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New Zealand employs a full imputation system for company taxation. That is, to avoid double taxation of corporate profits companies may impute, or pass on proportionately to their shareholders, the benefit of all tax paid at company level. The present document is the report of the Consultative Committee on the imputation proposals outlined in an earlier Government Consultative Document on Full Imputation. The recommendations concern the mechanics of the imputation scheme rather than fundamental design issues. The report includes recommendations on the integration of the imputation, branch-equivalent and withholding payment regimes. The interrelationship between these three schemes is the main area of the overlap between the imputation and international tax reforms.
The final report of the Consultative Committee on Full Imputation and International Tax Reform. Volume 1 contains recommendations on the further detailed measures required for the operation of the imputation and international tax regimes. Volume 2 sets out the draft legislation.
This document is the final report of the Consultative Committee on Full Imputation and International Tax Reform. This final report outlines the Committee's recommendations on the outstanding issues relating to both sets of reforms. It explains the policy behind draft legislation produced by the Committee. Chapters 2, 3 and 4 outline the Committee's recommendations on the remaining details of the branch-equivalent regime to apply to certain controlled foreign companies. Chapter 5 discusses the outstanding issues relating to the foreign investment fund regime. Trusts are dealt with in chapter 6, while disclosure and default provisions are the subject of chapter 7. Transitional issues relating to the international reforms are considered in chapter 8. Chapter 9 outlines the Committee's views on the remaining issues concerning the imputation and withholding payment regimes. Consequential and related changes to other aspects of the existing tax law are dealt with in chapter 10. Chapter 11 draws together all of the recommendation of the previous chapters and concedes.
The world has changed a lot in the last thirty years, but New Zealand’s tax system hasn’t. Since the 1980s New Zealand’s taxation policy has remained the same, despite substantial economic and social changes. The system may be familiar, but is it fair? Deborah Russell and Terry Baucher’s lively analysis shows why answers to this question cut to the heart of whether New Zealand can be considered an egalitarian country. Drawing on the latest evidence and using plain language, they explore thorny issues such as the taxation of housing, multinationals and inequality between generations. The remedies proposed in this short book will help change the way New Zealanders think about tax in the twenty-first century.
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