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International tax planning |
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The place of
residence of a company dictates the country that has taxing rights over
its income and the basis upon which that income would be taxed. Similar
to many other countries South Africa taxes its residents on a worldwide
basis. A company is considered to be resident in South Africa if it was
incorporated established or formed in the Republic or has its place of
effective management in the Republic but excluding an international
headquarter company. Company tax is also applied to non-residents
carrying on a trade through a branch in South Africa.
Branch is not defined in tax legislation in the Republic. Generally
there must exist a physical asset that is used to carry on trade. Using
a computer server to advertise merchandise may not be sufficient. If a
trade is carried on through the use of a multiple of servers across
several jurisdictions it is doubtful that one server in South Africa
could constitute a branch even if the servers were used for purposes of
delivering the service.
It is possible or that a non-resident trading in South Africa may be
taxable both in South Africa and in the country of residence. It is
also possible that a South African trading abroad may be taxable in
South Africa and abroad. Under the terms of most of South Africas
double tax treaties the source country being the country in which the
non-resident trades may only excercise its rights to tax in respect of
profits generated through a permanent establishment .
Thus the issue of what constitutes a permanent establishment is
normally important. The terms of a relevant double tax treaty will
normally determine what is permanent establishment. However the
principal requirement is a fixed place of business through which the
business is carried on. Fixed places of business are excluded from
constituting permanent establishments where for example the activities
carried out there are of a purely preparatory or auxiliary character to
the non-residents business. Also a permanent establishment of a
non-resident is normally deemed to exist if contracts are regularly
made through a local agent who is not an independent agent. There are
also some doubts as to what constitutes a permanent establishment in
the context of e-commerce. The possibility has been the raised that a
website could be considered a permanent establishment on the grounds
that it acts as an agent concluding contacts. As e-commerce expands the
permanent establishment concept may very well become less appropriate.
This aspect should be considered by most jurisdictions.
Tax Havens
When meeting with a new client for the purpose of developing and
international tax plan the client normally enquires about best
jurisdiction in which to place elements of planned tax structure. With
the onslaught on tax havens by organisations such as the United Nations
Report and the OECD report Toward Global Tax Cooperation the selection
of a perfect tax haven has been complicated. The OECD report contains a
so-called black list of a 35 countries whose evil policies of no tax
combined with a willingness to aid taxed evaders from other countries
is considered predatory and OECD nations are eventually considering
retaliatory action against entities from within a black lack listed
country.
When selecting a suitable jurisdiction for the purpose of an
international structure the following are some points that could be
taken into account
Political and economic stability of the government concerned
Tax legislation.
Relevant legislation that is favourable to the interests of the client such as import rules and permit requirements.
Double tax treaties.
Other agreements of mutual assistance and cooperation between local authorities and foreign jurisdictions.
Freedom to move currency - existence of exchange control.
History is of a minimal governmental interference.
The banking and business privacy laws.
Location of the country and its communication and transportation facilities.
The availability of local legal and other management assistance.
Finally one must keep in mind that the double treaties between countries normally override the tax legislation.
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