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Chairman Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) Shabbar Zaidi indicated on Friday that non-disclosure of details and income attributable to Controlled Foreign Company (CFC) in tax returns due on September 30, 2019 will have penal consequences for individuals and entities operating companies covered within the ambit of CFC, particularly those companies operating in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and other tax havens. According to a tweet of Shabbar Zaidi here on Friday, "Controlled Foreign Company (CFC) matter is applicable for tax returns due on September 30, 2019. This matter be taken into account in the returns now being filed specially those being companies owned in the UAE and other tax haven countries. Non-disclosure has severe consequences."
Shabbar Zaidi further said that FBR's anti-smuggling campaign will disseminate the message 'let us stop buying smuggled goods.' Smuggling hurts local manufacturing industry, local employment and government revenues. "Let all of us commit to boycott purchase of smuggled goods," he added.
Shabbar Zaidi stated that the FBR will launch 2nd Edition of portal 'IRIS Maloomat' during the first week of September 2019. This will greatly assist people and businesses in filing their income tax returns for tax year 2019, he added.
According to the FBR, it has already specified conditions to determine how a foreign company operating in Pakistan is considered as a Controlled Foreign Company (CFC) for the purpose of taxation. The FBR has issued circular 13 of 2019 to explain the section 109A of the Income Tax Ordinance 2001.
The FBR said that a new section 109A has been introduced by the Finance Act, 2018, which has been effective from 1st July, 2018. Return for tax year 2019 will be the first year when provision of this section will become applicable. This section states that taxable income of resident person shall include income attributable to a "Controlled Foreign Company (CFC)".
In ordinary sense, income of a foreign company owned by a Pakistani resident is 'taxable' in Pakistan only when such income is 'received' from that non-resident entity. Section 109A(1) of the Ordinance is a deeming provision which essentially creates legal fiction resulting in following exceptions: Corporate veil is pierced and income of a 'company' is deemed to be the income of controlling entity and income is taxed in the year it is 'earned' not when it is actually 'received'. This is the consequence of the first action because when corporate veil is pierced the income becomes taxable when earned.
In order to determine that a foreign company is a Controlled Foreign Company (CFC) either of the two conditions regarding control of the resident over foreign company has to be fulfilled:-
i) more than fifty percent of the capital or voting rights of the non-resident company are held, directly or indirectly, by one or more persons resident in Pakistan; or ii) more than forty percent of the capital or voting rights of the non-resident company are held, directly or indirectly, by a single resident person in Pakistan. However, a foreign entity which fulfills either of the above conditions cannot be treated as a CFC if: i) the shares of the company are traded on any stock exchange recognized by law of the country or jurisdiction of which the non-resident company is resident for tax purposes; ii) the non-resident company derives active business income as defined under sub-section (3) of section 109A ; iii) tax paid, after taking into account any foreign tax credits available to the non-resident company, on the income derived or accrued, during a foreign tax year, by the nonresident company to any tax authority outside Pakistan is less than sixty percent of the tax payable on the said income under this Ordinance, the FBR said.
The concept of Active Business Income revealed that the "Active Income" for the purpose of exclusion from CFC regime requires simultaneous fulfillment of two conditions:-
i) cumulative income from dividend, interest, property, capital gains, royalty, annuity payment, supply of goods or services to an associate, sale or licensing of intangibles and management, holding or investment in securities and financial assets is less than 20% of the total income of the said company and; ii) principal source of the company is under the head "income from business" in the country or jurisdiction of which it is a resident.
The FBR said that term 'direct control' refers to direct ownership of capital or voting rights in the foreign entity. However the term 'indirect control' is very wide in its connotation. It includes indirect control by a company through subsidiary companies in which the resident person holds capital or voting rights but also includes other companies in which the resident person exercises control through ownership of capital or voting rights.
The FBR said that the second question after determining a CFC is to determine the 'attributable CFC Income' taxable under Section 109A(1) of the Ordinance in the hand of resident person. The taxable income is income generated by a controlled company that should have been taxed 'when earned' instead of 'when distributed'. The attributable income of the resident person shall be determined by comparing the percentage of control (whether direct or indirect) held by the said person over the CFC.
The FBR said that certain other exclusions have also been prescribed by law. The income of a controlled foreign company, for example, shall be treated as zero, if it is less than ten million rupees and if direct/indirect capital or voting right held by the resident person is less than 10% in the foreign entity.
The FBR said that other relevant rules revealed that the income of a CFC shall be determined in the currency of that controlled foreign company and shall be included in the income of any resident person during any tax year by converting into Rupees at the State Bank of Pakistan rate applying between that foreign currency and the rupee on the last day of the tax year.
Foreign tax year, in relation to a non-resident company, means any year or period of reporting for income tax purposes by that non-resident company in the country of residence or, if that company is not subject to income tax, any annual period of financial reporting by that company, the FBR said.
The income attributable to controlled foreign company under section 109A shall not be taxed again when the same income is received in Pakistan by the resident taxpayer. Where tax has been paid by the resident person on the income attributable to controlled foreign company and in a subsequent tax year the resident person receives dividend distributed by the controlled foreign company, after deduction of tax on dividend, the resident person shall be allowed a tax credit equal to the lesser of foreign tax paid, as defined in sub-section (8) of section 103, on dividends and Pakistan tax payable, as defined in section 103, for the tax year in which the dividend is received by the resident taxpayer, the FBR added.

Copyright Business Recorder, 2019

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