mandated employer contribution (SISR regulation 5.01 and RSAR subregulation 3.03(1)) and, therefore, subject to minimum benefit standards (SISR regulation 5.04 and RSAR regulation 3.04), whether the contribution can be accepted (SISR Part 7) and whether the member protection standards (SISR subregulation 1.03(1)) apply. These provisions would be substantially undermined if employer contributions were the assessable income of employees when the contributions were made.

107. In summary, we consider that the scheme of superannuation and taxation law relies on the view that superannuation contributions made by an employer are not the income of the employee and, therefore, contributions of the employee, but are the employer's contributions.

Alternative view - application of paragraph 26(e)

108. The structure and operation of superannuation funds have altered significantly since Constable was decided. For instance, the discretion available to the administrator in Constable is no longer present under current superannuation legislation.

109. There is an alternative view that paragraph 26(e) may include within the assessable income of an employee superannuation contributions made under an effective SSA by an employer on an employee's behalf.

110. Support for the application of paragraph 26(e) to superannuation contributions is found in Case V21 88 ATC 217; AAT Case 4,067 (1988) 19 ATR 3081. This case considered whether health insurance cover provided by an employer for the benefit of an employee and his family fell within the employee's assessable income. The taxpayer conceded that the health insurance cover fell within the description to which paragraph 26(e) applied. The taxpayer's main argument was that the provision of insurance cover under a policy of insurance which provided for the payment was contingent only upon the occurrence of a contingency or an event. This argument was based on the High Court decision in Constable's case which established that such a contingent entitlement would fall outside the application of paragraph 26(e).

111. The Tribunal distinguished the decision in Constable because the making of the insurance contributions conferred immediately enforceable rights. Accordingly, the benefit of the insurance cover was assessable under paragraph 26(e).

112. We do not accept the alternative view expressed in paragraph 110 above. The facts of the Tribunal case are significantly different from that of a superannuation fund and do not bring into question the decision in Constable in respect of employer contributions to a complying superannuation fund.

Employers - income tax, fringe benefits tax, PAYG withholding obligations and superannuation guarantee

Salary or wages

113. As discussed in paragraphs 63 to 87, once an employee becomes entitled to receive an amount of salary or wages, the payment of that entitlement is a payment of salary or wages. As amounts are paid under an ineffective SSA as salary or wages, the employer PAYG payer has a PAYG withholding obligation in relation to the payments.

114. The existence of an entitlement to receive salary or wages is contingent on the performance of services by an employee. Until services have been performed, the character of an employee's remuneration can be altered with the agreement of the employer and the employee. As benefits provided under an effective SSA represent expected salary or wages foregone before the services have been performed, such benefits are not payments of salary or wages for which there is a PAYG withholding obligation.

Employer superannuation contributions for the purposes of the SGAA

115. Section 22 of the SGAA recognises that the notional employer contribution rate for a class of employees in a defined benefit fund is affected by employer superannuation support provided. Contributions to a complying superannuation fund made for a class of employees, of which the employee is one, reduce or eliminate the employer's liability to pay the superannuation guarantee charge.

116. Subsections 23(2) and 23(3) of the SGAA recognise that if an employer is required to make contributions to a superannuation fund other than a defined benefit fund under an industrial award or law, or an occupational superannuation arrangement, those contributions reduce or eliminate the employer's liability to pay the superannuation guarantee charge.

117. Some industrial awards or occupational superannuation arrangements permit salary sacrifice but require the employer to continue to make superannuation contributions based upon the earnings base that existed prior to entering into the SSA. The correct earnings base for an employee is a question of fact. An employer who make superannuation contributions based upon an earnings base that is less than required by the SGAA will have a superannuation guarantee shortfall. The SGAA does not prevent an employer contributing an amount greater than the SGAA minimum.

118. As outlined in paragraph 113, as amounts paid under an ineffective SSA are paid as salary or wages, superannuation contributions made by an employer under an ineffective SSA are not properly considered to be employer contributions to the superannuation fund for the purposes of the SGAA. However, as outlined in paragraph 114, as benefits provided under an effective SSA are not paid as salary or wages, superannuation contributions made by an employer to a complying superannuation fund under an effective SSA count towards the employer's obligation to provide a minimum level of superannuation support for the employee under the SGAA.

Employer superannuation contributions for the purpose of sections 82AAC to 82AAF of the ITAA 1936

119. Sections 82AAC to 82AAF, subject to certain limits, grant a deduction to an employer who make contributions to superannuation funds or RSAs for its employees. For the same reasons as discussed in paragraph 118 above, we accept that superannuation contributions made under an effective SSA qualifies as an employer contributions under sections 82AAC to 82AAF. However, a superannuation contribution made after 4:00 PM (by legal time in the Australian Capital Territory) on 30 June 2000 to a non-complying superannuation fund is not deductible to the employer that makes the contribution, as section 82 AAE was repealed by Taxation Laws Amendment (Superannuation Contributions) Act 2001.

120. Contributions to a superannuation fund under an ineffective SSA do not, for the same reasons as discussed in paragraph 118 above, entitle the employer to a deduction under sections 82AAC to 82AAF.

Employer superannuation contributions into the superannuation fund of an associate of the employee

121. An employee may enter into an effective SSA which includes an obligation for the employer to contribute to the complying superannuation fund of an associate of the employee. Such a benefit provided on or before 7 September 2000 in an effective SSA forms part of the employee's ordinary or statutory income, but is not derived as either salary or wages assessable income or 'fringe benefits' exempt income. This is because, before the amendments made by Taxation Laws Amendment (Superannuation Contributions) Act 2001, subparagraph (j)(i) of the definition of 'fringe benefit' in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA provided that a fringe benefit did not include a benefit constituted by the making of a payment to a complying superannuation fund. However, the employer is not entitled to a deduction under section 82AAC for contributions for an associate who is not an employee of the employer in their own right.

122. Taxation Laws Amendment (Superannuation Contributions) Act 2001 has now ensured that superannuation contributions made after 7 September 2000 are only excluded from the definition of 'fringe benefit' by subparagraph (j)(i) if made for the benefit of an employee. Generally, the employer will not be entitled to a deduction for the superannuation contribution in respect of an associate of an employee, notwithstanding that FBT is payable. While unusual, this is an intended consequence of the law.

Examples

Example 1 - effective SSA

123. Andrew Executive was paid $80,000 in salary plus $7,500 in employer superannuation contributions in the 1999-2000 year of income. On 30 June 2000, Andrew renegotiated his employment contract for the 2000-01 year of income to receive $72,500 salary and $15,000 employer superannuation contributions to a complying superannuation fund. He turns 33 during this year. There is no award, workplace or similar agreement covering Andrew's terms of employment.

124. The renegotiation of the employment agreement is an effective SSA. This is because Andrew has entered into the arrangement with his employer before performance of services for the following year of income.

125. The superannuation contributions made on Andrew's behalf are not taken by subsections 6-5(4) and 6-10(3) of the ITAA 1997 to be derived as income. Paragraph 26(e) of the ITAA 1936 also does not apply to the contributions.

126. The superannuation contributions of $15,000 for the 2000-01 year of income qualify for the purposes of the SGAA as employer superannuation contributions. Andrew's employer qualifies for a deduction of $11,388 in the 2000-01 year of income under section 82AAC of the ITAA 1936. Andrew is under 35 years old and, therefore, his employer is only entitled to a deduction for contributions up to a maximum of $11,388 on his behalf for the 2000-01 year of income (subsection 82AAC(2A)).

Example 2 - effective and ineffective SSA

127. Jane Executive is employed by Large Bank on an annual remuneration package of $105,300. On the Monday following the end of each 4-week pay period, remuneration totalling $8,100 is paid to Jane or applied on her behalf. At the end of the 7th pay period, on Friday 12 January 01, Jane and Large Bank vary the employment contract, commencing 18 December 00 (beginning 7th pay period) as set out below:

Form of 4 - weekly Remuneration Old Contract New Contract
Salary $7,000.00 $5,000.00
Superannuation $1,100.00 $2,100.00
Expense Payment Fringe Benefit $0.00 $517.50
Fringe Benefits Tax $0.00 $482.50
Total Value of Remuneration $8,100.00 $8,100.00

128. The new agreement is an ineffective SSA for the 7th pay period. The consequence of this is that $1000 of the $2100 contribution made by Jane's employer to her superannuation fund on 15 January 01 is salary income derived by her on that day. Also, the payment of $517.50 to the provider of Jane's personal credit card is salary or wages income and not a fringe benefit.

129. Jane's remuneration for the 2000-01 year is summarised below:

Salary pay periods 1 - 6 (6 @ $7,000) $42,000  
Salary pay period 7 (old agreement) $5,000  
Salary pay period 7 (ineffective SSA) $2,000  
Salary pay periods 8 - 13 (6 @ $5,000) $30,000  
Total Salary for the year   $79,000
Superannuation pay periods 1 - 6 (6 @ $1,100) $6,600  
Superannuation pay period 7 (old agreement) $1,100  
Superannuation pay periods 8 - 13 (6 @ $2,100) $12,600  
Total Superannuation for the year   $20,300
Fringe Benefit pay periods 8 - 13 (6 @ $1,000) ($517.50 + $482.50 = $1,000) $6,000  
Total Fringe Benefit for the year   $6,000
Total Remuneration   $105,300

130. The new agreement operates as an effective SSA from 15 January 01 and subsection 6-5(4) of the ITAA 1997 does not apply to any part of the superannuation contributions of $2,100 or personal credit card payments of $517.50 made by Jane's employer for the eighth or later pay periods. Paragraph 26(e) has no application to the contributions either, because the amounts have not been allowed, given or granted to Jane but, instead, are paid to the administrators of the fund. Jane derives assessable income of $79,000 for the 2000-01 year of income.

131. Jane's employer, for the purposes of the SGAA, is considered to have made employer superannuation contributions on her behalf of $20,300 for the 2000-01 year of income. Jane is 35 years old and, therefore, her employer is entitled to a deduction up the the maximum of $31,631 for superannuation contributions on her behalf for the 2000-01 year of income (subsection 82AAC(2A)). Jane's employer qualifies for a deduction under section 82AAC of $20,300.

132. $1,000 of the superannuation contribution of $2,100 made by Jane's employer on her behalf on 15 January 01 is considered to be an undeducted member contribution for the purposes of the SGAA. Jane's employer has a PAYG withholding obligation in respect of this amount and is not entitled to a deduction under section 82AAC for the amount.

133. Either Jane or her employer should ensure that the superannuation fund is aware that the $1,000 is an undeducted contribution so that it can be properly accounted for by the superannuation fund (income tax and superannuation surcharge). The $517.50 personal credit card payment is not an expense fringe benefit. Large Bank should amend its FBT return as required. Large Bank will be able to claim a deduction for payment of further salary or wages (the example assumes Large Bank increases Jane's salary to reflect the FBT that is not payable on the credit card payment) provided the requirements of subsection 8-1(1) ITAA 1997 are met.

Example 3 - provision of a bonus with no entitlement to salary or wages

134. Lynda Sales-Consultant works for an insurance company. She receives units in a unit trust that her employer manages as a reward for achieving 'consultant of the year' for her employer. She has no entitlement to the units until receipt and she has no choice of the form in which the reward is paid.

135. Lynda does not need to include the units received in her assessable income as salary or wages because they were not received in exchange for an entitlement to salary or wages. Linda's employer is liable to pay FBT for the benefit provided to her.

Example 4 - ineffective SSA involving a bonus

136. Kerrie Executive is employed by a stockbroker. She is advised that her entitlement to an annual bonus under the corporate performance bonus scheme is $6,000. She is given the choice of having the amount credited to her bank account, receiving units in a unit trust that her employer manages or additional superannuation contributions. She chooses to receive units in a unit trust.

137. Subsection 6-5(4) of the ITAA 1997 deems that Kerrie has derived income of $6,000 at the time of payment of moneys to the unit trust because she has not foregone her entitlement to salary or wages prior to the entitlement arising. Kerrie's employer is not liable to FBT on the benefit provided.

Example 5 - effective SSA involving a bonus

138. Kathryn Securities must lodge a declaration with her employer, a funds manager, notifying the form in which she would prefer to be paid any annual profit sharing bonus for the 2000-01 year of income that she might become entitled to receive. The employer will either credit the amount to her bank account, provide units in a unit trust that her employer manages or make additional superannuation contributions. Her preference is to receive units in the unit trust and she lodges the declaration on 30 June 2001.

139. On 1 August 2001 Kathryn's employer decides that she is entitled to a bonus and provides units in a unit trust 1 week later. Accordingly, her entitlement to the bonus does not exist until 1 August 2001. Kathryn's bonus is the subject of an effective SSA. Kathryn's employer is liable to pay FBT on the benefit provided.

Example 6 - partially effective SSA involving leave

140. David Citizen negotiates a SSA for the 2000-01 year of income with his employer at the close of business on 30 June 2000 in relation to his annual leave. The SSA seeks to apply to his leave that has already accrued, together with future leave that will accrue. There are no restrictions under the relevant industrial law, etc., that limit the amount of annual leave that David can forego in exchange for other benefits. As at 30 June 2000, David has an entitlement to annual leave of 4 weeks for services performed in the period 1 January 1999 to 31 December 1999. David has also accrued annual leave of 2 weeks for the period 1 January 2000 to 30 June 2000, although he is not entitled to take this leave until 1 January 2001. David would, however, receive payment of the leave entitlement if he were to resign prior to 1 January 2001.

141. Expense payment reimbursements received by David in exchange for his accrued leave of 2 weeks annual leave and the presently available 4 weeks of annual leave represent the payment of entitlements to leave which have been earned. They cannot be the subject of an effective SSA. The expense payment reimbursements are taken by subsections 6-5(4) and 6-10(3) of the ITAA 1997 to be derived as income. David's employer will have no liability to pay FBT on the benefits provided but will be required to withhold an amount to meet the PAYG withholding obligations.

142. Expense payment reimbursements received by David in lieu of the entitlement that he has foregone for leave accruing after 30 June 2000 represent benefits received under an effective SSA and do not form part of David's assessable income. David's employer is liable to pay FBT on the benefits provided.

Example 7 - effective SSA with a residual entitlement to salary or wages

143. Elizabeth Highflyer enters into an arrangement with her bank employer in which she is entitled to receive expense payment reimbursements of up to ten percent of her remuneration package for future services rendered. The agreement provides that, if at the end of each quarter she has not received ten percent of her remuneration package as an expense payment reimbursement, she can receive the balance as cash.

144. All the expense payment reimbursements are considered to be benefits received under an effective SSA. Elizabeth's employer is liable for FBT on the benefits provided to Elizabeth. Any residual payments of cash received have the character of salary or wages.

Detailed contents list

145. Below is a detailed contents list for this Ruling:

  Paragraph
What this Ruling is about 1
Class of persons/arrangement 1
Legislative Framework 8
A New Tax System changes to the law 17
Terms used 19
Date of effect 24
Ruling 25
Employees - derivation of income 25
Ineffective SSA 27
Effective SSA 28
Employers - income tax, fringe benefits tax, PAYG withholding liabilities and superannuation guarantee 32
Explanations 39
Employees - derivation of income 39
Industrial law 39
Remuneration agreements with employees, directors and office holders 48
Employees 48
Directors 51
Office holders 55
Conflict between employment agreements and industrial law, awards or workplace agreements 58
Interaction between the FBTAA and the ITAA 61
Ordinary or statutory income derived by employees from their employment 63
Derivation of salary or wage assessable income or 'fringe benefit' exempt income 68
Payment of salary or wages 69
Payments and set-offs of cross liabilities between employers and employees 79
Payments to an employee by associates of the employer 84
Payments by employers to a person on behalf of an employee 86
Reduction of entitlement to salary or wages below minimum conditions under industrial law 88
SSAs that involve leave entitlements 89
Alternative view - SSAs that involve leave entitlements 93
SSAs that involve bonus entitlements 97
SSA in which the employee retains a residual entitlement to salary or wages 99
SSA in which the employee retains a residual entitlement to benefits 100
Application of paragraph 26(e) 101
Alternative view - application of paragraph 26(e) 108
Employers - income tax, fringe benefits tax, PAYG withholding obligations and superannuation guarantee 113
Salary or wages 113
Employer superannuation contributions for the purposes of the SGAA 115
Employer superannuation contributions for the purpose of sections 82AAC to 82AAF of the ITAA 1936 119
Employer superannuation contributions into the superannuation fund of an associate of the employee 121
Examples 123
Example 1 - effective SSA 123
Example 2 - effective and ineffective SSA 127
Example 3 - provision of a bonus with no entitlement to salary or wages 134
Example 4 - ineffective SSA involving a bonus 136
Example 5 - effective SSA involving a bonus 138
Example 6 - partially effective SSA involving leave 140
Example 7 - effective SSA with a residual entitlement to salary or wages 143
Detailed contents list 145

Commissioner of Taxation
10 October 2001

Footnotes

1 Explanatory Memorandum distributed to the House of Representatives by the then Treaurer Hom. John Dawkinds, MP.

Previously released in draft form as 1999/D7.

Previously released in draft form as 2001/D5.

References

ATO references:
NO 96/10738-2; 97/2503-2; 99/7747-3; T2001/16595

ISSN: 1039-0731

Related Rulings/Determinations:

TR 92/1
TR 92/20
TR 97/16
TR 2000/14

Subject References:
assessable income
constructive receipt
derivation of income
salary sacrifice

Legislative References:
HEFA 1988 106Q
ITAA 1936 19
ITAA 1936 23L
ITAA 1936 25(1)
ITAA 1936 26(e)
ITAA 1936 26(e)(iv)
ITAA 1936 26(e)(v)
ITAA 1936 82AAC
ITAA 1936 82AAD
ITAA 1936 82AAE
ITAA 1936 82AAC(2A)
ITAA 1936 82AAF
ITAA 1936 159N
ITAA 1936 159SZ
ITAA 1936 159T
ITAA 1936 221A(1)
ITAA 1936 221C
ITAA 1936 251S(1)(a)
ITAA 1936 274(1)(a)(i)
ITAA 1936 281
ITAA 1936 288
ITAA 1936 517
ITAA 1936 Pt III, Div 2 Subdiv AA
ITAA 1936 Pt III, Div 3 Subdiv AA
ITAA 1936 Part IX
ITAA 1997 Part 3-1
ITAA 1997 4-15(1)
ITAA 1997 6-5
ITAA 1997 6-5(4)
ITAA 1997 6-10
ITAA 1997 6-10(3)
ITAA 1997 6-15(2)
ITAA 1997 8-1(1)
ITAA 1997 Subdiv 61-G
ITAA 1997 Subdiv 61-H
FBTAA 1986 136(1)
FBTAA 1986 136(1)(j)
FBTAA 1986 136(1)(g)
FBTAA 1986 136(1)(j)(i)
SCT(A&C)A 1997 7(2)
SCT(A&C)A 1997 10(2)
SCT(A&C)A 1997 15(1)
SCT(A&C)A 1997 43
SGAA 1992 22
SGAA 1992 23
SGAA 1992 23(2)
SGAA 1992 23(3)
ITRA 1986 Div 5
CSAA 1989 36
CSAA 1989 38
TAA 1953 Part IVAAA
TAA 1953 Schedule 1, 11-5
TAA 1953 Schedule 1, 12-35
TAA 1953 Schedule 1, 12-40
TAA 1953 Schedule 1, 12-45
TAA 1953 Schedule 1, 12-115
TAA 1953 Schedule 1, 12-120
TAA 1953 Schedule 1, Part 2-5
SISR 1994 1.03(1)
SISR 1994 5.01
SISR 1994 5.04
SISR 1994 Part 7
RSAR 1997 1.03(1)
RSAR 1997 3.03(1)
RSAR 1997 3.04

Case References:
Alexander Tennant v. Robert Sinclair Smith
[1892] 3 TC 158
[1892] AC 150


Brent v. FC of T
(1971) 125 CLR 418
71 ATC 4195
(1971) 2 ATR 563

Constable v. FC of T
(1952) 86 CLR 402
(1952) 5 AITR 371
(1952) 10 ATD 93

Dean and Anor v. FC of T
97 ATC 4762
(1997) 37 ATR 52

FC of T v. Cooke and Sherden
80 ATC 4140
(1980) 10 ATR 696

FC of T v. Steeves Agnew & Co (Vic) Pty Ltd
(1951) 82 CLR 408
(1951) 9 ATD 259

FC of T v. P Iori & Sons Pty Ltd
87 ATC 4775
(1987) 19 ATR 201

Gair v. FC of T
(1944) 71 CLR 388
(1944) 7 ATD 443

Kilminster v. Sun Newspapers Ltd
(1931) 46 CLR 284
(1931) 5 ALJ 285

Lend Lease Corporation v. FC of T
90 ATC 4401
(1990) 21 ATR 402

Nilsen Development Pty. Ltd. & Ors. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation
(1981) 144 CLR 616
81 ATC 4031
11 ATR 505

Newcastle Club Ltd v. FC of T
94 ATC 4594
(1994) 29 ATR 216

Poletti v. Ecob (No.2)
(1989) 31 IR 321

Roads and Traffic Authority of NSW v. FC of T
93 ATC 4508
(1993) 26 ATR 76

Temple Wholesale Flower Supplies Pty Ltd v. FC of T
90 ATC 4610
(1990) 21 ATR 556

Temple Wholesale Flower Supplies Pty Ltd v. FC of T
91 ATC 4387
(1991) 21 ATR 1606

Case R23
84 ATC 215

Case 77
(1984) 27 CTBR (NS) 604

Case V21
88 ATC 217

Case 4067
(1988) 19 ATR 3081

Case V49
88 ATC 381

Case 4188
(1988) 19 ATR 3336

Case U152
87 ATC 894

Other References:
Explanatory Memorandum: Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Bill 1992

TR 2001/10 history
  Date: Version: Change:
You are here 10 October 2001 Original ruling  
  31 July 2002 Consolidated ruling Addendum