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Exemption of RWT deduction on Dividend Payment between companies

 

There is no need to deduct RWT from a fully imputed dividend paid to corporate shareholder. 

 

This change has been made mainly to make easier for closely held companies to distribute dividend. There was a flaw in the tax system. On fully imputed divided paying company will deduct RWT and pay this to the IRD, and the recipient company will seek refund for RWT.  The change reduces the compliance cost for both companies. 

 

RWT on concurrent cash and non-cash dividends

 

A new section RE 14B is inserted in the Act. It provides the payer with the option of combining cash and non-cash dividend payments and accounting for RWT as though they were a single dividend. The proposed new section will only apply when the cash dividend alone is sufficient to cover the total RWT owing, meaning that RWT will be paid by deduction rather than gross-up, and the payer has elected for the section to apply.

 

The amount of RWT that the payer must withhold is calculated using the following formula:

 

(tax rate × (dividends + tax paid or credit attached)) − tax paid or credit attached

 

where:

 

tax rate is the basic rate set out in schedule 1, part D, clause 5 (Basic tax rates: income tax, ESCT, RSCT, RWT, and attributed fringe benefits);

 

dividends is the total amount of the cash dividend and the non-cash dividend paid before the amount of tax is determined;

 

tax paid or credit attached is the total of the following amounts:

 

(i) if a dividend is paid in relation to shares issued by an ICA company, the total amount of imputation credits attached to the dividends;

 

(ii) if a dividend is paid in relation to shares issued by a company not resident in New Zealand, the amount of foreign withholding tax paid or payable on the total amount of the dividends.

 

 

 

Example was provided in TIB Vol 29 No 5 June 2017 page 51

 

Amount of cash dividend required to satisfy the RWT liability

 

If a taxpayer provides a non-cash dividend and wishes to provide a cash dividend simply to satisfy the RWT liability on the noncash dividend then the following formula provides how much cash dividend is required: cash dividend = 0.4925* non-cash dividend – tax paid or credit attached

 

Example Co. X wishes to provide a non-cash dividend of $360. The non-cash dividend has imputation credits of $140 attached. Co. X wishes to provide a cash dividend solely to satisfy the RWT liability.

 

cash dividend = 0.4925 * 360 – 140 = $37.30

 

If Co. X provides a cash dividend of $37.30, the RWT payable is also $37.30.

 

The above simplifies the payment of RWT, this can be used to clear overdrawn shareholder current account. Intended users are the closely held small companies. However, there is still layer of complexity for deducting RWT. 

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New Zealand Tax Accountant.