2007年度EX282 現代企業法 租税法 部分 浅妻章如

Key Issues relating to
Permanent Establishment
9 October 2008 (15:30-17:00)
ASATSUMA Akiyuki
Rikkyo University (Tokyo)
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issues
Why we need PE concept?
PE & FE (fixed establishment)
Trigger of source tax
Taxable income & PE
Attribution of profits to a PE
PE & electronic commerce
Agent PE
Profit sharing & PE
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Why we need PE concept? (1)
2 kinds of tax jurisdiction on income
– Residence tax jurisdicion
– Source tax jurisdiction
income flow
Income earner ----------- payer
Residence country
Source country
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Why we need PE concept? (2)
Sometimes it is said that source of income
is “illusion”.
Certainly, it is “logically” true.
Income is defined as “income =
consumption + net increase of wealth”.
The definition of income only looks at
personal situation. Logically income does
not have geographical attributes.
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Why we need PE concept? (3)
Even though logically income has no
geographical source, in actual, can we
abandon a concept of source of income?
Can we allocate tax authority only
according to residence?
Can we give up taxing income from real
estate which is own by foreign person?
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Why we need PE concept? (4)
Foreign corp.-----------subsidiary (taxable)
Foreign corp.-----------branch (non taxable)
R-country
S-country
S-country should have tax authority on
domestic source income of foreign
residents. However, source tax authority
should not be unlimited because of the
difficulty of tax compliance for foreign
residents.
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PE & FE (fixed establishment)
Income tax: PE
Consumption tax: FE
PE threshold is lower than FE threshold.
– A vending machine can be a PE.
– FE needs human intervention.
PE is taxable only on its net income. FE is
taxable on gross sales amount.
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Trigger of source tax (1)
PE is justification of source tax.
PE is limitation on source tax.
German type:
PE (Betriebsstätte) concept is a symbol of
domestic businesses of non-residents.
Income attributable to a domestic
(German) PE is domestic source income
and is subject to source taxation according
both to domestic tax law and to tax treaties.
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Trigger of source tax (2)
US type:
A non-resident’s domestic (US) business
yields domestic source income and is
subject to US source taxation according to
US domestic tax law.
However, under tax treaties, US cannot
tax a non-resident’s business income if he
has no PE.
Domestic business and PE are somewhat
resemble but not equal.
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Taxable income & PE (1)
Entire income principle (Old US; Japan):
If a non-resident has a PE, then all
domestic source income is subject to
source taxation at the hand of the PE,
regardless whether the income is derived
by the PE.
It is called as “force of attraction”.
Now US applies “effectively connected
income” principle, resembled next slide.
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Taxable income & PE (2)
Attributed income principle (Germany):
Domestic source business income is
income attributable to a domestic PE.
Business income not attributable to a PE
is not subject to source taxation.
OECD Model Tax Convention §7 (1)
adopts this principle.
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Attribution of profits to a PE (1)
“functionally separate entity” approach
A PE is a part of a non-resident, does not
have legal personality. We do not imagine
a contract between my left hand and my
right hand.
However we must “hypothesize” the PE as
a “distinct and separate enterprise” and
recognize “dealings” between the PE and
other parts of the non-residents.
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Attribution of profits to a PE (2)
Even if total profits of the non-resident is
100, the PE’s profits can be more than 100
if the PE did good jobs and it can also be
minus if it did bad jobs.
We must determine:
– Functions of activities of the PE
– Risks attributed to the PE
– Assets, obligations and capital of the PE
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Attribution of profits to a PE (3)
Basically profit attributed to a PE is
determined, referring arm’s length
principle applied to transactions between
affiliated companies.
However the lack of legal personality
might raise differences.
(ex. Creditworthiness)
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Attribution of profits to a PE (4)
Old version of OECD Commentary does
not recommend recognizing intrapayments of royalties or interests from/to a
PE to/from foreign parts of a non-resident.
New version will recommend recognizing
intra-payments.
However issues of withholding are blank.
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PE & electronic commerce (1)
music download----------------
money flow --------------------supplier
user
Foreign
Japan
If the foreign supplier has no PE in Japan,
then Japan cannot tax the income paid
from Japanese users.
If the payment is royalty, then Japan can
tax under some tax treaties.
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PE & electronic commerce (2)
OECD said that a computer server can be
a PE. (cf. A vending machine can be a PE)
However income attributed to the server
PE would be very small, if not zero.
Therefore electronic commerce will give
little tax revenue to users’ country (Japan).
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PE & electronic commerce (3)
PE threshold should be amended?
We can say that PE threshold should be
amended if business circumstances are
changed. PE is not sacred. PE is a crystal
of compromise between countries. PE is
not genuinely led from logic.
Electronic commerce can be said as big
change.
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PE & electronic commerce (4)
However, should users’ country (Japan)
have tax authority?
PE is an indication of income source.
What is source of income?
Suppliers’ business [PE taxation]:
Japan isn’t location of suppliers’ business.
Users’ demand [royalty taxation]:
Japan is location of demand.
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PE & electronic commerce (5)
Historically PE taxation has been executed
along with an image that geographical
source of income is located at the place of
suppliers’ business.
If only existence of electronic commerce in
Japan can be a PE, tax practices would
not be workable. For example, we do not
have expenditure allocation rule in the
context of such virtual PE.
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PE & electronic commerce (6)
However, tax treaties allocate source tax
jurisdiction not only looking at suppliers’
business, but also payers; for example,
royalty taxation.
It is not ridiculous to claim that also
demand country should have tax authority
in contexts of electronic commerce; but PE
taxation on electronic commerce would be
impractical.
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Agent PE (1)
principal -----------agent-----trading partner
(R1 co.)
(A1)
(S1 co.)
head office--------branch----trading partner
(R2 co.)
(S2 co.)
R-county
S-country
Not only a branch but also an agent can
be a PE, because both R1 & R2 participate
in S-country’s market through an agent or
a branch.
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Agent PE (2)
If A1 is an independent agent, A1 does not
do R1’s business but do A1’s own business.
If A1 is a dependent agent, A1 can be said
as doing R1’s business and can be a PE.
However, does R1 really do its business in
S-country? Certainly S-country provides
market in both cases, but R1 physically
exists only in R-county.
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Agent PE (3)
Providing market or demand is non
justification for PE taxation. In case of R1,
S-country’s taxing power should be limited
on income attributed to A1’s activity.
Do we still need agent PE concept?
If A1 is not compensated by R1 along with
arm’s length principle because A1 is
dependent, then §7 (2) increases tax
revenue of S-country.
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Agent PE (4)
If A1 is compensated along with arm’s
length principle, do we still apply §7 (2)?
Some people say that in such cases R1’s
agent PE would have no income.
OECD concluded that income of A1 and
income of R1’s agent PE are different.
Does OECD consider providing market as
base for PE taxation?
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Agent PE (5)
Germany
Italy
Philip Morris GmbH---------A-co.----I-co.
PMG sold tobacco to I-co.
A-co. was a member of Philip Morris group
and had only acted as liaison of contracts
between PMG and I-co. But A-co. was
considered as an agent PE by Italian
supreme court.
Did PMG really do its business in Italy?
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Profit sharing & PE (1)
shareholder------------corporation
partner------------------partnership
R-country
S-country
A corporation is a taxable entity. A nonresident shareholder bears tax on dividend
income.
A partnership is a transparent entity.
However, the partnership is usually seen
as a PE of a non-resident partner.
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Profit sharing & PE (2)
silent partner (N-co.) ------ business (J-co.)
Netherlands
Japan
J-co. did business and distributed the
business profits to N-co. but this income is
characterized as “other income” (§23). Jco. was not considered as a PE of N-co.
However Netherlands did not tax N-co.,
considered as having a PE in Japan!
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Profit sharing & PE (3)
shareholder------------corporation
creditor------------------debtor
partner------------------partnership
R-country
S-country
Entity characterization
Deductibility of payment
Withholding tax or PE recognition
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