Policy Statement
Cross
Border Reorganizations
Commission
on Taxation, 28 April 1998
ICC
is the world business organization, bringing together thousands of companies
and business organizations in over 130 countries. Supporting open trade and
free movement of capital, ICC opposes protectionism and distortion of competition
by means of taxation and supports international cooperation to create a fair
and unbiased system governing international tax relations.
Introduction
Whereas international corporate
reorganizations are becoming more and more frequent in order to allow enterprises
to adapt to the requirements of the global economy and to increase their productivity,
ICC notes that substantial tax obstacles on cross border reorganizations remain.
Such obstacles should be removed in order to facilitate international cooperation
between companies and to allow international groups to reorganize their structures
and rationalize their activities in whatever manner is most commercially attractive.
Even within the European
Union, despite the adoption of the Merger Directive on 23 July 1990, tax neutral
mergers or demergers are still impossible or very difficult to achieve because
of the lack of appropriate company law provisions. Moreover a full and correct
implementation of the Merger Directive has not been achieved yet in all member
states.
Tax obstacles
Whereas internal tax laws
of most countries provide for tax neutrality of most domestic reorganizations,
mergers and divisions this is not generally the case when a foreign company
is involved.
Moreover, the tax treatment
of such transactions varies widely among countries, creating uncertainty and
administrative burdens and often giving rise to double taxation, despite the
existence of bilateral tax conventions.
Under the domestic tax legislation
of many countries corporate reorganizations involving the transfer of business
assets across borders are treated as liquidations or taxable dispositions. The
same holds true when in a corporate reorganization, a shareholder interest is
transferred abroad by way of exchange of shares in a domestic entity for shares
in a foreign entity.
The common tax obstacles
to cross-border reorganizations can be summarized as follows:
- retained earnings or
other surplus of the transferring company as well as unrealized appreciation
of its assets, may be immediately subject to tax in the hands of the transferring
company and sometimes treated as a deemed distribut
ion for its shareholders
- transfer or registration
taxes may be due on the occasion of the transfer of assets and shares
- shareholders, whether
corporate or individuals, may be subject to tax on an exchange of shares regardless
of the percentage of holding
- any unused losses and
other tax attributes carried over (e.g. investment and foreign tax credits
or tax deductible provisions) may lapse
- taxation may also be
incurred with respect to assets located in third countries (i.e. not in countries
of merging or demerging entities)
Recommendations
to eliminate obstacles
ICC urges countries which
still do not allow tax free domestic reorganizations to introduce the concept
in their internal law and strongly recommends that all countries remove any
remaining tax obstacles to cross-border restructuring operations to the effect
that :
- a cross-border merger,
division or exchange of shares should not give rise to any tax liability until
such time a capital gain is actually realized. To this effect and to the extent
that the assets and liabilities transferred are connected to a permanent establishment
of the receiving company(ies) located in the country of the transferring company,
the tax liability on unrealized capital gains may be shifted to the receiving
company(ies) to crystallize as income of the receiving company(ies) when they
are disposed of (roll-over relief) by the permanent establishment. The same
tax neutrality should also be granted when a cross border reorganization entails
a transfer of legal seat. The transferring company should however have the
option of whether to opt for such a deferral or immediate taxation
- any transfer taxes which
may be due on both the transfer of assets and shares should be deferred until
actual disposal
- on either a cross-border
merger, division or exchange of shares the allotment of shares in the receiving
company(ies) to the shareholders of the transferring company(ies) should not
give rise to an immediate income tax or capital gains tax. Any taxation of
the corresponding gain should be deferred until subsequent transfer of securities
received in exchange
- any anti-tax evasion
or abusive avoidance rules should be reasonable and sufficiently precise in
order to avoid uncertainty
In particular, assuming
the tax neutral regime is not granted in the case where the shares received
in exchange for the transfer of assets are sold within a specified period, this
period should not exceed two years.
- the receiving company(ies)
should inherit any tax losses and other tax attributes of the transferring
company
Implementation
of recommendations
In order to be effective,
the provisions of domestic law should be supplemented by bilateral tax treaties
or multilateral instruments as in the European Union (Merger Directive).
ICC suggests that a new
article be added to the
OECD Model Treaty, as well as the present and future
bilateral tax treaties, which would provide that any gains realized by the transferring
company(ies) or its shareholders shall be exempt from tax in the other contracting
state until actual realization of a gain takes place (i.e. the shares of the
receiving company(ies) are disposed of).
ICC also urges the EU member
states to adopt the Tenth Company Law Directive harmonizing the company law
treatment of cross-border mergers.
Document n°
180/417 Rev.