Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

The availability of treaty relief for secondary transfer pricing adjustments taking the form of a deemed distribution of an asset in specie in South Africa

The number of MNEs have increased substantially in recent years, putting a strain on international tax rules which have not developed at the same pace. Many of these MNEs have kept their tax bill at a minimum by shifting profits to low tax jurisdictions by using transfer prices that do not accord wi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Strauss, Carien
Other Authors: Roeleveld, Jennifer
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Finance and Tax 2017
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613223914569728
access_status_str Open Access
author Strauss, Carien
author2 Roeleveld, Jennifer
author_browse Roeleveld, Jennifer
Strauss, Carien
author_facet Roeleveld, Jennifer
Strauss, Carien
author_sort Strauss, Carien
collection Thesis
description The number of MNEs have increased substantially in recent years, putting a strain on international tax rules which have not developed at the same pace. Many of these MNEs have kept their tax bill at a minimum by shifting profits to low tax jurisdictions by using transfer prices that do not accord with economic reality. In response hereto, many tax jurisdictions have implemented domestic anti-avoidance legislation to assist tax authorities in curbing tax avoidance resulting from the manipulation of transfer prices. SA is an example of such a country. These anti-avoidance provisions typically involve a primary and secondary adjustment. The primary adjustment requires that an adjustment be made to the transfer price used by the MNE in the event that the said price does not reflect an arm's length price. The secondary adjustment concerns itself with making the actual allocation of funds consistent with the primary adjustment by deeming there to be another transaction, i.e. the secondary transaction. In SA, this secondary adjustment takes the form of a deemed distribution of an asset in specie in the case of residents who are companies. As such, this secondary transaction (i.e. the deemed dividend) is subject to Dividends Tax in SA levied at the domestic rate. This study considered whether such a deemed dividend will qualify for treaty relief in the form of the reduced rate provided for by Article 10 of the OECD MTC and UN MTC. In making this analysis, three main issues where specifically considered, namely (i) whether the SA company paying the Dividends Tax will have access to treaty relief in cases where Dividends Tax is not listed as a covered tax in the relevant tax treaty, (ii) whether a deemed dividend under a secondary adjustment in terms of SA domestic law falls within the dividend definition contained in Article 10.3 of the OECD and UN MTC, and finally (iii) whether the relevant deemed dividend can be regarded as 'paid' for purposes of Article 10.1 and 10.2 of the OECD MTC and UN MTC. It was concluded that the SA Company will not qualify for the reduced rate provided for by tax treaties modelled on the OECD MTC and UN MTC as the deemed dividend does not fall within the ambit of the dividend definition contained in these model treaties. However, some of SA's tax treaties currently in force, deviate from the wording used in these model treaties to such an extent that it brings deemed dividends under a secondary adjustment in SA within the scope of the dividend definition, and in doing so, provides the SA Company with access to the reduced rates provided for in tax treaties. Examples hereof are the tax treaties that SA have concluded with the UK and NZ. Should SA decide to adopt a more 'forgiving' approach towards the availability of relief for secondary adjustments, it is recommended that SA either amend the domestic relief provisions to allow access to such relief, or amend the dividend definition contained in the tax treaties it currently has in force to include deemed dividends in terms of secondary adjustments in SA. The first approach is preferred as it is not always possible and timely to amend tax treaties currently in force.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/25465
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:42.829Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
publishDateSort 2017
publisher Department of Finance and Tax
publisherStr Department of Finance and Tax
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/25465 The availability of treaty relief for secondary transfer pricing adjustments taking the form of a deemed distribution of an asset in specie in South Africa Strauss, Carien Roeleveld, Jennifer International Tax The number of MNEs have increased substantially in recent years, putting a strain on international tax rules which have not developed at the same pace. Many of these MNEs have kept their tax bill at a minimum by shifting profits to low tax jurisdictions by using transfer prices that do not accord with economic reality. In response hereto, many tax jurisdictions have implemented domestic anti-avoidance legislation to assist tax authorities in curbing tax avoidance resulting from the manipulation of transfer prices. SA is an example of such a country. These anti-avoidance provisions typically involve a primary and secondary adjustment. The primary adjustment requires that an adjustment be made to the transfer price used by the MNE in the event that the said price does not reflect an arm's length price. The secondary adjustment concerns itself with making the actual allocation of funds consistent with the primary adjustment by deeming there to be another transaction, i.e. the secondary transaction. In SA, this secondary adjustment takes the form of a deemed distribution of an asset in specie in the case of residents who are companies. As such, this secondary transaction (i.e. the deemed dividend) is subject to Dividends Tax in SA levied at the domestic rate. This study considered whether such a deemed dividend will qualify for treaty relief in the form of the reduced rate provided for by Article 10 of the OECD MTC and UN MTC. In making this analysis, three main issues where specifically considered, namely (i) whether the SA company paying the Dividends Tax will have access to treaty relief in cases where Dividends Tax is not listed as a covered tax in the relevant tax treaty, (ii) whether a deemed dividend under a secondary adjustment in terms of SA domestic law falls within the dividend definition contained in Article 10.3 of the OECD and UN MTC, and finally (iii) whether the relevant deemed dividend can be regarded as 'paid' for purposes of Article 10.1 and 10.2 of the OECD MTC and UN MTC. It was concluded that the SA Company will not qualify for the reduced rate provided for by tax treaties modelled on the OECD MTC and UN MTC as the deemed dividend does not fall within the ambit of the dividend definition contained in these model treaties. However, some of SA's tax treaties currently in force, deviate from the wording used in these model treaties to such an extent that it brings deemed dividends under a secondary adjustment in SA within the scope of the dividend definition, and in doing so, provides the SA Company with access to the reduced rates provided for in tax treaties. Examples hereof are the tax treaties that SA have concluded with the UK and NZ. Should SA decide to adopt a more 'forgiving' approach towards the availability of relief for secondary adjustments, it is recommended that SA either amend the domestic relief provisions to allow access to such relief, or amend the dividend definition contained in the tax treaties it currently has in force to include deemed dividends in terms of secondary adjustments in SA. The first approach is preferred as it is not always possible and timely to amend tax treaties currently in force. 2017-09-28T05:37:02Z 2017-09-28T05:37:02Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25465 eng application/pdf Department of Finance and Tax Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle International Tax
Strauss, Carien
The availability of treaty relief for secondary transfer pricing adjustments taking the form of a deemed distribution of an asset in specie in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The availability of treaty relief for secondary transfer pricing adjustments taking the form of a deemed distribution of an asset in specie in South Africa
title_full The availability of treaty relief for secondary transfer pricing adjustments taking the form of a deemed distribution of an asset in specie in South Africa
title_fullStr The availability of treaty relief for secondary transfer pricing adjustments taking the form of a deemed distribution of an asset in specie in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed The availability of treaty relief for secondary transfer pricing adjustments taking the form of a deemed distribution of an asset in specie in South Africa
title_short The availability of treaty relief for secondary transfer pricing adjustments taking the form of a deemed distribution of an asset in specie in South Africa
title_sort availability of treaty relief for secondary transfer pricing adjustments taking the form of a deemed distribution of an asset in specie in south africa
topic International Tax
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25465
work_keys_str_mv AT strausscarien theavailabilityoftreatyreliefforsecondarytransferpricingadjustmentstakingtheformofadeemeddistributionofanassetinspecieinsouthafrica
AT strausscarien availabilityoftreatyreliefforsecondarytransferpricingadjustmentstakingtheformofadeemeddistributionofanassetinspecieinsouthafrica