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RECOMMENDATION
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GOVERNMENT RESPONSE
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Chapter 2: ESOPs antipodean fables: nature
and rationale
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1
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The Committee recommends that the Government direct the Australian Taxation
Office to conduct a study to determine:
- the number and type of employee share plans operating in Australia;
- the types of enterprise in which they operate;
- the number of employees in such plans;
- the value of holdings in those plans;
- the amount of revenue provided to the Commonwealth each year from
the sale of employee share plan equities;
- revenue foregone by the Commonwealth through the operation of employee
share plans; and
- the performance of these plans in attaining the public policy objectives
set for them and in doing so, identify and report upon problem areas
in plans operating both inside and outside Division 13A.
The Committee recommends that the Australian Taxation Office collect
such information annually. The Government should consider the merit of
making such information publicly available and, if so, on an annual basis.
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The Government does not consider that the information specified in the
recommendation should be collected by the Australian Taxation Office.
The Employee Share Ownership Development Unit will be able to collect
information about the barriers to further participation in employee share
ownership.
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2
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The Committee recommends that the Government fund, on a contestable basis,
independent, university-based research into best practice management in
relation to employee share plans.
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The Government supports the establishment of a development unit within
DEWR. The Unit will have capacity to support research of this nature.
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3
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The Committee recommends that the Government develop, in conjunction
with educational institutions and private sector industry groups, educational
programs designed to make information about contemporary management practices
available to small and medium unlisted companies, and companies in sunrise
industries.
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Noted. The Government supports measures to improve the skill development
of the small business sector. There are a number of government programmes
that provide practical assistance and encouragement to small businesses
in adopting contemporary management practices. One example is the Small
Business Assistance Programme part of which provides funding to service
providers, such as industry groups and educational institutions, for projects
that provide contemporary business skills training, mentoring and practical
support for women in small businesses.
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4
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The Committee recommends that legislative measures should ensure that
employee share plans are not used as an alternative to mandatory superannuation
for general employees.
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The Government supports the recommendation that the status quo is maintained
in regard to compulsory superannuation and that employee share plans are
not used as an alternative to this.
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5
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The Committee recommends that public policy should be formulated so as
to promote employee share plans for the following purposes:
- to better align the interests of employees and employers;
- to develop national savings;
- to facilitate the development of sunrise enterprises; and
- to facilitate employee buyouts and succession planning.
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The Government broadly supports the development of policy on employee
share ownership to better align the interests of employers and employees.
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6
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The Committee recommends that the Government introduce a concessional
taxation rate on up to 50 per cent of the proceeds of the sale of any
equities acquired under an employee share plan that operates under Division
13A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, and which is open to 75 per
cent of a company's employees, where the taxpayer:
- invests, as a preserved contribution, up to 50 per cent of the proceeds
of the sale of any equities acquired under such a plan in an approved
superannuation fund in the participant's name; or
- invests in an approved trust structure established to provide income
for a dependant, for the term of their legal dependency; or
- has reached retirement age or after, and uses the proceeds to fund
retirement.
The Committee recommends that a maximum allowable limit should be applied
in any one tax year. That limit should be set to advantage general employee
share plans. The concessional tax treatment will apply only to that qualifying
portion of the proceeds invested in the terms described. The nature and
level of taxation concessions provided should be determined by the Government
after consultation with appropriate industry bodies, the Employee Share
Plan Advisory Board (see recommendation 9) and the Australian Taxation
Office.
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This recommendation is not supported.
Given the scale of tax concessions currently attached to superannuation
and employee share acquisition schemes, the Government believes that further
concessions along the lines proposed by this recommendation are not warranted.
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7
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The Committee recommends that a national review be conducted on the possible
investment options, that could be encouraged in addition to compulsory
superannuation, that would:
- increase national savings, and in the longer term,
- promote greater self-reliance in retirement.
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Noted. The Government continues to monitor the operation of Australia's
superannuation system with a view to ensuring that it continues to meet
the needs of an ageing society, including the promotion of greater self-reliance
in retirement. Superannuation remains a tax-preferred investment for all
taxpayers. A number of the measures introduced by the Government in A
Better Superannuation System provide further incentives for voluntary
contributions to superannuation.
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Chapter 3: Aligning interests: employee share plans and public policy
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8
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The Committee recommends that Parliament enact a single piece of legislation,
bringing under one Act all laws governing employee share plans, their
structure, taxation treatment, reporting and disclosure requirements.
This legislation should apply to those plans presently operating under
Division 13A as well as those plans that do not. The advice of relevant
regulatory, industry and accounting bodies should be sought in undertaking
this significant reform.
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Advice from the Australian Government Solicitor has indicated that, for
constitutional and practical reasons, it would be unwise to enact one
central piece of legislation for Employee Share Schemes.
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9
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The Committee recommends that an Employee Share Plan Advisory Board be
established:
- consisting of all relevant interests, including but not limited to:
the Australian Taxation Office, the Australian Securities and Investment
Commission and representatives of employers and employees; and
- to provide advice on the policies to be implemented in order to foster
the widespread development of employee share plans amongst general employees
and in sectors where uptake has been poorer, such as in small and medium
companies and sunrise enterprises.
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The Government does not accept the need for the establishment of a further
body to provide advice on ESS.
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10
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The Committee recommends that the Department of Employment, Workplace
Relations and Small Business establish an Employee Share Plan Promotional
Unit. Its purpose would be to actively promote employee share plans, including
assistance with design, implementation and the provision of information
to both employers and employees.
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The Government supports the establishment of such a unit within DEWR.
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11
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The Committee recommends that the Employee Share Plan Promotional Unit
should aim, in cooperation with a proposed Employee Share Plan Regulatory
Agency in the Australian Taxation Office, to develop and make available
to employers and employees, model or off-the-shelf plans. This
would reduce costs to smaller businesses while facilitating the uptake
of employee share plans already approved by the ATO as being consistent
with taxation provisions.
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The Government supports the provision of information about schemes. This
will be one of the roles undertaken by the Development Unit.
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12
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The Committee recommends that a minimum information list for employees
be developed and specified in legislation for all employee share plans.
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The Government supports this recommendation; however, legislative provisions
for minimum information requirements are already contained in the Corporations
Act 2001. The Development Unit will prepare a plain English minimum
information list, in consultation with other relevant agencies.
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13
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The Committee recommends that the Australian Taxation Office receive
an additional, specific appropriation to fund investigation of the promoters
of aggressive tax schemes. Further consideration should be given to appropriations
in support of ATO-initiated legal action should this be supported by the
outcome of systematic inquiry.
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The ATO currently has resources allocated to examining the affairs of
promoters of aggressive tax schemes, including employee benefit arrangements.
The level of resources allocated to examining promoters has been determined
in accordance with the ATO's risk assessment process having regard to
the relative priorities of all areas of risk. The level of resources allocated
to this function will continue to be assessed annually, on the basis of
those relative priorities.
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14
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The Committee recommends that the Government consider that a cap be applied
to salary sacrifice arrangements when foregone salary is contributed to
an employee share plan qualifying under Division 13A. Further concessional
arrangements should apply to sunrise industries, small and medium businesses
where the Share Plan Regulatory Agency recommended elsewhere in this report
is satisfied that the employee share plan is a bona fide employee buyout.
This arrangement would apply for a defined period of time to be negotiated
between the Government, the regulatory agency and relevant industry bodies.
The Committee further recommends that the Government give consideration
to requiring all sacrificed salary in executive-only or non-13A plans
be assessable in the income tax year in which the sacrificed salary was
earnt, having conducted first an analysis of its impact on corporations,
especially their ability to attract and retain key personnel.
Any substantial changes to the taxation treatment of executive remuneration
packages should be phased in and prospective.
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The recommendation is not supported.
The Government considers that issues relating to the amount and composition
of employee remuneration are matters which are more appropriately left
to employers and employees to determine.
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15
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The Committee recommends that the Government establish an independent
inquiry to examine:
- the extent to which FBT exemptions are being used to develop and
underwrite executive salary packaging, the cost to revenue and the economic
benefits, including the attraction and retention of key personnel;
- the merit of plans, open to executives only, which operate on a salary
sacrifice basis or on low or no interest loans, or which use various
FBT exemptions, to continue to operate as they stand;
- whether limits should be placed on the amount of salary that may
be sacrificed, the size of a low or no interest loan that may be accepted,
or the amount of FBT exemption that may be allowable, without the value
of the benefit being treated in the same way as cash income; and
- whether sunrise enterprises should be given access to concessional
taxation treatment in respect of the FBT liability or the taxation treatment
of salary sacrifice and company provided loans.
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The Government believes that the current tax arrangements are appropriate.
The fringe benefits tax (FBT) system is designed to ensure that salary
packaging results in no overall loss to Commonwealth revenue, with employees
being subject to income tax on the wage or salary component of their remuneration
package and employers paying FBT at the top marginal personal tax rate
on the non-salary component. The major forms of non-salary remuneration
not dealt with under FBT are given treatment under alternative taxation
regimes, such as those which apply to superannuation and to employee share
discounts.
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16
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The Committee recommends that the Attorney General prepare a discussion
paper for public consideration, on the issues surrounding the clarification
of the powers of the Commissioner for Taxation in relation to the discovery
of information concerning aggressive tax planning schemes. This would
include information held by legal practitioners. Particular consideration
should be given to ensuring that information collected is used only for
the detection and prevention of aggressive tax planning.
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The Treasurer and the Commissioner of Taxation have confirmed that aggressive
tax planning schemes are being dealt with effectively under the Part IVA
anti-avoidance provision of the ITAA36.
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17
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The Committee recommends that any legislation providing for employee
share plans contain a preamble that clearly articulates the public policy
goals intended by Parliament.
The Committee recommends that the Commissioner for Taxation and any other
regulatory authority be required to take notice of, and give effect to,
this preamble in their rulings in respect of employee share plans legislation.
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The recommendation refers to the proposed standalone legislation for
employee share plans which, based on AGS advice, cannot be enacted.
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18
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The Committee recommends that:
- an Employee Share Plan Regulatory Agency be established, by legislation
and operate under the aegis of the Australian Taxation Office;
- the agency should be established as an element of any consolidated
employee share plan legislation; and
- the agency's responsibilities should be to:
1. administer any employee share plan legislation;
2. monitor the operation of employee share plans;
3. advise appropriate regulatory authorities so that the intent of
the legislation can be attained;
4. advise government of improvements to legislation that would facilitate
the creation of employee share plans while at the same time reducing
opportunities for their use other than for purposes intended by Parliament.
This would include, but not be limited to, defining small, medium and
sunrise enterprises and establishing criteria for determining what constitutes
an aggressive tax planning scheme; and
5. develop, in consultation with stakeholders, a number of model plans
with known taxation consequences, and provide these to the Employee
Share Plan Promotional Unit in the Department of Employment Workplace
Relations and Small Business, recommended elsewhere in this report.
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The Government does not accept the need for a separate regulatory agency.
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19
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The Committee recommends that:
- all employee share plans operating in Australia be registered with
the regulatory agency and be given a unique identifying number, whether
or not they operate under Division 13A or some other arrangement;
- registration of employee share plans involve providing to the regulatory
authority the following information:
- the names of participants;
- the type, number and value of equities provided;
- the method of valuing equities;
- the rules of the plan and how it operates and is administered;
- the duration of the plan;
- any concessions provided to the plan; and
- the number of times equities have been issued under the plan;
- taxpayers be required to disclose on their tax returns their participation
in employee share plans; and
- data be collected, on an annual basis, as to the number and types
of membership, size of employee share plan and other operational details.
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The Government does not accept the need for a separate regulatory agency.
In addition, the Government does not consider that participation in employee
share schemes should be reported in individuals income tax returns as
this would add significantly to the complexity of individual return arrangements
for reasons that are not related to the effective collection of revenue.
In addition, as the data would be provided by taxpayers, information on
the characteristics of the firms offering ESS and the type and nature
of those schemes would not be known
The Employee Share Ownership Development Unit will be able to collect
information about the barriers to further participation in employee share
ownership.
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20
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The Committee recommends that the regulatory agency be empowered to declare
that a certain share plan has a primary purpose beyond that intended by
Parliament. The agency should be empowered to make an assessment in respect
of the income and/or equities in the plan.
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As above.
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21
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The Committee recommends that:
- the Government re-examine the underlying policy of private binding
rulings, and consider options for increasing the transparency of such
rulings; and
- the feasibility of posting rulings issued in respect of employee
share plans on the Australian Taxation Office internet site should be
examined, provided that no taxpayer identifying information is provided.
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The Government notes that the Commissioner of Taxation commissioned a
review by Mr Tom Sherman AO of the systems and procedures relating to
the issue of private rulings by the ATO.
As a result of one of the recommendations of the Sherman Report the ATO
now publishes edited versions of all written binding advice it issues
on the Register of Private Binding Advice that is available on the ATO
website. This register deals with all applications for binding advice
received after 31 March 2001 (except for GST specific private rulings
for which relate to applications received after 30 June 2001).
The advice is edited to protect the secrecy and privacy of the person
or entity to which it was given. The ATO publishes edited versions of
this advice to improve the integrity and transparency of the private ruling
system. However, only the person to which the private ruling
relates can rely on the advice that is contained within it.
All written binding advice issued by the ATO is required to
be based on an ATO precedential decision. Those precedential decisions
are contained on the ATO Legal database that is available on the above ATO
website. Taxpayers who are seeking an indication of the Commissioner's
view on the application of the law in particular circumstances can
search this database. Should they wish to do so they, of course,
can apply for a private ruling.
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22
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The Committee recommends that the Employee Share Plan Regulatory Agency,
or failing the creation of such an agency, the Commissioner for Taxation,
be provided with a discretionary power to waive sections 139CD(3) and
139 DD(3) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, provided that:
- the plan in question would otherwise satisfy Division 13A;
- the Commissioner is satisfied that the plan is not being used and
will not be used for aggressive tax planning; and
- there is another plan operating under Division 13A, but open to 75
per cent of employees, with an uptake rate of more than 50 per cent
and no disincentive conditions, that is offered at the same time and
in respect of which the same exemption is sought.
[139CD(3) & 139DD(3) - the qualifying condition that the company
is the employer of the taxpayer or a holding company of the employer of
the taxpayer.]
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This recommendation is not supported. The Government considers that allowing
individuals other than employees to benefit from ESS tax concessions would
be inconsistent with the broader policy objectives of aligning the interests
of employees and employers.
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23
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The Committee commends the draft Registered Organisations Bill 2000 to
Parliament and recommends that any legislation dealing with employee associations,
provide explicitly:
- for membership of employee share plans;
- that when the members of a plan are also members of an employee association,
the eligibility for registration of that association; and
- for the protection of the freedom of choice of employees who participate
in enterprise associations and also participate in an employee share
plan.
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The Workplace Relations Amendment (Registration and Accountability of
Organisations) Act 2002 was passed by the Senate on 16 October 2002 and
amends a number of provisions of the Workplace Relations Act 1996 (WR
Act) relating to registered organisations. Amendments in relation to enterprise
unions and employee share plans had been included in the relevant Bill
as introduced but were not included in the Bill as passed; if such amendments
proceed it is expected that this will occur through separate single issue
legislation.
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24
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The Committee recommends that the Government refer to the Employee Share
Plan Advisory Board the question of whether taxation concessions available
to employers for establishing qualifying employee share plans be conditional
upon there being a non-interference clause inserted in the qualifying
conditions in Division 13A. The intention would be to provide explicit
guarantees for the freedom of choice and association of employers and
employees.
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The Government supports this recommendation; however, further response
is not required as it is already covered by the freedom of association
elements of the WR Act.
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25
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The Committee recommends that employees and employers be permitted to
reach an agreement to trade wages and conditions (but not superannuation
entitlements) for participation in an employee share plan so long as the
following conditions are met:
- the agreement is part of a reasonable strategy to deal with a business
crisis;
- the agreement is not contrary to the public interest;
- the agreement involves full disclosure of the company's situation
and risks that can reasonably be known;
- the negotiations leading to the agreement involve an independent
assessment that the strategy is soundly based;
- the participants negotiate free of duress; and
- any agreement struck should be ratified by an independent arbiter,
such as the Australian Industrial Relations Commission or the Office
of the Employment Advocate.
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The WR Act already provides sufficient flexibility to allow employers
to develop agreements to assist in addressing a business crisis, while
maintaining appropriate protections through the No Disadvantage Test (NDT).
This is applied to all agreements made under the WR Act and ensures that
the agreement does not reduce the overall terms and conditions for employees.
Where employee shares form part of the remuneration package for an employee
or employees, those shares could be taken into account by the AIRC or
Employment Advocate (EA) in applying the NDT, the assessment of the value
of employee shares in such a situation would be a matter for the AIRC
or EA. However, an agreement may be approved even if it fails the NDT
if the AIRC is satisfied that the agreement is part of a reasonable strategy
to deal with a business crisis and is not contrary to the public interest.
For example, the Greyhound Pioneer 1998 agreement, which contained an
ESS, was approved under the public interest test.
Whilst ESS would allow for some fluctuation in earnings (as with normal
performance bonus arrangements), their use would be supported as an addition
to, rather than a substitute for award wage entitlements.
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Chapter 4: Administration and Taxation Arrangements
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26
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The Committee recommends that the Government clarify the taxation treatment
of trust arrangements that are used to operate bona fide employee share
plans established under Division 13A, and legislate specifically to exempt
such trusts from proposed entity taxation provisions.
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The Exposure Draft to the New Business Tax System (Entity Taxation) Bill
2000 was withdrawn on 27 February 2001. The Government has since indicated
that the entity tax treatment of trusts will not be proceeding.
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27
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The Committee recommends that the Government amend those sections of
Division 13A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 providing for
taxation of equities in tax deferral elections, currently 139B(3) and
139 CC(3) and 139CC(4), to give effect to the following taxation treatment
of the gain in capital value:
- that income tax be levied on: the value of the discount on the equity
when originally allocated, inflated by the application of compound interest,
for the period of time the equity has been held and at an interest rate
as determined from time to time;
- that if income tax or FBT has not otherwise been paid on sacrificed
salary, then the amount of salary sacrifice that has funded the purchase
of an equity, be liable to income tax calculated as the value of the
sacrificed salary inflated by the application of compound interest for
the period of time the equity has been held, at an interest rate as
determined from time to time; and
- that capital gains tax be levied on: the value of the gain in capital
value less the inflated value of the discount and, if applicable, the
inflated value of any salary sacrificed. In considering this recommendation,
the advice of the Australian Taxation Office should be sought to ensure
that it is satisfied with the integrity measures and that the amendment
is made in the knowledge of its revenue implications.
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The recommendation is not supported. The Government is concerned that
the proposed method of calculating the taxation liability on share discounts
under the deferral option would add significantly to the complexity of
the taxation provisions covering employee share schemes and result in
increased taxpayer compliance costs.
As a general point, the Government considers that discounts on shares
acquired under employee share schemes are in the nature of employee remuneration
and are more appropriately taxed as income of the employee (subject to
the concessional treatment under Division 13A) rather than as capital
gains.
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28
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The Committee recommends that:
- the Government direct the Australian Taxation Office and the Australian
Securities and Investment Commission, in consultation with interested
stakeholders, to develop appropriate and simplified valuation processes;
- the anomalies and uncertainties in the present valuation system be
addressed and where possible removed; and
- model plans should be devised by the ATO, in consultation with stakeholders,
and that these model plans specify appropriate, simplified and ATO-endorsed
valuation processes.
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The Government supports the removal of anomalies and uncertainties in
valuation processes but considers these should generally continue to be
remedied through AASB processes. The Government notes that the
AASB has released a draft accounting standard that prescribes a method
of valuation of share options granted to employees for financial reporting
required under the Corporations Act 2001. Valuation methods
are generally determined by the Australian Accounting Standards Board,
which has its own processes for public consultation.
The Government notes that the valuation arrangements set out in Division
13A for valuing options over shares in unlisted companies use an accepted
methodology for valuing options which has been modified to make them easier
to use. The Government also notes that the variable factors underlying
the tables are generally concessional.
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29
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The Committee recommends that the Australian Taxation Office and the
Australian Securities and Investment Commission, in consultation with
interested stakeholders, develop appropriate and simplified processes
for valuing the discount on shares and the value of untraded shares or
options.
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As above.
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30
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The Committee recommends that the Government move to amend the relevant
sections of Division 13A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, so
that when:
(a) shares or options, in an enterprise which is subject to a corporate
restructure, merger, takeover, or acquisition have to be exchanged for
other shares or options; and
(b) the original shares or options are qualifying shares or rights, held
under a Division 13A plan; and
(c) a tax deferral election had been made in relation to those shares
or options; and
(d) the new shares or options are qualifying shares or rights, offered
under a Division 13A plan; then:
any income tax liability from the proceeds of the compulsory disposal
of the original shares or options should become payable when a cessation
event for the new shares or options takes place; or the employee be given
the opportunity to transfer the entire interest to a preserved superannuation
fund, at the taxation rate applicable to contributions to superannuation
contributions.
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The recommendation is partly supported. Generally, as the concessions
are made available in the context of the employer-employee relationship,
it is not unreasonable for a taxing point to arise when that relationship
is severed.
However, the Government does consider that it is appropriate to provide
rollover for employees in the event of a corporate restructure where both
their employment and the schemes in which they participate remain substantially
the same.
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31
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The Committee recommends that the Government move to amend the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 so that for shares or rights allocated under
a Division 13A deferred election plan, liability for taxation occur at
the time of disposal, provided that:
- The plan is one open to 75 per cent of an employer's employees; or
- If the plan is open to a lesser number of employees (i.e. it is a
restricted plan), then there was offered in that tax year or concurrently
with the restricted plan, another plan that is open to 75 per cent of
employees and meets the qualifying conditions in Division 13A; or
- If such a plan is not offered, reasons must be provided to the Employee
Share Plan Regulatory Agency by the employer, explaining why either
of the first two conditions have not been met.
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This recommendation is not supported. The Government considers that the
ten year deferral period available under the current arrangements is already
generous and offers adequate scope for encouraging long-term participation
in employee share schemes.
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32
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The Committee recommends that the $1,000 concession available to share
plans operating under Division 13A be increased.
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This recommendation is not supported. The Government considers that existing
concessional taxation arrangements provide an appropriate balance between
encouraging ESS and limiting overuse.
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33
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The Committee recommends that three years from the commencement of its
operation, the Share Plan Regulatory Agency examine the operation of employee
share plans and supporting legislation, and report to Parliament. In particular
the agency should examine:
- the cost to revenue of employee share plans, whether they operate
under Division 13A or not;
- participation rates;
- whether the legislation is achieving the public policy outcomes intended
when it was enacted; and
- any possible improvements to the legislative arrangements that would
promote the further spread of plans amongst general employees.
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The Government does not accept the need for a separate regulatory agency.
However, as noted in the response to recommendation 1 the employee share
ownership development unit would be able to collect information about
the barriers to further participation in employee share ownership.
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34
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The Committee recommends that the 5 per cent limit on the number of qualifying
shares or rights described in section 139C13(6) and (7) of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 be removed and replaced with a rule that:
(a) stipulates that any allocation under an employee share plan that
will result in an employee holding more than 5 per cent of the shares
or controlling more than 5 per cent of the votes at a general meeting
be advised to, and approved by,
- a general meeting of owners; and
- the Share Plan Regulatory Agency on the basis that it is a genuine
employee share plan established for a recognised purpose, such as:
- an employee buyout;
- spreading equity ownership throughout a small or medium enterprise;
or
- facilitating the creation and growth of a 'sunrise' enterprise.
(b) allows an employee to hold as many shares as any other member in
a particular share scheme, up to a maximum of 25 per cent for each employee
in that scheme, provided that:
(c) if the scheme in (b) is restricted to a small number of employees,
rather than provided to all employees, then there is at the same time
another 'general' scheme open to at least 75 per cent of employees, which:
- is not structured in any way so as to deter employees from participating;
and
- provides for each member of that scheme to be allocated equities,
the value of the discount of which must exceed the level of the discount
allowable as a tax exemption under a tax exempt scheme operating under
Division 13A. This is currently $1,000.
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This recommendation is not supported. The Government considers that existing
arrangements provide an appropriate balance between encouraging ESS and
limiting overuse. However, the Development Unit will be able to collect
information about the barriers to further participation in ESS and the
scope for current ESS to encourage start-up activity.
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35
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The Committee recommends that:
- the intent of section 139CE(2) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936
be clarified, so as to remove doubt about its meaning; and
- unlisted enterprises be permitted to require employee share plan
participants to sell any equities acquired through an employee share
plan to the plan manager when they choose to dispose of the equities.
The valuation method used should be determined by the Employee Share
Plan Regulatory Agency.
[Section 139 CE(2) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, requires that
a share plan not contain any condition that would result in the forfeiture
of the shares or rights acquired.]
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The recommendation is not supported. The Government considers the current
Division 13A qualifying conditions are appropriate.
Further, the Government does not consider that it would be appropriate
to require employees to dispose of ESS equities to a single buyer.
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36
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The Committee recommends that Division 13A be amended to allow stapled
securities as qualifying equities in addition to ordinary shares or options
to ordinary shares, provided that any plans that do use such equities
have the approval of the Share Plan Regulatory Agency.
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This recommendation is not supported. The Government considers that the
provisions that restrict Division 13A qualifying equities to ordinary
shares or options to ordinary shares is appropriate to achieve the policy
objectives of more closely aligning the interests of employees and employers.
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37
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The Committee recommends that employee share plans operating under Division
13A and which are open to at least 75 per cent of a company's employees,
not be confined to ordinary shares or options to ordinary shares. They
should also be permitted to offer any other instrument or security in
the employer which is able to be dealt with by an employee, provided that
such an instrument or security confers no less ownership entitlements
upon the employee shareholder than those usually conferred by ordinary
shares in a company.
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As above.
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38
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The Committee recommends that, in cases of genuine hardship, employees
who are members of plans open to more than 75 per cent of the employees
of an enterprise, be exempted from the three-year sale restriction limit.
Exemptions would be granted only on application to the Employee Share
Plan Regulatory Agency, that has been previously recommended. (Chapter
3, recommendation 17)
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The recommendation is not supported. The three-year sale restriction
is integral to preventing abuse of the exemption. For example, allowing
employees who elect to have the discount included in assessable income
in the year in which the shares were acquired to sell those shares in
the same year would, in effect, be equivalent to allowing them to receive
$1,000 of tax-free income with no ongoing benefits in terms of the employer-employee
relationship.
Given the importance of the three year sale restriction to maintaining
the integrity of Division 13A, any provisions covering exemption from
the three year sale restriction condition would be both legislatively
and administratively complicated and could potentially affect all employees
in the plan.
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39
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The Committee recommends, subject to the Australian Taxation Office being
satisfied as to the strength of the integrity measures, that:
(a) where the tax grouping rules prevent the creation of employee share
plans, case by case relief from them should be provided, so long as the
plan is operated under Division 13A and it is a plan in which general
employees are eligible to participate; and
(b) where a person becomes a resident of the Commonwealth, for taxation
purposes, and has acquired before becoming a resident, equities as part
of an employee share plan; then
- any tax paid on those equities in a foreign jurisdiction should be
taken into account in their taxation liability in respect of those equities
in Australia; so that
- any income derived from those equities should be taxed in such
a way that the person will not pay tax on those equities at a higher
rate than would be the case if the equities had been acquired by
a resident of the Commonwealth.
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The recommendation is not supported.
The consolidation regime for wholly-owned groups, which commenced from
1 July 2002, generally replaces the grouping rules in the tax law. The
grouping rules generally cease to apply after 30 June 2003. Consolidation
allows a company operating an employee share plan to be a subsidiary member
of a consolidated group provided the shares issued under the plan do not
exceed 1 per cent of the ordinary shares in the company.
The current Review of International Tax Arrangements has sought views
on whether the double taxation of employee share options should be addressed
through bilateral tax treaty negotiations and possible consequential changes
to Australia's domestic tax law treatment (Option 5.2 for consultation).
The Review notes the work being undertaken by the OECD on cross-border
tax issues arising from employee share options.
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Chapter 5: Further initiatives to facilitate the growth of employee
share plans
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40
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The Committee recommends that the Australian Securities and Investment
Commission:
- monitor the operation of the provisions of Corporate Law Economic
Reform Program Act 1999 and Policy Statement 49 in respect of their
effect on employee share plans and advise the Treasurer annually as
to:
- the number of applicants who seek to use the relevant provisions
of the CLERP Act;
- the number of applicants who seek relief under Policy Statement
49;
- the number of applications in each class which were approved;
- the number of applications which were not approved; and
- if not approved, the reasons why they were not approved.
- advise the Government as to any amendments that may be required to
facilitate the operation of the Corporate Law Economic Reform Program
Act 1999 in respect of employee share plans without unduly increasing
investor risk;
- if necessary, amend Policy Statement 49 so as to facilitate the creation
and operation of employee share plans, especially in regard to unlisted,
small and medium companies, and those in sunrise industries, without
unduly increasing investor risk; and
- advise the Treasurer on the feasibility of a specific disclosure
document designed to be used by the operators of employee share plans
that cannot otherwise use the disclosure exemption provisions or the
Offer Information Statement provisions of the CLERP Act.
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The recommendation is not supported.
The primary purpose of issuing shares to employees is to foster the relationship
between a listed company and its employees, rather than providing an alternative
method to raise capital. That purpose is the basis for the limited exemption
from prospectus disclosure for employee share plans offered under the
Australian Securities and Investment Commission's (ASIC) Policy Statement
49.
Normally, a company that is issuing shares must provide adequate disclosure
through a prospectus. A prospectus is designed to ensure investors are
fully informed and able to assess the benefits and risks of investing
in a company, whilst allowing companies efficient access to capital.
To facilitate efficient fundraising whilst ensuring appropriate consumer
protection, the Corporate Law Economic Reform Program Act 1999
(CLERP Act) introduced certain exemptions from the fundraising regime,
with a focus on assisting small and medium companies. The business community
has supported the improved quality of information available to the market
as a result of the CLERP Act reforms.
ASIC is responsible for the administration of the Corporations Act
2001 (the Act), which includes issuing policy statements on how it
will administer the Act. ASIC is not ordinarily responsible for law reform
or reporting to Government on specific policy positions. Instead of a
formal reporting process to Government, ASIC has the ability to review
and modify its policy statements (such as Policy Statement 49) should
it consider further relief is warranted or grant individual relief on
a case by case basis.
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41
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The Committee recommends that it be a requirement that the following
information pertaining to employee share plans be provided in a readily
understandable form in all annual reports:
- the total value and size of all employee share plans, including the
value of options and other equities and number thereof;
- the value and number of equities allocated in the year in respect
of all plans and types of equity;
- the method of valuing the equities and determining the size of allocation;
- the aggregate amount received in the year by all employees. The aggregate
sum received by directors and executive employees and other employees
receiving executive-level remuneration should be identified as a specific
line item;
- the total value and number of equities of all sorts allocated to,
or exercised by, directors, executives and any other employee receiving
executive-level remuneration, and the value and number of options which
they allowed to lapse;
- whether the equities allocated in the year in question or in previous
years under an employee share plan gave rise to an expense for the enterprise
and the size of that expense; and
- the effects, if any, of the exercise of those options on the enterprise's
financial standing.
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Enhancing reporting of employee share options is being addressed through
the AASB process.
In the CLERP 9 policy proposal paper, which was released by the Treasurer
on 18 September 2002, the Government formalised its support for the expense
recognition of share options paid to employees in company financial statements.
The International Accounting Standards Board issued a draft standard
dealing with accounting for share-based payment, which includes the payment
of options to employees, in November 2002. A final standard is expected
to be issued in the second half of 2003. Comments on the draft are due
by 7 March 2003.
The AASB will adopt the IASB standard once it is finalised by the IASB,
subject to its own due process. The proposed approach to recognising options
as an expense requires companies to record an expense against their retained
profits. It is likely that after companies make a debit entry against
their retained profits (to recognise the expense) they will make a corresponding
credit entry to their share capital account resulting in a capitalisation
of profits. (The AASB has indicated that the transfer of the expensed
amount to the share capital account may not be mandated by the International
Standard.)
To facilitate the earliest possible adoption of a standard requiring
expensing of share options, the AASB has decided to issue the IASB standard
with a scope temporarily restricted (until 1 January 2005) to equity compensation
for employees only. The IASB draft standard also covers other share-based
transactions which cross-reference IASB standards that will not be adopted
in Australia until 2005.
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42
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The Committee recommends that information about all of an enterprise's
employee share plan or plans:
- be held by a designated officer of each company;
- be notified to the regulatory agency or, failing the establishment
of such an agency, the Australian Securities and Investment Commission.
The Committee further recommends that failure to disclose that information
or providing misleading information should be considered an offence.
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The recommendation is not supported. The Government does not consider
that employers should be required to maintain and disclose information
regarding ESS in addition to what is already required by the Corporations
Act 2001 and Accounting Standards.
The issue of whether a company's information should be held and made
available by a designated officer of a company should generally be a matter
for the corporate governance arrangements of that company. If such an
arrangement is adopted it will not remove the general responsibility imposed
on the company and its officers to provide and maintain timely and accurate
information required by the provisions of the Corporations Act 2001.
The Government considers that the Corporations Act 2001 already provides
a comprehensive and appropriate penalty system for failure to provide
information or provide misleading information.
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43
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The Committee recommends that when a significant proportion of the equities
held by an executive or director of a company is to be disposed of within
a two-week period, fourteen days notification should be provided to the
Australian Stock Exchange and the Australian Securities and Investment
Commission, for public release. The threshold which triggers the requirement
for such notification should be determined by the Government in consultation
with the Employee Share Plan Advisory Board.
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The recommendation is not supported.
The Government considers that the existing regulatory framework is generally
appropriate in addressing the investor protection concerns underlying
the recommendation. In light of the existence of general obligations for
the disclosure of information and prohibitions against insider trading,
it is not considered appropriate to enact specific rules relating to ESS.
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44
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The Committee recommends that the Australian Taxation Office and Treasury
evaluate the feasibility of requiring, through legislation, employee share
plans to provide guaranteed levels of employee share ownership to different
classes of employees, in listed private sector organisations that have
more than twenty employees.
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The Government does not support this recommendation as the establishment
of an employee share plan should be at the discretion of the employer.
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45
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The Committee recommends that when more information is available about
the operation of employee share plans, a further Parliamentary inquiry
be conducted into the use and nature of employee equity arrangements,
with particular emphasis on the feasibility of:
- providing equities at full cost;
- providing equities in enterprises other than in the employer of the
person receiving the equity;
- further assisting share plans designed to facilitate succession and
employee buyouts and buy-ins and as elements in industry assistance
programs; and
- allowing taxation concessions on some portion of a capital gain arising
from the sale of equities into an employee share plan, so long as the
proceeds are invested in another enterprise.
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The Government will consider the impact of significant changes in this
area on its current policy settings.
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