TAX NEWS | VIEWS | CLUESWelcome to the February Edition of the Spry Roughley Report This first edition of our Newsletter for 2011 comes with all of our good wishes for your success in this New Year. What follows below gives news of what has been happening here at Spry Roughley in the past few months and the usual summary of some key tax issues for you to be aware of. We are excited about 2011. We have a new office, but at the same address, which now includes conference and meeting rooms. We would be delighted to show you around the new office - please drop in when you are next in the area. In totally refitting the office with only a half day interruption to work we were well supported by Working Environments - a firm of designers and truly hands on project managers who delivered on time everything we had requested - and Program Building Services Pty Ltd, the builder we have used for the past 21 years. We are thrilled with the result and would recommend these firms to you should you ever need similar services. We continue to expand our practice as clients seek more assistance from us. We are now a 25 person practice and I think will just about rank in the top 100 firms in Australia. We look forward to continuing to provide our clients with quality, reliable and insightful service and solutions throughout 2011. We have kicked off the year with 2 very interesting special assignments -
During the next few months we will be rejigging some of our team arrangements to reassign work amongst our managers to ensure we can effectively deliver our service promises. Shaun and I as the client service partners will be contacting all clients for whom there will be a change in their service team. Finally, as you will see below, there is a "mixed bag" of current tax issues, but there is a win for students who received Youth Allowance in 2007 through to 2010. Scroll down to read a short summary of the articles or click here to access the explanatory memorandum if you would like to read the full version. As usual, please do not hesitate to call us on (02) 9891 6100 should you wish to discuss how any of the points raised in the report specifically affect you or click here to send us an email. Kind regards, Martin __________________________________________________________________________ |
Under the GST Act, a sale of real property is “input taxed” (ie no GST is payable on the sale), if the property is “residential premises to be used predominately for residential accommodation”, and other requirements are met. Although the phrase from the GST Act appears straightforward, it has been subject to lengthy arguments before the courts.
A taxpayer has been unsuccessful before the Administrative Appeals Tribunal in seeking a review of the Commissioner’s decision to disallow its objection against a private ruling. Broadly, the Commissioner had made an adverse private ruling regarding the deductibility of certain capital appreciation payments covering the 2003 to 2009 income years. However, the taxpayer had originally only sought a ruling covering the 2004 to 2008 income years.
In a recent case, the Administrative Appeals Tribunal remitted penalties imposed on a retired couple by the Commissioner for failing to take reasonable care in preparing their tax returns. Broadly, the Commissioner disallowed some deductions claimed by the taxpayers in relation to their retirement village scheme investment. Consequently, the Commissioner issued amended assessments and imposed the penalties.
The Tax Office has released a ruling which sets out the Commissioner’s views on the tax provisions which restrict refunds that can arise from the overpayment of GST. The ruling also sets out the guiding principles the Commissioner will follow in exercising his discretion to pay a refund in appropriate circumstances. A circumstance where the Commissioner may consider exercising his discretion is where the overpayment of GST occurred as a result of an arithmetic error made by a supplier. The Tax Office has released its long-anticipated response to a recent High Court decision which held that a student taxpayer was entitled to a deduction for education expenses incurred in receiving Youth Allowance income.
Under the tax law, certain payments and loans made by a private company to its shareholders or associates, and debts owed by its shareholders or associates that are forgiven by the private company, are taken to be unfranked dividends paid by the private company. However, there are specific exceptions to this rule.
The Government has announced its support for most of the wide-ranging Cooper Super System Review recommendations by releasing a package of reforms known as “Stronger Super”. The proposed reforms feature a new low-cost and simple default superannuation product called “MySuper” which is marked to commence from 1 July 2013.
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