Commonwealth of Australia Explanatory Memoranda

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TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (2009 MEASURES NO. 4) BILL 2009


2008-2009




               THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA











                          HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES











             tax laws amendment (2009 measures no. 4) bill 2009














                           EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM














                     (Circulated by the authority of the
                      Treasurer, the Hon Wayne Swan MP)



Table of contents


Glossary    5


General outline and financial impact    7


Chapter 1    Lift the expenditure cap for eligibility to the Research and
              Development Tax Offset    11


Chapter 2    Prescribed private funds   15


Chapter 3    Demutualisation of friendly societies 31


Chapter 4    Consolidation:  Application of losses with nil available
              fraction 67


Chapter 5    Minor amendments     75


Index 103



Glossary

         The following abbreviations and acronyms are used throughout this
         explanatory memorandum.

|Abbreviation        |Definition                   |
|ABR                 |Australian Business Register |
|ATO                 |Australian Taxation Office   |
|CFC                 |controlled foreign company   |
|CGT                 |capital gains tax            |
|Commissioner        |Commissioner of Taxation     |
|DGRs                |deductible gift recipients   |
|FBT                 |fringe benefits tax          |
|FHSA trust          |First Home Saver Account     |
|                    |trust                        |
|FIFs                |foreign investment funds     |
|GST                 |goods and services tax       |
|ITAA 1936           |Income Tax Assessment Act    |
|                    |1936                         |
|ITAA 1997           |Income Tax Assessment Act    |
|                    |1997                         |
|LIA 1995            |Life Insurance Act 1995      |
|LPR                 |legal personal representative|
|MEC group           |multiple entry consolidated  |
|                    |group                        |
|PHIA 2007           |Private Health Insurance Act |
|                    |2007                         |
|PPFs                |prescribed private funds     |
|R&D                 |research and development     |
|TAA 1953            |Taxation Administration Act  |
|                    |1953                         |
|TIES                |Tax Issues Entry System      |

General outline and financial impact

Lift the expenditure cap for eligibility to the Research and Development
Tax Offset


         Schedule 1 to this Bill increases the research and development
         (R&D) expenditure cap for eligibility to the R&D Tax Offset from $1
         million to $2 million.


         Date of effect:  This amendment applies from 1 July 2009.


         Proposal announced:  This measure was announced in the Treasurer's
         Media Release No. 062 of 12 May 2009.


         Financial impact:  This measure is estimated to have the following
         revenue impact over the forward estimates period:

|2008-09   |2009-10   |2010-11   |2011-12   |2012-13   |
|Nil       |-$120m    |$55m      |Nil       |Nil       |


         Compliance cost impact:  Low.


Prescribed private funds


         Schedule 2 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997,
         the Taxation Administration Act 1953 and the A New Tax System
         (Australian Business Number) Act 1999 to improve the integrity of
         prescribed private funds (PPFs).  The amendments among other
         things:


                . rename PPFs as private ancillary funds;


                . move the full administration of those funds under the
                  authority of the Commissioner of Taxation (Commissioner);


                . give the Treasurer the power to make legislative
                  guidelines about the establishment and maintenance of
                  private ancillary funds; and


                . give the Commissioner the power to impose administrative
                  penalties on trustees that fail to comply with the
                  guidelines and to remove or suspend trustees of non-
                  complying funds.


         Date of effect:  These amendments will apply from 1 October 2009.


         Proposal announced:  These amendments were announced in the 2008-09
         Budget by the Treasurer in Media Release No. 052 of 13 May 2008.


         Financial impact:  Nil.


         Compliance cost impact:  Low.


Demutualisation of friendly societies


         Schedule 3 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
         to provide relief from capital gains tax to members and insured
         entities of friendly societies that have a life insurance business
         and/or a private health insurance business and the friendly society
         demutualises to a for-profit entity.


         Date of effect:  These amendments apply to demutualisations that
         occur on or after 1 July 2008.  This will ensure that friendly
         societies that demutualise on or after this date but prior to the
         amendments receiving Royal Assent may qualify for this relief.


         Proposal announced:  These amendments were announced in the then
         Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Competition Policy and
         Consumer Affairs' Media Release No. 086 of 24 October 2008.


         Financial impact:  These amendments are expected to have a small
         but unquantifiable revenue impact.


         Compliance cost impact:  Low.  This comprises a low implementation
         impact and a low decrease in ongoing compliance costs relative to
         the affected group.


Consolidation:  Application of losses with nil available fraction


         Schedule 4 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
         to ensure losses transferred to the head company of a consolidated
         group or a multiple entry consolidated group by a joining entity
         that is insolvent at the joining time can be used by the head
         company in certain circumstances.


         Date of effect:  1 July 2002 - this measure is beneficial to
         taxpayers.


         Proposal announced:  This measure was announced jointly by the
         Treasurer and the then Assistant Treasurer and Minister for
         Competition Policy and Consumer Affairs in Media Release No. 053 of
         13 May 2008.


         Financial impact:  This measure will have an unquantifiable (but
         minimal) cost to revenue over the forward estimates.


         Compliance cost impact:  Low.


Minor amendments


         Schedule 5 to this Bill makes technical corrections and other minor
         amendments to the taxation laws.  These amendments are part of the
         Government's commitment to the care and maintenance of the tax
         system.


         Date of effect:  These amendments commence from Royal Assent unless
         otherwise stated in this explanatory memorandum.


         Proposal announced:  These amendments were all foreshadowed by
         release in draft form on the Treasury website on 20 May 2009.


         Financial impact:  The amendments proposed by items 329 to 336 to
         the capital gains tax (CGT) small business concessions are expected
         to result in an unquantifiable but small cost to revenue.


         The amendments proposed by items 337 and 338 to the CGT provisions
         as they apply to foreign residents are expected to result in an
         unquantifiable potential gain to revenue.


         The other minor amendments are expected to have a nil to minimal
         revenue impact.


         Compliance cost impact:  Nil to low.








Chapter 1
Lift the expenditure cap for eligibility to the Research and Development
Tax Offset

Outline of chapter


      1. Schedule 1 to this Bill amends the tax law to increase the research
         and development (R&D) expenditure cap for eligibility to the R&D
         Tax Offset from $1 million to $2 million.


      2. All references to legislative provisions in this chapter are
         references to the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936) unless
         otherwise stated.


Context of amendments


      3. The R&D Tax Concession contained in the ITAA 1936 provides a
         concessional tax deduction to companies that incur expenditure in
         undertaking eligible R&D activities.  Certain companies can choose
         to receive a tax offset (R&D Tax Offset) rather than a deduction.


      4. As part of the 2009-10 Budget, the Government announced that it
         will replace the existing R&D Tax Concession with a new R&D tax
         incentive, with effect from 1 July 2010.  For additional details
         refer to the Treasurer's Media Release No. 062 of 12 May 2009.


      5. The Government announced that as an interim measure, it would
         increase the R&D expenditure cap for eligibility to the existing
         R&D Tax Offset from $1 million to $2 million, with effect from
         1 July 2009.


Summary of new law


      6. This amendment increases the R&D expenditure cap for eligibility to
         the R&D Tax Offset from $1 million to $2 million.


Detailed explanation of new law


      7. Section 73B of the ITAA 1936 provides a tax deduction to companies
         that incur expenditure in undertaking eligible R&D activities.  In
         many cases the deduction is equal to 125 per cent of expenditure.


      8. Under section 73I, certain companies, as set out in section 73J,
         that incur expenditure on eligible R&D can choose a tax offset
         instead of a deduction.  The R&D Tax Offset is equal to 30 cents in
         every dollar that the company would have been able to deduct if it
         had chosen to claim a deduction.  For a deduction of 125 per cent,
         this would equate to an offset of 37.5 per cent of expenditure.


      9. The R&D Tax Offset is refundable, allowing these companies to
         'cash out' the R&D Tax Concession.  This means it is most
         attractive to companies that are in a tax loss position, who cannot
         immediately benefit from an additional tax deduction.


     10. To be eligible for the R&D Tax Offset, paragraph 73J(1)(c) requires
         that the R&D group (as defined in section 73K) of which the company
         claiming the Offset is a part have an 'aggregate research and
         development expenditure amount' that is not more than $1 million
         (this imposes a 'hard cap' on expenditure).


     11. This measure increases the R&D expenditure cap for eligibility to
         the existing R&D Tax Offset from $1 million to $2 million, with
         effect from 1 July 2009.  [Schedule 1, item 1, paragraph 73J(1)(c)]


     12. Lifting the expenditure cap provides a further boost to small pre-
         profit companies in research intensive industries, ahead of the
         introduction of the new R&D tax incentive in 2010-11, and mitigates
         the incentive for firms to keep their R&D spending under the
         current expenditure cap.


      1.


                Barksdale Technologies Ltd is a company that satisfies the
                conditions in section 73J, with the exception of paragraph
                73J(1)(c).  The company is not part of a broader R&D group.
                In 2009-10, the company incurs expenditure of $1.5 million
                on eligible R&D activities.


                Without this amendment, Barksdale Technologies would be
                unable to elect to claim the R&D Tax Offset, as it has not
                met the existing condition in paragraph 73J(1)(c).  That is,
                the company's R&D aggregate expenditure exceeds the hard cap
                on expenditure of $1 million.


                Following this amendment, Barksdale Technologies is able to
                elect to claim the R&D Tax Offset because its R&D aggregate
                expenditure is below the new hard cap on expenditure of $2
                million.


Application and transitional provisions


     13. This amendment commences from the date this Bill receives Royal
         Assent and applies to years of income starting on or after
         1 July 2009.


     14. It is expected that the provision will be repealed as part of the
         introduction of the new R&D tax incentive in 2010-11.


     15. Schedule 1 does not contain any transitional provisions.








Chapter 2
Prescribed private funds

Outline of chapter


     16. Schedule 2 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
         (ITAA 1997), the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (TAA 1953) and
         the A New Tax System (Australian Business Number) Act 1999 to
         improve the integrity of prescribed private funds (PPFs).
         The amendments among other things:


                . rename PPFs as private ancillary funds;


                . move the full administration of those funds under the
                  authority of the Commissioner of Taxation (Commissioner);


                . give the Treasurer the power to make legislative
                  guidelines about the establishment and maintenance of
                  private ancillary funds; and


                . give the Commissioner the power to impose administrative
                  penalties on trustees that fail to comply with the
                  guidelines and to remove or suspend trustees of non-
                  complying funds.


Context of amendments


History


     17. PPFs came about as a response to a report on philanthropy in
         Australia by the Business and Community Partnerships Working Group
         on Taxation Reform dated 26 March 1999.


     18. PPFs are a form of ancillary trust fund designed to encourage
         private philanthropy by providing private groups, such as
         businesses, families and individuals, with greater flexibility to
         start their own trust funds for philanthropic purposes.


     19. Donations to PPFs are tax deductible.  PPFs are limited to making
         distributions to other deductible gift recipients (DGRs) that
         either have been endorsed by the Commissioner, or are listed by
         name in the income tax law as a DGR.


     20. A PPF may also be entitled to an income tax exemption if it is also
         endorsed as a charity or as an income tax exempt fund.


     21. A PPF is one of two types of ancillary trust fund that can qualify
         for DGR status and income tax exempt status.  The other type is a
         public ancillary fund, which is distinct from a PPF in that it must
         establish a public fund.  Public ancillary funds are a common
         structure for community and fundraising foundations.  Both types of
         ancillary fund act only as intermediaries between donors and
         organisations that can receive tax deductible donations.


     22. The current PPF guidelines outline the process to be followed, and
         requirements to be met, in order to establish a PPF, including the
         requirement to establish a trust in accordance with a model trust
         deed.  The current guidelines are unlegislated and therefore have
         no legal status in their own right.


Areas for improvement in the current arrangements for PPFs


     23. The current PPF guidelines outline the requirements for PPFs in
         some detail, but not necessarily the objectives of those
         requirements.  Furthermore, in cases of PPFs misusing their funds
         (for example, providing benefits to the donor) there is currently
         an 'all or nothing' penalty system.  The Commissioner is generally
         limited to advising the Treasurer to declare that a particular
         organisation is no longer a PPF.  De-listing of a PPF does not
         affect the deductions that have already been claimed, nor enable
         the protection of the PPF's philanthropic funds into the future.


     24. The Government announced in the 2008-09 Budget a measure to improve
         PPF integrity which will be achieved by:


                . amending the PPF guidelines to, among other things, ensure
                  regular valuation of assets at market rates and increase
                  the size of compulsory distributions;


                . legislating the PPF guidelines; and


                . giving the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) greater
                  regulatory powers.


     25. At present, the Governor-General is responsible for prescribing
         funds as PPFs and the Treasurer is responsible for declaring a fund
         to no longer be a PPF.


     26. The amendments included in Schedule 2 to this Bill implement the
         Government's Budget announcement to give legislative force to the
         PPF guidelines and to give the ATO greater regulatory powers.


     27. The remaining elements of the Government's Budget announcement will
         be implemented by way of amendments to the PPF guidelines which
         will be made by way of a legislative instrument.


     28. The Government released a discussion paper in November 2008 seeking
         public input into the implementation of the new integrity
         arrangements.  One hundred and thirty eight submissions were
         received in response to the paper.


     29. Many respondents to the discussion paper were encouraged by the
         Government's interest in the philanthropic sector, and in
         particular the proposals to simplify arrangements for PPFs, and
         give the ATO greater regulatory powers.  However, the majority of
         respondents also cautioned against increasing the minimum
         distribution rate for PPFs to a point where PPFs are unable to
         exist in perpetuity.  The matter of a minimum distribution rate
         will be considered by the Government along with other matters
         before the new guidelines are finalised.


     30. An exposure draft of Schedule 2 to this Bill was released on 14 May
         2009.  Fourteen submissions were received.  There was general
         support for the changes proposed in this Schedule.  However, a
         number of refinements were made as a result of minor concerns about
         transitional arrangements and the scope of the administrative
         penalty regime.


Summary of new law


     31. The amendments bring the full administration of the PPF regime
         under the authority of the Commissioner.  This means that PPFs
         would no longer be 'prescribed' in the relevant legal sense but
         instead be endorsed by the Commissioner.  This would have the
         effect of giving the ATO full regulatory control over PPFs and
         allow the ATO to take more timely action to protect the capital of
         a PPF.


     32. As PPFs will no longer be prescribed, they have been renamed
         private ancillary funds.


     33. The amendments give the Treasurer the power to make guidelines
         about the establishment and maintenance of private ancillary funds.
          Those guidelines are enforced through the imposition of
         administrative penalties.


     34. The Commissioner will also have the power to suspend or remove
         trustees of private ancillary funds that breach the guidelines or
         other relevant Australian laws.  The Commissioner's decisions are
         reviewable by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal and the Federal
         Court of Australia.


     35. In order to provide the Commissioner with the necessary regulatory
         powers to protect the charitable funds of private ancillary funds
         it is necessary to require that all of the trustees of private
         ancillary funds are corporate trustees.


     36. The amendments also facilitate changes to the Australian Business
         Register (ABR) so that the register can expressly identify private
         ancillary funds and the provision in the ITAA 1997 under which a
         DGR is entitled to be endorsed.


     37. The amendments also introduce new secrecy disclosure rules.  The
         Commissioner will be able to disclose to State and Territory
         Attorneys-General breaches by charities of state laws relating to
         trusts and charities.


Comparison of key features of new law and current law

|New law                  |Current law              |
|The Commissioner will be |The Governor-General is  |
|responsible for          |responsible for          |
|determining whether a    |prescribing trust funds  |
|trust fund is a private  |as PPFs.                 |
|ancillary fund (according|The Treasurer is         |
|to a legislative         |responsible for removing |
|definition) and          |prescribed PPFs.         |
|determining whether that |Once a trust fund is     |
|fund is entitled to be   |prescribed as a PPF it is|
|endorsed as a DGR.       |automatically a DGR.     |
|The Commissioner's       |These decisions are made |
|decision is reviewable by|by reference to          |
|the Administrative       |non-binding guidelines.  |
|Appeals Tribunal and the |There are no formal      |
|Courts.                  |mechanisms to appeal     |
|                         |these decisions.         |
|The Treasurer will have  |The existing PPF         |
|the power to make binding|guidelines are not       |
|guidelines about the     |binding in nature.       |
|establishment and        |The Government makes     |
|maintenance of private   |reference to the         |
|ancillary funds.         |guidelines in determining|
|The guidelines are a     |whether to prescribe or  |
|legislative instrument   |remove a PPF.            |
|and are subject to review|The guidelines are not   |
|by the Parliament.       |subject to review by the |
|                         |Parliament.              |
|The guidelines are       |No equivalent.  The only |
|enforced through the     |remedy to enforce the    |
|imposition of            |existing guidelines is to|
|administrative penalties.|prospectively remove the |
|                         |PPF status of a          |
|                         |non-complying trust fund.|
|The Commissioner will    |No equivalent.           |
|have the power to suspend|                         |
|or remove the corporate  |                         |
|trustees of private      |                         |
|ancillary funds that     |                         |
|consistently breach the  |                         |
|guidelines or other      |                         |
|relevant Australian laws.|                         |
|For constitutional       |Trustees of existing PPFs|
|reasons, all of the      |can be either individuals|
|trustees of private      |or corporations.         |
|ancillary funds must be  |                         |
|corporate trustees.      |                         |
|The ABR will expressly   |No equivalent.           |
|identify whether an      |                         |
|entity is a private      |                         |
|ancillary fund.          |                         |
|The ABR will expressly   |The ABR currently only   |
|identify under what      |includes a statement as  |
|provision an entity is   |to whether an entity is a|
|entitled to be endorsed  |DGR or not.              |
|as a DGR.                |                         |
|The Commissioner will be |The Commissioner is      |
|able to disclose         |unable to disclose       |
|information to State and |information to State and |
|Territory                |Territory                |
|Attorneys-General where  |Attorneys-General        |
|he or she identifies a   |relating to charities.   |
|breach by a charity or   |                         |
|private ancillary fund of|                         |
|a state or territory law |                         |
|relating to trusts or    |                         |
|charities.               |                         |


Detailed explanation of new law


Full administration by the Commissioner


     38. The Commissioner will have full administration of private ancillary
         funds.  The Governor-General and Treasurer will no longer have a
         role in determining whether a particular trust fund is entitled to
         be a PPF.  [Schedule 2, items 4 and 22, item 2 in the table in
         subsection 30-15(2) of the ITAA 1997 and Subdivision 426-D in
         Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     39. A definition of 'private ancillary fund' (new term for PPF) is
         being included in the ITAA 1997 and TAA 1953.  A trust fund that
         meets the definition will be entitled to be endorsed as a DGR
         (subject to the general requirements that apply to all entities
         seeking endorsement as a DGR).  [Schedule 2, items 4 and 22, item 2
         in the table in subsection 30-15(2) of the ITAA 1997 and section
         426-105 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     40. The Commissioner will be responsible for considering whether a
         trust fund meets the definition of a 'private ancillary fund' and
         whether that fund is then entitled to be endorsed as a DGR.
         [Schedule 2, items 5, 6 and 7, paragraph (c) of the cell in item 2
         in the table in subsection 30-15(2), paragraph 30-17(1)(b) and
         subsection 30-125(1) of the ITAA 1997]


     41. The Commissioner will maintain his or her current role in assessing
         a trust fund's entitlement for endorsement as an income tax exempt
         entity.


     42. A trust is a private ancillary fund if:


                . all the trustees of the trust are constitutional
                  corporations; and


                . all the trustees have agreed to comply with the guidelines
                  made by the Treasurer.


     43. PPFs were not previously required to have corporate trustees.
         However, for Constitutional reasons, it has been necessary to
         impose this new requirement on private ancillary funds in order to
         provide the Commissioner with additional regulatory powers.


     44. A constitutional corporation is a corporation covered by
         section 51(xx) of the Constitution.  A corporation established and
         operated solely as a trustee of a private ancillary fund would be
         considered a constitutional corporation.  Professional trustee
         corporations would also be considered constitutional corporations.


     45. Imposing a requirement for private ancillary funds to have a
         corporate trustee also ensures that directors meet a minimum
         standard of behaviour.  The Corporations Act 2001 details the
         circumstances under which an individual will be automatically
         disqualified from managing corporations.  These include where the
         person has:


                . a conviction on indictment of an offence in relation to
                  decisions that affect the business of a corporation or its
                  financial standing;


                . an offence involving a contravention of the Corporations
                  Act 2001 punishable by imprisonment for 12 months or more;




                . an offence involving dishonesty punishable by more than
                  three months imprisonment;


                . conviction for an offence against the law of a foreign
                  country punishable by more than 12 months imprisonment; or


                . is an undischarged bankrupt.


         [Schedule 2, item 22, section 426-105 in Schedule 1 to the TAA
         1953]


     46. In order for a trust fund to become a private ancillary fund, the
         trustee(s) will need to agree to be bound by the guidelines.  The
         trustee(s) will indicate their agreement to be bound in a form
         approved by the Commissioner.  [Schedule 2, item 22, section 426-
         105 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     47. A private ancillary fund will be entitled to be endorsed as a DGR
         provided they have an Australian Business Number, meet the existing
         conditions applying to both types of ancillary funds and comply
         with the guidelines.  [Schedule 2, item 7, subsection 30-125(1) of
         the ITAA 1997]


     48. If the Commissioner refuses to endorse a prospective private
         ancillary fund as a DGR, the fund can request a review of the
         decision by the Commissioner, Administrative Appeals Tribunal or
         appeal the decision to a Court under section 426-35 in Schedule 1
         to the TAA 1953.


Private ancillary fund guidelines


     49. The Treasurer will be able to make binding guidelines about the
         establishment and maintenance of a private ancillary fund.
         [Schedule 2, items 15 and 22, subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
         and section 426-110 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     50. Compliance with the guidelines is a requirement for a private
         ancillary fund's continued endorsement as a DGR.  [Schedule 2, item
         7, subsection 30-125(1) of the ITAA 1997]


     51. The guidelines are a legislative instrument and are therefore
         subject to disallowance by either House of Parliament.


     52. The guidelines may specify requirements about the purpose,
         structure and governing rules of a private ancillary fund.  The
         guidelines may also specify matters about the ongoing governance
         and permitted and prohibited activities of the fund.


     53. It is envisaged that the guidelines will specify matters such as
         the role and purpose of private ancillary funds; the class of
         entities that the fund may donate to; that the fund be not-for-
         profit in character; the individuals that may be directors of the
         fund's trustee; the minimum distribution requirements of the fund;
         the permitted investment strategies of the fund; and any ongoing
         audit requirements.


     54. The guidelines will ensure that private ancillary funds have
         appropriate governance arrangements, are properly accountable and
         act in a manner consistent with an entity holding philanthropic
         funds for a broad public benefit.


         Income tax returns


     55. Under the existing non-binding guidelines, PPFs agree to provide
         the ATO with an annual information statement.  There is currently
         no consequence for failing to comply with this requirement.


     56. The Government does not intend to introduce new reporting laws for
         private ancillary funds.  Instead, commencing from the 2009-10
         income year, private ancillary funds will be required to lodge an
         annual income tax return.  The income tax return for private
         ancillary funds will be similar to the current annual information
         statement.


     57. Private ancillary funds that fail to lodge their income tax return
         by the relevant due date will be subject to the general penalty
         regime that applies to all taxpayers who do provide their income
         tax return to the Commissioner by the due date.


Administrative penalties


     58. Administrative penalties will be imposed on trustees and the
         directors of trustees that hold a private ancillary fund out as
         being endorsed; entitled to be endorsed; or entitled to remain
         endorsed; as a DGR.  [Schedule 2, item 22, subsections 426-120(1)
         and (2) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     59. The administrative penalties will largely result from a private
         ancillary fund failing to comply with the guidelines.  This is
         because a condition of a private ancillary fund's endorsement as a
         DGR is that it must comply with the guidelines.


     60. While the TAA 1953 imposes the penalty, the guidelines will
         determine the amount of the penalty.  The amount of the penalty has
         been left to be determined by the guidelines so that any
         administrative penalty can be appropriately tailored to the nature
         and size of the breach taking account of the trustee's level of
         culpability and the particular requirement that the private
         ancillary fund has not complied with.  [Schedule 2, item 22,
         subsection 426-120(3) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     61. The trustees of a private ancillary fund are jointly and severally
         liable to any administrative penalty.


     62. As corporate trustees of private ancillary funds usually have
         little capital, it is necessary to also impose the penalty on the
         directors (where any of the penalty cannot reasonably be recovered
         from a trustee) to effectively ensure that a private ancillary fund
         complies with the guidelines.  Exposure to this liability promotes
         a minimum level of accountability amongst directors for decisions
         that affect the private ancillary fund.


     63. In determining whether a penalty can reasonably be recovered from a
         trustee regard should be had to the administrative practicality of
         recovering the penalty from the trustee, the amount of time the
         penalty has remained unpaid and the likelihood of successfully
         recovering the penalty from the trustee.  The Commissioner must
         take reasonable steps to recover the penalty from the trustee
         before concluding that the penalty can not reasonably be recovered.


     64. A director that did not take part in the management of the trustee
         at the time the private ancillary fund breached its obligations may
         in certain circumstances avoid an administrative penalty.


     65. The circumstances that the director must demonstrate are that the
         director was not aware of the breach and it would not have been
         reasonable to expect them to have been aware of the breach; or the
         director took all reasonable steps to ensure that the breach did
         not occur; or there were no such steps that the director could have
         taken.  [Schedule 2, item 22, subsections 426-120(5) to (8) in
         Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     66. Directors of trustees that are registered trustee companies are not
         liable to these administrative penalties, as registered trustee
         companies have an appropriate level of prudential supervision and
         regulation to cover their liabilities.  Registered trustee
         companies are those companies that are governed by the relevant
         state trustee companies Acts.


     67. The administrative penalty must not be reimbursed from the fund.
         [Schedule 2, item 22, subsection 426-120(4) in Schedule 1 to the
         TAA 1953]


     68. Directors should be aware of the process for making decisions, as
         governed by the Corporations Act 2001.


     69. Further, the Commissioner has the discretion to remit all or a part
         of the penalty under the normal machinery provisions for penalties.


Suspension or removal of trustees


         The Commissioner's powers


     70. The Commissioner will have the power to remove or suspend a trustee
         of a private ancillary fund that breaches the guidelines or any
         other Australian law.  [Schedule 2, item 22, section 426-125 in
         Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     71. It is expected that the Commissioner would only take such action in
         situations that involve serious non-compliance by a private
         ancillary fund.


     72. Whether the Commissioner decides to merely suspend a trustee or to
         remove them permanently will depend upon the nature of a breach,
         the circumstances of the trustee and the history of compliance.


     73. The Commissioner is being provided with these powers in order to
         protect the assets of the private ancillary fund and the ongoing
         integrity of the tax law.


     74. If the Commissioner chooses to suspend a trustee, it will be for a
         period that the Commissioner determines by reference to the
         circumstances.  The Commissioner may also modify the suspension
         period as he or she considers necessary.  [Schedule 2, item 22,
         subsections 426-125(2), (4) and (6) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     75. If the Commissioner suspends or removes a trustee, he or she must
         give the trustee a written notice advising them of the decision,
         explaining the reasons why the decision was taken and in the cases
         of suspension, setting out the period of suspension.  The trustee
         may seek a review of the decision by the Administrative Appeals
         Tribunal or a court following the process outlined in Part IVC of
         the TAA 1953 (taxation objections, reviews and appeals).  [Schedule
         2, item 22, subsections 426-125(3), (5), (7) and (8) in Schedule 1
         to the TAA 1953]


         If a trustee is suspended or removed


     76. When a trustee is suspended or removed, the Commissioner must
         appoint an acting trustee to undertake the duties of trustee until
         the suspension period has ended or a replacement trustee is
         appointed (as the case may be).  [Schedule 2, item 22, subsections
         426-130(1) and (2) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     77. An acting trustee may be an individual, body corporate or a
         Government authority.  The Commissioner may also appoint him or
         herself as acting trustee.  The acting trustee must have agreed to
         comply with the private ancillary fund guidelines.  The
         Commissioner cannot appoint an acting trustee who is not a
         constitutional corporation for a period exceeding 6 months.
         [Schedule 2, item 22, subsection 426-130(3) to (5) in Schedule 1 to
         the TAA 1953]


     78. The Commissioner may determine the terms and conditions upon which
         an acting trustee is appointed.  The terms and conditions
         determined by the Commissioner are valid despite any limitation in
         an Australian law or the governing rules of the private ancillary
         fund.  [Schedule 2, item 22, section 426-135 in Schedule 1 to the
         TAA 1953]


     79. The Commissioner may also give directions to an acting trustee to
         do or not to do certain things.  The acting trustee commits an
         offence if they contravene a direction.  [Schedule 2, item 22,
         section 426-160 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     80. The Commissioner may terminate the appointment of an acting trustee
         at any time.  If the Commissioner were to do so, he or she would be
         required to appoint a new acting trustee.  [Schedule 2, item 22,
         section 426-140 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     81. An acting trustee may resign as acting trustee.  However, the
         acting trustee must do so in writing given to the Commissioner.
         The resignation is not effective until seven days after the
         Commissioner receives the written resignation.  [Schedule 2, item
         22, section 426-145 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     82. When the Commissioner appoints an acting trustee, the Commissioner
         must make an order transferring the property of the private
         ancillary fund from the former or suspended trustee to the acting
         trustee.  The order has the legal effect of immediately
         transferring that property subject to certain limitations.
         [Schedule 2, item 22, subsections 426-150(1) and (3) in Schedule 1
         to the TAA 1953]


     83. The property covered by the order is both legal and equitable
         property.


     84. The Commissioner must also make a subsequent order transferring the
         property when the appointment of an acting trustee ends.  The
         subsequent property transfer order may be to a new acting trustee,
         to the previously suspended trustee or to a newly appointed trustee
         as appropriate.  [Schedule 2, item 22, subsection 426-150(2) in
         Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     85. The Commissioner's order to transfer property does not immediately
         transfer property if the property is of a kind whose transfer is
         registrable under an Australian law.  Instead, the property is
         transferred only after the registration process has been completed.
          [Schedule 2, item 22, subsection 426-150(4) in Schedule 1 to the
         TAA 1953]


     86. A former trustee has a number of obligations to comply with
         following their suspension, removal or the ending of their
         appointment.  A former trustee must:


                . provide the acting or new trustee with all books relating
                  to the fund's affairs that is in their custody, possession
                  or control;


                . provide notice to the acting or new trustee identifying
                  all the property of the fund (as much as they possibly
                  can); and


                . provide notice to the acting or new trustee explaining how
                  that property was accounted for.


         [Schedule 2, item 22, subsections 426-165(1) to (3) in Schedule 1
         to the TAA 1953]


     87. The acting or new trustee may also require the former trustee to
         assist with the transfer of the property of the private ancillary
         fund.  The acting or new trustee must do so by mandating that the
         former trustee take certain actions necessary for the transfer of a
         specific item of property to the acting or new trustee.  [Schedule
         2, item 22, subsection 426-165(4) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     88. A former trustee will commit an offence if they do not comply with
         these obligations.  [Schedule 2, item 22, subsection 426-165(5) in
         Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     89. Former trustees are strictly liable for their actions relating to
         books, identification of property and transfer of property (that
         is, liable regardless of fault).  This liability has been
         established to compel former trustees which have already been
         removed on the grounds of misconduct to deal fairly with the
         trust's property during the handover period.  [Schedule 2, item 22,
         subsection 426-165(6) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


Changes to the Australian Business Register


     90. For each private ancillary fund, the ABR must include a statement
         on the ABR indicating that the fund is a private ancillary fund.
         [Schedule 2, items 1 and 22, paragraph 26(3)(ga) of the A New Tax
         System (Australian Business Number) Act 1999 and section 426-115 in
         Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


     91. These additional requirements will improve the integrity and
         transparency of private ancillary funds.


     92. For each DGR, the ABR must identify the item in the table in
         subsection 30-15(2) of the ITAA 1997 under which an entity
         qualifies as a DGR.  Consistent with the endorsement requirements,
         this requirement is limited to DGRs covered by items 1, 2 and 4 in
         the table in subsection 30-15(2).  [Schedule 2, item 9, subsection
         30-229(2) of the ITAA 1997]


     93. These changes to the ABR will assist ancillary funds determine
         which DGRs they can donate monies to.  By way of background, for
         tax integrity reasons, ancillary funds are forbidden from donating
         to one another.  However, the ABR currently does not distinguish
         between different types of DGRs so it can often be difficult for an
         ancillary fund to confirm the eligibility of a DGR to receive
         donations from them.  These changes to the ABR seek to reduce these
         difficulties by distinguishing DGRs on the ABR by type.


Disclosure of information to the states and territories


     94. The Commissioner will be authorised to disclose information to
         State and Territory Attorneys-General that relates to the non-
         compliance of a charity or a private ancillary fund with an
         Australian law.


     95. The disclosure must be for the purposes of relevant State and
         Territory Attorneys-General administering a state or territory law
         governing trusts or charities.  [Schedule 2, items 3 and 17,
         subsection 16(4) of the ITAA 1936 and subsection 3C(4) of the TAA
         1953]


     96. The States and Territories have the primary responsibility for
         trust law and charities law.  State and Territory Attorneys-General
         are the 'protectors' of charities.  Traditionally, they have had
         the sole responsibility for ensuring that trustees of charitable
         trusts act in accordance with a trust's governing rules and
         relevant state law.  The Attorneys-General are also the only
         authority with standing to take legal action in protection of a
         charitable trust.


     97. In order to assist the State and Territory Attorneys-General
         perform their role, it is appropriate that the Commissioner be able
         to provide them with information concerning non-compliance that the
         ATO has identified as part of its compliance activities.
         Collaboration between ATO and State and Territory Attorneys-General
         should improve the integrity of charities and the protection of
         philanthropic funds.


Application and transitional provisions


General application


     98. The amendments generally apply from 1 October 2009.  [Clause 2]


Transitional rules for existing PPFs


     99. Existing PPFs will become private ancillary funds on
         1 October 2009.  The Commissioner will be taken to have endorsed
         all those PPFs that become private ancillary funds as DGRs on 1
         October 2009.  In order to comply with the new definition of
         private ancillary fund, all existing PPFs will also be taken to
         have agreed to comply with the guidelines from 1 October 2009.
         This mechanism will ensure a smooth transition of existing PPFs
         into the new regime.  [Schedule 2, items 27, 29 and 30]


         PPFs with non-corporate trustees


    100. Private ancillary funds (that were PPFs before 1 October 2009) will
         not be required to replace their non-corporate trustees with
         corporate trustees.  Mandating the replacement of trustees will
         create unnecessary compliance costs for existing trustees.
         [Schedule 2, item 28]


    101. Those private ancillary funds that continue to have non-corporate
         trustees will not be subject to the Commissioner's new powers to
         suspend or remove trustees.  It is for constitutional reasons that
         the new powers cannot be extended to these existing PPFs.


    102. In cases of serious non-compliance by private ancillary funds with
         non-corporate trustees, the Commissioner will have the ability to
         refer the matter to the relevant State or Territory Attorney-
         General for action.


    103. If at any point after 1 October 2009, a private ancillary fund with
         non-corporate trustees replaces all its non-corporate trustees with
         corporate trustees, the private ancillary fund will become subject
         to the Commissioner's new powers.


    104. Under the existing integrity arrangements, PPFs and other ancillary
         funds are prevented from distributing to one another.  However, in
         order to assist PPFs move fully into the new regime, private
         ancillary funds with non-corporate trustees will be permitted to
         transfer all of their property to another private ancillary fund
         with trustees that have only corporate trustees. This transitional
         arrangement will give transitional private ancillary funds the
         option of restructuring their trustee arrangements by establishing
         a new private ancillary fund to hold the assets of the old fund.
         [Schedule 2, item 31]


    105. Transitional private ancillary funds that wish to restructure
         (either by establishing a new private ancillary fund, or replacing
         their existing trustees) should make themselves familiar with the
         state and territory laws on replacing trustees or transferring
         assets between trusts.


         PPFs that have been approved by the Treasurer but not prescribed by
         1 October 2009


    106. Under existing arrangements, there is often a delay between the
         time the Treasurer agrees to recommend to the Governor-General that
         a trust fund be prescribed as a PPF and date the fund is
         prescribed.  The date a fund is prescribed is usually backdated to
         the day the Treasurer agrees to recommend prescription.  Both the
         prospective funds and the Commissioner would usually act on the
         advice of the Treasurer until the procedural formalities for
         prescription are completed.


    107. With the transfer of responsibility for these funds to the
         Commissioner, there is likely to be a number of funds that are yet
         to be prescribed.  For reasons of certainty and simplicity, the
         Treasurer will be given the power to make a declaration after 1
         October 2009 listing those funds that have been approved but not
         yet prescribed.  The declaration will have the effect of deeming
         those listed funds to have been prescribed from the date set out in
         the determination.  [Schedule 2, item 26]


         Progressive changes to the ABR


    108. The Australian Business Registrar will be given until 1 January
         2010 to update the ABR with the additional DGR endorsement category
         details.  The changes to the ABR are commencing at a later time to
         give the Registrar sufficient time to make the necessary systems
         changes in support the new requirements.  [Schedule 2, items 23 and
         24, subsection 30-229(2A) of the ITAA 1997 and subsection 426-
         115(1) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]


Consequential amendments


    109. Use of the term 'prescribed private fund' is amended to now refer
         to 'private ancillary fund'.  [Schedule 2, items 4 and 10, section
         30-15 and paragraph 31-10(1)(b) of the ITAA 1997]


    110. References to 'prescribed private fund' are being repealed and
         replaced with a reference to the definition of private ancillary
         fund.  [Schedule 2, items 2, 11, 13 to 16, subsection 6(1) of the
         ITAA 1936, paragraph 31-10(2)(b) and subsection 995-1(1) of the
         ITAA 1997, and subsection 2(1) of the TAA 1953]


    111. Table of tax related liabilities in other legislation in the
         TAA 1953 is amended to refer to the new penalties.  [Schedule 2,
         item 18, item 140 in the table in subsection 250-10(2) in Schedule
         1 to the TAA 1953]

Chapter 3
Demutualisation of friendly societies

Outline of chapter


    112. Schedule 3 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
         (ITAA 1997) to provide relief from capital gains tax (CGT) to
         members and insured entities of friendly societies that have a life
         insurance business and/or a private health insurance business and
         the friendly society demutualises to a for-profit entity.


    113. All references to legislative provisions in this chapter are
         references to the ITAA 1997 unless otherwise stated.


Context of amendments


    114. Friendly societies may provide life insurance, private health
         insurance, aged care and other services to their members or other
         entities.  These amendments will provide CGT relief for members or
         insured entities of a friendly society with a life insurance and/or
         a private health insurance business that demutualises to a for-
         profit entity.  The CGT relief is broadly equivalent to that which
         is available when a stand-alone life insurer or private health
         insurer demutualises.


    115. Demutualisation is the process by which participants of a mutual
         fund (such as a friendly society) give up their rights to
         participate in the fund.  In effect, this involves the participants
         giving up the right to benefit in the future from any accumulated
         mutual surplus that has been (or may be) built in the fund.  Upon
         demutualisation there is effectively a distribution of any
         accumulated mutual surplus to the participants.  Ordinarily, this
         triggers a CGT taxing point.


    116. Division 9AA of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936)
         provides that any capital gains or capital losses that arise on
         these transactions for members and policyholders of life insurers
         and general insurers that demutualise are disregarded.  In
         addition, Division 9AA of the ITAA 1936 provides a cost base for
         shares issued to policyholders and members of demutualising life
         insurers that is based on the life insurer's embedded value.
         Division 9AA of the ITAA 1936 also provides a cost base for shares
         issued to policyholders and members of a demutualising general
         insurer that is based on the general insurer's net tangible assets.


    117. Division 315 of the ITAA 1997 provides that any capital gains or
         capital losses that arise on these transactions for policyholders
         of a private health insurer that converts, by demutualising, to a
         for-profit entity are disregarded.  Division 315 of the ITAA 1997
         provides a cost base for shares issued to policyholders of a
         demutualising private health insurer that is based on the private
         health insurer's market value.


    118. Division 9AA of the ITAA 1936 provides relief only when members or
         policyholders of the insurer receive their share of the distributed
         accumulated mutual surplus in the form of shares in the
         demutualised insurer or an entity that ends up wholly owning the
         demutualised insurer.  Division 9AA of the ITAA 1936 also requires
         the demutualised insurer or the holding company to become a listed
         company, generally within two years of demutualising.


    119. In addition, Division 9AA of the ITAA 1936 may not be available for
         friendly societies that have a life insurance business held in a
         wholly owned subsidiary.


    120. These amendments will therefore provide relief for demutualising
         friendly societies in a broader range of situations.  Specifically,
         relief will be available when the friendly society demutualises to
         a for-profit entity regardless of whether the society distributes
         its accumulated mutual surplus in the form of shares or an amount
         of money (or both).  Further, there will be no requirement that the
         demutualised friendly society become a listed entity.


    121. This is similar to the scope of the relief available for
         demutualising private health insurers contained in Division 315 of
         the ITAA 1997.


Summary of new law


    122. Schedule 3 amends the ITAA 1997 by inserting Division 316 into Part
         3-32.  This Division disregards various capital gains and capital
         losses that may arise when a friendly society demutualises to a for-
         profit entity.


    123. Specifically, Subdivision 316-B disregards capital gains and
         capital losses that arise to members and insured entities of the
         friendly society under its demutualisation, except when the member
         or insured entity receives an amount of money.


    124. In cases where the member or insured entity receives an amount of
         money, these amendments modify the cost base rules applying to the
         relevant asset (an interest affected by demutualisation) so that
         the member or insured entity may realise a capital gain or capital
         loss.  This modification ensures that members and insured entities
         that receive money are treated equivalently under CGT to members
         and insured entities that receive an allocation of shares and
         immediately dispose of them.  These rules are contained in
         Subdivision 316-B and Subdivision 316-C.


    125. Subdivision 316-C also sets out the rules for calculating the cost
         base of shares and rights to acquire shares that are issued under
         the friendly society's demutualisation to its members and insured
         entities.


    126. Subdivision 316-D disregards capital gains and capital losses and
         sets out other CGT consequences that arise when shares or rights to
         acquire shares are subsequently transferred to members and insured
         entities of the friendly society after the demutualisation.


    127. Subdivision 316-E sets out special rules for successors of a
         deceased member or deceased insured entity that receive shares or
         rights to acquire shares that would have otherwise been issued to
         the member or insured entity under the demutualisation.


    128. The non-CGT consequences of the friendly society's demutualisation
         are set out in Subdivision 316-F.  This includes a reduction to the
         demutualising friendly society's franking account.


Comparison of key features of new law and current law

|New law                  |Current law              |
|Capital gains and capital|Members and policyholders|
|losses arising to members|of life insurers and     |
|and insured entities when|policyholders of private |
|their friendly society   |health insurers may be   |
|demutualises to a        |able to disregard capital|
|for-profit entity will be|gains and capital losses |
|disregarded except when  |that arise when their    |
|the member or insured    |insurer demutualises.    |
|entity receives an amount|However, these current   |
|of money under the       |provisions do not provide|
|demutualisation.         |consistent outcomes for  |
|                         |friendly societies that  |
|                         |have a life insurance    |
|                         |business and a private   |
|                         |health insurance         |
|                         |business.                |
|Members and insured      |Except where the         |
|entities that receive an |provisions relating to   |
|amount of money under    |demutualising private    |
|their friendly society's |health insurers apply,   |
|demutualisation will     |entities that give up    |
|calculate their capital  |rights in return for an  |
|gain or capital loss by  |amount of money will     |
|reference to a modified  |typically realise a      |
|cost base that is based  |capital gain or capital  |
|on:                      |loss on the rights equal |
|the market value of the  |to the capital proceeds  |
|friendly society's health|received less the cost   |
|insurance business (if it|base of the rights.  The |
|has one); and            |cost base of these rights|
|the embedded value of any|would typically be       |
|other business.          |minimal.                 |
|The cost base of shares  |The cost base of shares  |
|and rights to acquire    |issued to members and    |
|shares that are issued to|policyholders of life    |
|members and insured      |insurers that demutualise|
|entities under their     |is based on the life     |
|friendly society's       |insurer's embedded value.|
|demutualisation will be  |                         |
|based on:                |The cost base of shares  |
|the market value of the  |or rights to acquire     |
|friendly society's health|shares issued to         |
|insurance business (if it|policyholders of private |
|has one); and            |health insurers that     |
|the embedded value of any|demutualise is based on  |
|other business.          |the private health       |
|                         |insurer's market value.  |
|Capital gains and capital|Capital gains and capital|
|losses arising on some   |losses arising on related|
|transactions related to  |transactions may trigger |
|the friendly society's   |CGT consequences.        |
|demutualisation will also|                         |
|be disregarded.          |                         |
|No other tax consequences|Distributions for a      |
|will arise to members and|company may, in certain  |
|insured entities from    |circumstances:           |
|them receiving shares,   |be treated as a dividend;|
|rights or an amount of   |or                       |
|money under a friendly   |trigger CGT consequences.|
|society's                |                         |
|demutualisation.         |                         |
|Legal personal           |As these shares or rights|
|representatives and      |are not held by the      |
|beneficiaries of a       |deceased member or       |
|deceased member or       |insured entity at the    |
|insured entity that      |time of their death, no  |
|receive shares or rights |CGT roll-over is         |
|to acquire shares because|available when the shares|
|of the member or entity's|or rights pass to a      |
|death will receive the   |beneficiary of their     |
|same cost base for the   |estate.                  |
|shares or rights that the|                         |
|deceased member or entity|                         |
|would have received.     |                         |
|In addition, any capital |                         |
|gains or capital losses  |                         |
|arising from the shares  |                         |
|or rights passing to a   |                         |
|beneficiary of the estate|                         |
|will be disregarded.     |                         |
|Shares or rights to      |A trustee dealing with   |
|acquire shares issued    |assets in a trust will   |
|under a friendly         |typically incur CGT      |
|society's demutualisation|consequences.            |
|may be held on trust and |                         |
|transferred to, or sold  |                         |
|on behalf of, members and|                         |
|insured entities without |                         |
|CGT consequences for the |                         |
|trustee.                 |                         |


Detailed explanation of new law


    129. A friendly society is defined in section 995 of the ITAA 1997 as
         being:


                . a body that is a friendly society for the purposes of the
                  Life Insurance Act 1995 (LIA 1995);


                . a body that is registered or incorporated as a friendly
                  society under a State law or a Territory law;


                . a body that is permitted, by a State law or a Territory
                  law, to assume or use the expression friendly society; or


                . a body that, immediately before the date that is the
                  transfer date for the purposes of the Financial Sector
                  Reform (Amendments and Transitional Provisions) Act (No.
                  1) 1999, was registered or incorporated as a friendly
                  society under a State law or a Territory law.


Eligible demutualisations


    130. The demutualising friendly society must satisfy the following
         requirements for this relief to be available.


    131. Prior to demutualising, the friendly society must carry on either a
         health insurance business or a life insurance business.  A friendly
         society that carries on both a health insurance business and a life
         insurance business also qualifies for the relief.  These businesses
         may be carried on through a wholly owned subsidiary of the friendly
         society.  [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraph 316-5(a)]


    132. The entity that carries on the health insurance business (either
         the friendly society or a wholly owned subsidiary) must be a
         private health insurer within the meaning of the Private Health
         Insurance Act 2007 (PHIA 2007) [Schedule 3, item 1,
         subparagraph 316-5(a)(i)].


                . A friendly society that carries on only a health insurance
                  business may qualify for this relief and is therefore
                  excluded from the demutualisation relief contained in
                  Division 315 of the ITAA 1997 [Schedule 3, item 22].


    133. The entity that carries on the life insurance business (either the
         friendly society or a wholly owned subsidiary) must be registered
         under section 21 of the LIA 1995 [Schedule 3, item 1,
         subparagraph 316-5(a)(ii)].


                . A friendly society that carries on a life insurance
                  business may qualify for this relief and is therefore
                  excluded from the demutualisation relief contained in
                  Division 9AA of the ITAA 1936 [Schedule 3, item 2].


    134. A friendly society that carries on neither a health insurance
         business nor a life insurance business will not qualify for this
         relief.  However, such a friendly society may qualify for the
         demutualisation relief contained in Division 9AA of the ITAA 1936
         (if the friendly society is a general insurer) or Schedule 2H to
         the ITAA 1936.


    135. It is also a requirement of this relief that the friendly society
         must not have capital divided into shares that are held by its
         members prior to demutualising.  [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraph 316-
         5(b)]


    136. After demutualising, the friendly society must be carried on for
         the object of securing a profit or pecuniary gain for its members.
         [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraph 316-5(c)]


      1.


                Friendliest Friendly Society Ltd (Friendliest Friendly) is a
                company limited by guarantee and a body that is permitted by
                a State law to use the expression friendly society.  Among
                its other businesses, Friendliest Friendly provides life
                insurance to its members.  Consequently Friendliest Friendly
                is registered under section 21 of the LIA 1995.


                Friendliest Friendly proposes to demutualise to a for-profit
                entity.  Should it demutualise, Friendliest Friendly
                qualifies for this relief.


      2.


                Affable Society Ltd (Affable Society) is registered as a
                friendly society under a State law and is a company limited
                by guarantee.  It has two wholly owned subsidiaries - one of
                which carries on a private health insurance business and the
                other which carries on a life insurance business.


              . The subsidiary that carries on the private health insurance
                business is a private health insurer within the meaning of
                the PHIA 2007.


              . The subsidiary that carries on the life insurance business
                is registered under section 21 of the LIA 1995.


                Affable Society proposes to demutualise to a for-profit
                entity and, as part of a broader merger arrangement with a
                for-profit private health insurer Healthy Health Ltd
                (Healthy Health), become wholly owned by Healthy Health.


                Should it demutualise, Affable Society qualifies for this
                relief.


      3.


                Benevolent Company Ltd (Benevolent Company) is a company
                limited by guarantee and a body that is a friendly society
                for the purposes of the LIA 1995.  It carries on a life
                insurance business and is registered under section 21 of the
                LIA 1995.


                Benevolent Company proposes to demutualise and become a for-
                profit entity.


                Should it demutualise, Benevolent Company qualifies for this
                relief.


    137. A friendly society may demutualise in any of the following ways.


                . The society may issue shares to its members where the
                  shares entitle the members to a share of the profit or
                  capital of the friendly society.


                . The society may distribute amounts to its members in their
                  capacity as members (whether or not the amounts are paid
                  from profits).


                . The society may amend its constitution to expressly
                  provide for the distribution of profits to its members in
                  their capacity as members.


Relief for members and insured entities of the friendly society


    138. Most capital gains and capital losses arising under the friendly
         society's demutualisation to entities that are either members of
         the society or insured through the society or a wholly owned
         subsidiary of the society will be disregarded.

                . An exception to this rule applies when the member or
                  insured entity receives an amount of money under the
                  demutualisation.  The consequences of this transaction are
                  set out in paragraphs 3.35 to 3.41.

    139. It will be a question of fact as to whether a specific transaction
         (and therefore a capital gain or capital loss) arises under the
         friendly society's demutualisation.  Transactions are likely to
         vary between demutualising friendly societies.  In determining
         whether a transaction arises under a friendly society's
         demutualisation, regard may be given to the friendly society's
         demutualisation scheme approved by its members.


    140. However, transactions that occur after the distribution of the
         friendly society's accumulated mutual surplus will not be
         transactions that occur under the friendly society's
         demutualisation.  This will be the case even if the transactions
         occur as part of a broader scheme for reorganising the friendly
         society's affairs.  Nonetheless, a friendly society may distribute
         its accumulated mutual surplus in more than one transaction and in
         this case each of these transactions would occur under the friendly
         society's demutualisation.  However, if a friendly society
         distributes its accumulated mutual surplus in the form of shares
         for example, then there will be cost base implications for the
         shares if they are not all issued at the same time.  Further
         information about these cost base rules is set out in
         paragraph 3.49.


      1.

                Further to Example 3.3.


                Following approval from its members, Benevolent Company
                demutualises to a not-for-profit entity on 27 October 2008
                and distributes its accumulated mutual surplus to its
                members in the form of money.


                Under the terms of Benevolent Company's demutualisation, the
                accumulated mutual surplus will be distributed as follows:


              . 90 per cent of the total accumulated mutual surplus to be
                distributed will initially be distributed to members that
                have agreed to receive their share of the accumulated mutual
                surplus and the remaining 10 per cent will be retained for
                other members that may make a future claim for their share
                of the surplus.


              . After six months, the residual amount of the accumulated
                mutual surplus will then be distributed to all members that
                had previously received a share of the distributed
                accumulated mutual surplus (whether it was from the initial
                90 per cent distribution or the remaining 10 per cent
                distribution).


                The distribution of each of these amounts will be
                transactions that occur under Benevolent Company's
                demutualisation.


    141. Entities that are insured through the friendly society or a wholly
         owned subsidiary (insured entities) may include, for example:


                . policyholders and other insured persons within the meaning
                  of the PHIA 2007 - where the friendly society or a wholly
                  owned subsidiary carries on a health insurance business;
                  and


                . owners or holders of life insurance policies within the
                  meaning of the ITAA 1997 - where the friendly society or a
                  wholly owned subsidiary carries on a life insurance
                  business.  This may also include owners or holders of
                  funeral policies, income bonds, sickness policies and
                  scholarship plans within the meaning of the ITAA 1997.


         [Schedule 3, item 1, subparagraph 316-55(1)(a)(ii)]


    142. In some cases, depending on the terms of the friendly society's
         demutualisation, entities that were formerly members of the society
         or were formerly insured by the society or a wholly owned
         subsidiary may be entitled to receive a share of the society's
         accumulated mutual surplus.


                . For convenience, references to members or insured entities
                  also include entities that were former members of the
                  society or were formerly insured by the society or a
                  wholly owned subsidiary.


      1.


                Further to Example 3.1.


                Friendliest Friendly announces its intention to demutualise.


                Mary is a member of Friendliest Friendly at the time of this
                announcement and at the time its members subsequently
                approve its demutualisation.  Mary is entitled to receive an
                allocation of 1,500 shares in Friendliest Friendly under the
                terms of its demutualisation.


                However, Mary is no longer a member at the time the
                Friendliest Friendly demutualises and issues her with 1,500
                shares.  Mary is therefore a former member of Friendliest
                Friendly.


    143. If a member or insured entity dies during a demutualisation
         process, similar CGT relief may also be available for their
         successor (such as a legal personal representative (LPR)) and
         beneficiaries of their estate.  Further information about the CGT
         consequences for the LPR and beneficiaries in these circumstances
         is set out in paragraphs 3.86 to 3.96.


         Disregard capital gains and capital losses


    144. Except when a member or insured entity of the friendly society
         receives an amount of money under its demutualisation, capital
         gains and capital losses arising to the entity will be disregarded
         from CGT events that happen under the society's demutualisation to
         an interest of the member or insured entity that is affected by
         demutualisation.  [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraph 316-55(1)(a)]


    145. An interest affected by demutualisation may include:


                . an interest that the entity has (or had) in the friendly
                  society as the owner or holder of an insurance policy with
                  the society or a wholly owned subsidiary that is a life
                  insurer or health insurer;


                . a membership interest that the entity has (or had) in the
                  friendly society;


                . a right or interest of another kind that the entity has
                  (or had) in the friendly society; or


                . a right or interest of another kind that arises to the
                  entity under the demutualisation.


                  - However, an interest in a lost policy holders trust is
                    excluded from being an 'interest affected by
                    demutualisation'.  Instead a separate regime exists for
                    dealing with these interests.  Further information about
                    the lost policy holders trust regime is set out in
                    paragraphs 3.66 to 3.85.


         [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraph 316-55(1)(b)]


      1.


                Further to Examples 3.1 and 3.5.


                Philip is a member of Friendliest Friendly and under the
                terms of its constitution has a number of rights including
                the right to receive notice of Friendliest Friendly's Annual
                General Meeting, the right to attend and be heard at that
                meeting and the right to require Friendliest Friendly to
                manage its assets in a certain way and to operate on a not-
                for-profit basis.


                Under the terms of Friendliest Friendly's demutualisation
                scheme, Philip acquires the right to receive 5,000 shares.


                These rights make up Philip's interests that are affected by
                Friendliest Friendly's demutualisation.  These rights are
                satisfied when Friendliest Friendly distributes its
                accumulated mutual surplus and Philip receives his 5,000
                shares.


                As Philip did not receive an amount of money under
                Friendliest Friendly's demutualisation, he disregards any
                capital gains or capital losses that arise from the
                satisfaction of these rights.


      2.


                Further to Example 3.5.


                Mary has the right to receive 1,500 shares under Friendliest
                Friendly's demutualisation.  Mary subsequently receives
                these shares when Friendliest Friendly distributes its
                accumulated mutual surplus and so her right to receive the
                shares ends.


                This right is an interest affected by Friendliest Friendly's
                demutualisation.  As it arises under Friendliest Friendly's
                demutualisation Mary disregards any capital gains or capital
                losses arising to her from the satisfaction of her right to
                the 1,500 shares.


         Capital gains and capital losses realised on an amount of money


    146. From a policy perspective, a member or insured entity that receives
         an amount of money under their friendly society's demutualisation
         should receive a consistent CGT outcome relative to a member or
         insured entity that receives an allocation of shares.  This can be
         achieved by ensuring that the CGT outcome for such a member or
         insured entity is equivalent to that for a member or insured entity
         that receives an allocation of shares and immediately disposes of
         them.


                . In this context it is important to note that Division 9AA
                  of the ITAA 1936 and Division 315 of the ITAA 1997 do not
                  distinguish between members and policyholders of the
                  demutualising entity that have continuously held an
                  interest in the demutualising entity since before 20
                  September 1985 and those that have not for the purposes of
                  providing a modified cost base for issued shares.


    147. A member or insured entity that receives an amount of money under
         their friendly society's demutualisation for the cancellation or
         variation of their interests affected by demutualisation does not
         disregard any capital gains or capital losses arising in relation
         to the receipt of money.  [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraphs 316-
         60(1)(a), (b), and (d), paragraph 316-60(3)(a) and subparagraph 316-
         60(1)(c)(i)]


    148. Instead the member or insured entity calculates whether they
         realise a capital gain or capital loss on the basis that their
         interest affected by demutualisation has a modified cost base or
         reduced cost base.  [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-60(2)]


    149. The member or insured entity then works out the cost base or
         reduced cost base of their interest affected by the demutualisation
         by multiplying the capital proceeds they receive by the friendly
         society's valuation factor [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraph 316-
         60(2)(b)].


                . Further information about calculating the friendly
                  society's valuation factor is set out in paragraphs 3.53
                  to 3.65.


                . The friendly society may inform its members or insured
                  entities what its valuation factor is.


      1.


                Further to Examples 3.3 and 3.4.


                David has been a continuous member of Benevolent Company
                since 2005 and under its demutualisation receives $2,000 in
                satisfaction of the rights he has against Benevolent
                Company.  These rights are David's interests affected by
                Benevolent Company's demutualisation.


                Benevolent Company has a valuation factor of 0.9.


              . Examples 3.14 and 3.15 provide information about how a
                friendly society may calculate its valuation factor.


                David calculates whether he makes a capital gain or capital
                loss from the receipt of the $2,000 on the basis that his
                interests affected by demutualisation have a modified cost
                base or reduced cost base.


                David calculates his cost base for these interests by
                multiplying the $2,000 capital proceeds he receives by
                Benevolent Company's valuation factor of 0.9.


                David's interests affected by demutualisation have a cost
                base of $1,800.


              . This is calculated as follows:


              - $2,000 capital proceeds multiplied by a 0.9 valuation
                factor.


                David therefore realises a capital gain of $200 on his
                interests.


              . This is calculated as follows:


              - $2,000 capital proceeds less a $1,800 cost base.


    150. The following rules will ensure that members and insured entities
         that receive an amount of money under the demutualisation receive
         an equivalent CGT outcome to members and insured entities that
         receive shares.


                . A capital gain realised by a member or insured entity from
                  the receipt of an amount of money under their friendly
                  society's demutualisation will not be a 'discount capital
                  gain' [Schedule 3, item 15].


                . A capital gain or capital loss realised by a member or
                  insured entity from the receipt of an amount of money
                  under their friendly society's demutualisation will not be
                  disregarded even where the member or insured entity has
                  held their interest affected by demutualisation since
                  before 20 September 1985 [Schedule 3, item 1,
                  paragraph 316-60(3)(b)].


         Members or insured entities that receive both non-monetary capital
         proceeds and money


    151. A member or insured entity may receive their share of the friendly
         society's accumulated mutual surplus in the form of money and in
         the form of non-monetary proceeds, such as shares or rights to
         acquire shares.


    152. In these situations the member or insured entity will realise a
         capital gain or capital loss only in relation to the capital
         proceeds received in the form of money.  In calculating this
         capital gain or capital loss, the member or insured entity excludes
         the market value of any property other than money they receive
         under the demutualisation from their capital proceeds.
         [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-60(2)]


      1.


                Further to Example 3.2.


                Affable Society announces its intention to demutualise and
                offers its members the choice of receiving their share of
                its accumulated mutual surplus in the form of:


              . an amount of money;


              . shares in Healthy Health; or


              . a combination of money and shares in Healthy Health.


                Niomi is a member of Affable Society and elects to receive
                100 per cent of her share of the accumulated mutual surplus
                in the form of money.  She subsequently receives $1,000 from
                Affable Society when it demutualises.  This payment is made
                in satisfaction of a number of rights (interests affected by
                demutualisation) Niomi has against Affable Society.


                Affable Society has a valuation factor of 0.85.


                Niomi calculates whether she makes a capital gain or capital
                loss on the basis that these interests affected by
                demutualisation have a modified cost base or reduced cost
                base.


                Niomi calculates her cost base by multiplying the $1,000
                capital proceeds she receives by Affable Society's valuation
                factor of 0.85.


                Niomi's interests affected by demutualisation have a cost
                base of $850.


              . This is calculated as follows:


              - $1,000 capital proceeds multiplied by a 0.85 valuation
                factor.


                Niomi realises a capital gain of $150.


              . This is calculated as follows:


              - $1,000 capital proceeds less a $850 cost base.


      2.


                Further to Examples 3.2 and 3.9.


                Rob is also a member of Affable Society and elects to
                receive 50 per cent of his share of the accumulated mutual
                surplus in the form of money and 50 per cent in the form of
                shares in Healthy Health.  He subsequently receives $500
                from Affable Society and 250 shares in Healthy Health (each
                worth $2) when Affable Society demutualises.


                Rob calculates whether he makes a capital gain or capital
                loss from this transaction on the basis that his interests
                affected by demutualisation have a modified cost base or
                reduced cost base.


                Rob calculates his cost base by multiplying the $500 capital
                proceeds (excluding the market value of the 250 shares he
                receives in Healthy Health) he receives by Affable Society's
                valuation factor of 0.85.


                Rob's interests affected by demutualisation have a cost base
                of $425.


              . This is calculated as follows:


              - $500 capital proceeds multiplied by a 0.85 valuation factor.


                Rob realises a capital gain of $75.


              . This is calculated as follows:


              - $500 capital proceeds less a $425 cost base.


                Example 3.13 explains how Rob calculates the cost base of
                his shares in Healthy Health.


Relief for the demutualising friendly society


    153. Capital gains or capital losses that arise to the friendly society
         under its demutualisation will be disregarded.  [Schedule 3,
         item 1, section 316-75]


Relief for other entities


    154. Capital gains or capital losses that arise under the friendly
         society's demutualisation to other entities will be disregarded
         when the following three requirements are satisfied.  [Schedule 3,
         item 1, section 316-80]


    155. First, the entity must be established solely for the purpose of
         participating in the friendly society's demutualisation.  It will
         be a question of fact whether an entity meets this requirement.
         However, in determining this, regard should be given to the terms
         of the friendly society's demutualisation and whether, for example,
         its demutualisation scheme provides for the creation of the entity.
          [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraph 316-80(a)]


    156. Second, the entity must not be a lost policy holders trust.
         [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraph 316-80(a)]


                . These amendments create a separate framework for a lost
                  policy holders trust.  This framework is described in
                  paragraphs 3.66 to 3.85.


    157. Third, the capital gains or capital losses realised by the entity
         must be connected to the allocation or distribution of the friendly
         society's accumulated mutual surplus and arise either prior to, or
         at the time, the surplus is allocated or distributed.  Similar to
         the first requirement, it will be a question of fact whether these
         requirements are satisfied.  [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraph 316-
         80(b)]


Shares and rights issued to members and insured entities under the
demutualisation


    158. As noted above, a friendly society may distribute its accumulated
         mutual surplus in the form of shares in the demutualised friendly
         society or another company or in the form of rights to acquire such
         shares.


                . These rights to acquire shares are separate to the rights
                  that make up a member's or insured entity's interest
                  affected by demutualisation and which end or are satisfied
                  under the demutualisation.


         Acquisition time of shares or rights to acquire shares


    159. Members and insured entities that receive shares or rights to
         acquire shares under their friendly society's demutualisation will
         be taken, for CGT purposes, to have acquired each of the shares or
         rights at their issue time.  [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-
         105(3)]


      1.


                Further to Examples 3.6 and 3.7.


                Friendliest Friendly demutualises and issues shares to its
                members, including Philip and Mary, on 7 November 2008.


                Philip is taken to have acquired each of the 5,000 shares
                issued to him on 7 November 2008.  Similarly, Mary is taken
                to have acquired each of the 1,500 shares issued to her on 7
                November 2008.


         Cost base of shares or rights to acquire shares


    160. Members and insured entities of the friendly society that receive
         shares or rights to acquire shares under the society's
         demutualisation will receive a modified cost base for those shares
         or rights when the following requirements are satisfied
         [Schedule 3, item 1, subsections 316-105(1) and 316-115(1)].


                . First, the shares or rights must be issued under the
                  demutualisation and in connection with the member or
                  insured entity's interest affected by demutualisation
                  being varied or cancelled [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraphs 
                  316-110(1)(b) and 316-110(1)(c)].


                . Second, the shares or rights must be issued simultaneously
                  to:


                  - all members and insured entities that are entitled to
                    receive shares and rights to acquire shares under the
                    demutualisation;


                  - all successors that are entitled to receive shares or
                    rights because of the death of a member or insured
                    entity; and


                  - the trustee of a lost policy holders trust.


                  [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-110(3) and section 316-
                  115]


                . Third, if shares are issued, the shares must be issued in
                  the demutualised friendly society or in a company that
                  wholly owns the demutualised friendly society [Schedule 3,
                  item 1, subparagraphs 316-110(1)(a)(i) and (iii)].


                . Alternatively, if rights to acquire shares are issued,
                  then the rights must allow only for shares in the
                  demutualised friendly society or a company that wholly
                  owns the friendly society to be acquired [Schedule 3,
                  item 1, subparagraphs 316-110(1)(a)(ii) and (iv)].


                  - In addition, the rights must have an exercise price of
                    nil [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-110(2)].


    161. The first element of the cost base or reduced cost base of each of
         these shares or rights to acquire shares is calculated by
         multiplying the market value of the share or right at the time it
         is issued by the friendly society's valuation factor [Schedule 3,
         item 1, subsections 316-105(1) and (2)].


                . Further information about calculating the friendly
                  society's valuation factor is set out in paragraphs 3.53
                  to 3.65.


      1.


                Further to Example 3.11.


                Each of the shares issued in Friendliest Friendly has a
                market value of $3.00 at the time of their issue.


                Friendliest Friendly has a valuation factor of 0.95.


                The first element of the cost base or reduced cost base of
                each of the 5,000 shares in Friendliest Friendly issued to
                Philip is $2.85.


              . This is calculated as follows:


              - $3.00 market value multiplied by a 0.95 valuation factor.


                Mary calculates the first element of the cost base or
                reduced cost base of each of the 1,500 shares issued to her
                similarly.


      2.


                Further to Example 3.10.


                The first element of the cost base or reduced cost base of
                each of the 250 shares in Healthy Health issued to Rob is
                $1.70.


              . This is calculated as follows:


              - $2.00 market value multiplied by a 0.85 valuation factor.


                Should Rob immediately sell his shares he would realise a
                capital gain of $0.30 per share, assuming he incurs no other
                costs in relation to the shares.


              . This is calculated as follows:


              - $2.00 capital proceeds (current market value of each of the
                shares) less a $1.70 cost base (as calculated above).


                Rob's total capital gain from the 250 shares is $75.


              . This is calculated as follows:


              - $0.30 capital gain per share multiplied by 250 shares.


    162. The first element of the cost base or reduced cost base of shares
         or rights to acquire shares that are issued to the trustee of a
         lost policy holders trust is also calculated in the same way
         [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-115(3)].


                . Further information about a lost policy holders trust is
                  set out in paragraphs 3.66 to 3.85.


    163. The first element of the cost base or reduced cost base of shares
         or rights to acquire shares that are issued to the LPR of a
         deceased member or insured entity is also calculated in the same
         way [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-115(2)].


                . Further information about other CGT consequences of shares
                  or rights to acquire shares issued to a deceased member or
                  insured entity's LPR is set out in paragraphs 3.86 to
                  3.96.


Friendly society's valuation factor


    164. The friendly society's valuation factor is derived as follows:


         [pic][Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-65(1)]


    165. The formula's numerator represents the value of the friendly
         society and the denominator represents the friendly society's
         accumulated mutual surplus.


                . The two components that make up the formula's numerator
                  reflect the differing treatment of life insurers and
                  private health insurers under the existing income tax law.
                   Division 9AA of the ITAA 1936 and Division 315 of the
                  ITAA 1997 respectively calculate the cost base of shares
                  issued to members and policyholders of life insurers and
                  policyholders of private health insurers.


                . The formula's denominator reflects the total value of the
                  friendly society's accumulated mutual surplus distributed
                  to:


                  - members and insured entities of the society;


                  - successors of deceased members and insured entities; and


                  - the trustee of a lost policy holders trust.


         [Schedule 3, item 1, section 316-65]


    166. Each of the components of the valuation formula is discussed in
         further detail below.


         Market value of any health insurance business


    167. In calculating the market value of a health insurance business
         carried on by the friendly society (either directly or through a
         wholly owned subsidiary) regard may be given to the consideration
         paid to the society or a subsidiary of the society for the disposal
         or control of that business.  [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-
         65(1)]


    168. If such consideration is paid to the friendly society or a
         subsidiary of the society and the amount to be paid is fixed under
         the terms of a binding agreement then the market value of the
         health insurance business may be calculated by reference to the
         time that the binding agreement for the disposal or control of the
         business is made and the value of the consideration.


    169. Alternatively, if the consideration paid to the friendly society or
         a subsidiary of the society is dependent on subsequent events
         occurring after a binding bid is made, then the market value of the
         health insurance business may be calculated by reference to the
         time that the payment is made and the value of the consideration.


      1.


                Further to Example 3.2.


                Healthy Health entered into a binding agreement with Affable
                Society as part of a broader arrangement to pay Affable
                Society $50 million for control of Affable Society's private
                health insurance.


                Several months later Healthy Health makes this $50 million
                payment to Affable Society after its members agree to its
                demutualisation.  At the time Healthy Health makes this
                payment, the market value of Affable Society and its private
                health insurance business has slightly declined.


                For the purposes of the valuation factor calculation,
                Affable Society's private health insurance business has a
                market value of $50 million.


         Embedded value of any other businesses


    170. The embedded value of the friendly society's other business is
         calculated on the assumption that the friendly society or a wholly
         owned subsidiary does not carry on a health insurance business.
         [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-65(1)]


    171. The embedded value is derived from the sum of the friendly
         society's existing business value and its adjusted net worth.
         These amounts need to be calculated on either:


                . the demutualisation resolution day - if an accounting
                  period of the friendly society ends on that day
                  [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-70(1) and
                  paragraph 316-70(3)(a)]; or


                . the last day of the most recent accounting period of the
                  friendly society prior to the demutualisation resolution
                  day [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-70(1) and
                  paragraph 316-70(3)(b)].


                  - However, if the embedded value is calculated on the last
                    day of the friendly society's most recent accounting
                    period prior to the demutualisation resolution day, the
                    friendly society's existing business value and adjusted
                    net worth need to be adjusted to take account of any
                    significant changes to these amounts up until the
                    demutualisation resolution day [Schedule 3, item 1,
                    subsection 316-70(5)].


         In this context, the reference to a friendly society's accounting
         period refers to its financial year accounting period rather than
         any other accounting period that the friendly society may have for
         management reporting purposes.


    172. Consistent with Division 9AA of the ITAA 1936, the friendly
         society's demutualisation resolution day is either the day:


                . on which the resolution to proceed with the
                  demutualisation is passed by the society's members or
                  insured entities; or


                . if the friendly society, or a subsidiary of the friendly
                  society, has a life insurance business and all of that
                  business is transferred to another company under the
                  demutualisation under a scheme confirmed by the Federal
                  Court of Australia - the day that the transfer takes
                  place.


                  - However, if the transfer takes place over more than one
                    day, then the last day that the transfer takes place
                    will be the friendly society's demutualisation
                    resolution day.


         [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-70(4)]


    173. The embedded value calculation needs to be calculated according to
         Australian actuarial practice by an actuary who:


                . is a Fellow or Accredited Member of the Institute of
                  Actuaries of Australia; and


                . is not an employee of the friendly society, a subsidiary
                  of the society that carries on a life insurance or health
                  insurance business or an entity that wholly acquires the
                  friendly society under the demutualisation [Schedule 3,
                  item 1, subsection 316-70(2).


    174. There are also two assumptions that need to be made in calculating
         the friendly society's existing business value and adjusted net
         worth.  These are:


                . that the friendly society and any subsidiaries with a life
                  insurance or health insurance business will continue to
                  conduct their businesses in the same way as previously
                  conducted as if the demutualisation did not occur (the
                  continued business assumption) [Schedule 3, item 1,
                  subsection 316-70(6)]; and


                . that the friendly society and any subsidiaries will incur
                  the same amount and type of expenditure (adjusted for
                  inflation) as incurred prior to the demutualisation (the
                  expenditure assumption) [Schedule 3, item 1,
                  subsection 316-70(7)].


         Total capital proceeds


    175. Capital proceeds received by members, insured entities, successors
         of deceased members and insured entities and the trustee of the
         lost policy holders trust under the demutualisation in satisfaction
         of rights or interests that arise under the demutualisation are
         excluded from the valuation factor's denominator.  This ensures
         that only capital proceeds received under the demutualisation in
         relation to the existing rights and interests of members or insured
         entities to participate mutually in the friendly society are
         included in the denominator.


                . Including any capital proceeds for rights or interests
                  that arise under the demutualisation may lead to a double
                  counting of some capital proceeds.  This will arise for
                  example, if some of the capital proceeds received in
                  relation to a member's or insured entity's rights to
                  participate mutually in the friendly society are rights
                  that arise under the demutualisation.  In this case, the
                  value of the right that arises under the demutualisation
                  is included in the capital proceeds the member or insured
                  entity receives from their rights to participate mutually,
                  and so should not be included again.


         [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-65(1)]


    176. Any reduction to the capital proceeds a member, insured entity or a
         successor of a deceased member or insured entity makes because they
         receive both money and non-monetary capital proceeds under the
         demutualisation is ignored when calculating the total capital
         proceeds received for the purposes of the valuation formula.  This
         ensures that the value of all capital proceeds received under the
         demutualisation is included in the valuation factor's denominator
         whether the proceeds take the form of assets or an amount of money.
          [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-65(2)]


      1.


                Further to Examples 3.13 and 3.14.


                Under Affable Society's demutualisation, $70 million is
                distributed to its members (and their successors) and 15
                million shares in Healthy Health (each worth $2) are issued
                to its members, their successors and the trustee of the
                Affable Lost Trust (a lost policy holders trust).


                The total capital proceeds received by these entities is
                $100 million.


              . This is calculated as follows:


              - $70 million in cash plus $30 million (15 million shares each
                with a market value of $2).


                The embedded value of Affable Society's non-health insurance
                business is $35 million.


                Affable Society has a valuation factor of 0.85.


              . This is calculated as follows:


              - The numerator of Affable Society's valuation factor is
                $85 million.  This comprises of a $50 million market value
                of Affable Society's private health insurance business plus
                a $35 million embedded value of its other business.


              - The denominator of the valuation factor is equal to
                $100 million.


              - That is, [pic]


Lost policy holders trust


    177. Division 315 of the ITAA 1997 provides a legislative framework for
         shares or rights to acquire shares to be held on trust for
         policyholders of demutualising health insurers that are entitled to
         receive the shares or rights but do not receive them directly.  The
         framework allows these shares or rights to be held on trust and
         transferred to the policyholder without CGT consequences for the
         trustee.  The framework also ensures that the policyholder receives
         the shares or rights with the same CGT attributes as if they had
         received the shares or rights to acquire shares directly.


    178. These amendments provide a similar framework for shares or rights
         to acquire shares to be held on trust and then transferred to
         members and insured entities of a demutualising friendly society.
         As these amendments provide a different CGT outcome for
         distributions of money compared to Division 315 of the ITAA 1997,
         this framework also facilitates payments of money from the lost
         policy holders trust to members and insured entities.


                . These members and insured entities (referred to as
                  beneficiaries of the lost policy holders trust) could
                  include unverified or overseas members or unverified or
                  overseas insured entities.  A beneficiary of the lost
                  policy holders trust could also include an LPR or
                  beneficiary in the estate of a deceased member or insured
                  entity that was a beneficiary of the lost policy holders
                  trust.  [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-155(4)]


         Requirements for these rules to apply


    179. These rules will only apply when the following conditions are
         satisfied:


                . the friendly society's demutualisation scheme that is
                  approved by a court provides for the lost policy holders
                  trust [Schedule 3, item 1, subsections 316-155(1) and
                  (2)];


                . the trust exists solely for the purpose of holding shares
                  or rights to acquire shares on behalf of entities that are
                  beneficiaries of the trust; or holding money payable in
                  satisfaction of the variation or cancellation of interests
                  affected by demutualisation [Schedule 3, item 1,
                  subsection 316-155(3)]; and


                . shares or rights to acquire shares are issued or money is
                  paid to the trustee of the lost policy holders trust under
                  the friendly society's demutualisation [Schedule 3,
                  item 1, subsection 316-155(5)].


      1.


                Further to Examples 3.1 and 3.11.


                After its members agreed to the demutualisation, Friendliest
                Friendly's demutualisation scheme was subsequently approved
                by a court.  This scheme provided for a trust, Friendly
                Trust, which has the sole purpose of holding shares on
                behalf of unverified members and members registered at an
                overseas address.  Friendly Trust's deed provides that the
                Trust will cease after three years.


                Under Friendliest Friendly's demutualisation, the trustee of
                Friendly Trust receives 50,000 shares in Friendliest
                Friendly.


                The lost policy holder trust rules would apply to Friendly
                Trust.


         Trustee of the lost policy holders trust


         Acquisition time of shares or rights to acquire shares


    180. The trustee of the lost policy holders trust that receives shares
         or rights to acquire shares will be taken, for CGT purposes, to
         have acquired the shares or rights at their issue time.
         [Schedule 3, item 1, subsections 316-105(3) and 316-115(3)]


         Cost base of shares or rights to acquire shares


    181. The first element of the cost base or reduced cost base of the
         shares or rights issued to the trustee of the lost policy holders
         trust under the friendly society's demutualisation is calculated in
         the same way as if the shares or rights to acquire shares had been
         issued to the member or insured entity (or their LPR or beneficiary
         of their estate if the member or insured entity dies before
         receiving the shares or rights) directly. [Schedule 3, item 1,
         subsections 316-105(1) and (2) and 316-115(3)]


                . These rules are set out in paragraphs 3.49 to 3.52.


      1.


                Further to Examples 3.12 and 3.16.


                The trustee of Friendly Trust acquires 50,000 shares in
                Friendliest Friendly on 7 November 2008.  The first element
                of the cost base of each of these shares is $2.85.


         Transfer of assets to a beneficiary of the lost policy holders
         trust


    182. Any capital gains or capital losses arising to the trustee of the
         lost policy holders trust from the transfer of assets in the lost
         policy holders trust to a beneficiary of the trust will be
         disregarded.  Similarly, any capital gains or capital losses
         arising to the trustee from a beneficiary of the lost policy
         holders trust becoming absolutely entitled to an asset of the trust
         will be disregarded.  [Schedule 3, item 1, subsections 316-170(1)
         and (2)]


      1.


                Further to Example 3.17.


                Jess was a member of Friendliest Friendly and under its
                demutualisation was entitled to receive 500 shares.
                However, Jess was unaware of Friendliest Friendly's
                demutualisation and her entitlement to the shares.  Six
                months after Friendliest Friendly demutualised Jess became
                aware of her entitlement to the 500 shares and contacted the
                trustee of Friendly Trust.  At this time, each of the shares
                in Friendliest Friendly has a market value of $3.50.


                Any capital gains arising to the trustee of Friendly Trust
                from Jess becoming absolutely entitled to the 500 shares are
                disregarded.


      2.


                Further to Example 3.17.


                Ross was also a member of Friendliest Friendly and, although
                he was unaware of it, he was entitled to receive 1,000
                shares under its demutualisation.


                Twelve months after demutualising Friendliest Friendly
                reorganises its affairs and interposes a holding company,
                Friendly Holding Ltd (Friendly Holding) between itself and
                its shareholders.  Under this scheme, shareholders in
                Friendliest Friendly exchange two shares in Friendliest
                Friendly for one share in Friendly Holding.  The trustee of
                Friendly Trust subsequently receives shares in Friendly
                Holding and, assuming the requirements of Subdivision 124-G
                of the ITAA 1997 are satisfied, a roll-over of any CGT
                liability that would have otherwise arisen under the
                exchange.


                Three months later (15 months after Friendliest Friendly
                demutualised) Ross realised he had an entitlement to shares
                under Friendliest Friendly's demutualisation and contacted
                the trustee of Friendly Trust.  At this time, each of the
                shares in Friendly Holding has a market value of $7.50.


                Any capital gains arising to the trustee from Ross becoming
                absolutely entitled to 500 shares in Friendly Holding are
                disregarded.


    183. The lost policy holders trust may also provide for the trustee to
         dispose of shares or rights in the trust held on behalf of a
         beneficiary and give the net proceeds to the beneficiary, on whose
         behalf the trustee was holding the assets.  This will typically
         occur when the beneficiary is registered at an overseas address.


      1.


                Further to Example 3.17.


                Eric was a member of Friendliest Friendly and was entitled
                to receive 1,000 shares under its demutualisation.  Although
                Eric remains an Australian resident for tax purposes, he was
                registered with Friendliest Friendly with an overseas
                address.  Instead of directly receiving his 1,000 shares
                when Friendliest Friendly demutualised, Eric's shares are
                issued to the trustee of Friendly Trust to sell on his
                behalf.  Two months after Friendliest Friendly demutualises,
                the trustee of Friendly Trust sells the 1,000 shares for
                $3.20 each.


                Any capital gains arising to the trustee from this
                transaction are disregarded.


         Other dealings with assets


    184. Any capital gains arising from the trustee dealing with the assets
         in the lost policy holders trust in any other way will, broadly, be
         assessed to the trustee under section 99A of the ITAA 1936.
         [Schedule 3, item 1, section 316-175]


    185. Specifically, for the purposes of section 97, 98A and 100 of the
         ITAA 1936, the share of the net income of the trust that is
         attributable to the capital gains arising from these transactions
         will not be included in the income of any beneficiaries of the
         trust [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-175(2)].  In addition,
         the trustee will not be assessed on this share of net income under
         section 98 of the ITAA 1936 [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-
         175(3)]


         Beneficiaries of the lost policy holders trust that receive assets
         or money from the trust


         Beneficiaries that receive assets


    186. Any capital gains or capital losses arising to a beneficiary
         receiving assets from the lost policy holders trust in satisfaction
         of their interest in the trust are disregarded.  [Schedule 3,
         item 1, section 316-160]


    187. The beneficiary will be taken to have acquired each of the assets
         at the same time as the trustee of the lost policy holders trust
         acquired them.  [Schedule 3, item 1, subsections 316-170(1) and
         (4)]


    188. The first element of the cost base or reduced cost base of each of
         the assets that are transferred to a beneficiary from the lost
         policy holders trust will be equal to the asset's cost base in the
         trustee's hands.  [Schedule 3, item 1, subsections 316-170(1) and
         (3)]


    189. The trustee of the lost policy holders may inform the beneficiary
         what the first element of the cost base or reduced cost base of any
         transferred asset will be in the beneficiary's hands.  The trustee
         may also advise the beneficiary of the date that the trustee
         originally acquired the asset as this date will be the same date
         that the beneficiary will be taken to have acquired the asset for
         CGT purposes.


      1.


                Further to Example 3.18.


                Jess becomes absolutely entitled to 500 shares, which are
                held in Friendly Trust, in Friendliest Friendly six months
                after it demutualises.  Jess becomes absolutely entitled to
                the shares in satisfaction of her interest in Friendly
                Trust.


                Any capital gains or capital losses arising to Jess from
                this transaction are disregarded.


                The first element of the cost base or reduced cost base of
                each of these shares in Jess's hands is $2.85.  Jess will be
                taken to have acquired each of these shares on 7 November
                2008.


      2.


                Further to Example 3.19.


                Ross becomes absolutely entitled to 500 shares in Friendly
                Holding held in Friendly Trust in satisfaction of his
                interest in Friendly Trust.


                Any capital gains or capital losses arising to Ross from
                this transaction are disregarded.


                The first element of the cost base or reduced cost base of
                each of these shares in Ross's hands is $5.70.  Ross will be
                taken to have acquired each of these shares on 7 November
                2008.


              . Ross receives this cost base because the trustee exchanged
                shares in Friendliest Friendly for shares in Friendly
                Holding and received a roll-over under Subdivision 124-G of
                the ITAA 1997.


      3.


                Further to Example 3.20.


                Eric becomes absolutely entitled to 1,000 shares in
                Friendliest Friendly in satisfaction of his interest in
                Friendly Trust.  Any capital gains or capital losses arising
                to Eric from this transaction are disregarded


                The first element of the cost base of each of these shares
                is $2.85.


                The trustee of Friendly Trust then sells the shares on
                behalf of Eric for $3.20.  Assuming no other costs are
                incurred, Eric realises a capital gain of $0.35 on each
                share sold.


              . This is calculated as follows:


              - $3.20 capital proceeds less a $2.85 cost base equals a $0.35
                capital gain.


         Beneficiaries that receive an amount of money


    190. A beneficiary whose interest in the lost policy holders trust is
         satisfied from the receipt of money does not disregard any capital
         gains or capital losses arising from that receipt.  [Schedule 3,
         item 1, subsections 316-165(1) and (3)]


    191. Instead the beneficiary calculates whether they realise a capital
         gain or capital loss on the basis that their interest in the lost
         policy holders trust has a modified cost base or reduced cost base.
          [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-165(2)]


    192. The beneficiary works out the cost base or reduced cost base of
         their interest in the lost policy holders trust by multiplying the
         capital proceeds they receive from the trust by the friendly
         society's valuation factor [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraph 316-
         165(2)(b)].


                . Further information about calculating the friendly
                  society's valuation factor is set out in paragraphs 3.53
                  to 3.65.


    193. The trustee of the lost policy holders trust may inform the
         beneficiary what the friendly society's valuation factor is.


         Beneficiaries that receive assets and an amount of money


    194. A beneficiary's interest in the lost policy holders trust may be
         satisfied from the receipt of money and non-monetary proceeds.


    195. In these situations the beneficiary will realise a capital gain or
         capital loss only in relation to the capital proceeds received in
         the form of money.  In calculating this capital gain or capital
         loss, the member or insured entity excludes the market value of any
         property other than money they receive from their capital proceeds.
          [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraph 316-165(2)(a)]


         Expiry of a beneficiary's interest in the lost policy holders trust


    196. Capital gains or capital losses arising from the expiry of a
         beneficiary's interest in the lost policy holders trust are
         disregarded.  [Schedule 3, item 1, section 316-160]


      1.


                Further to Example 3.17.


                Brendan was a member of Friendliest Friendly and under its
                demutualisation was entitled to receive 2,000 shares.
                However, Brendan was unaware of the demutualisation and his
                entitlement to shares.


                Brendan is still unaware of his entitlement to shares three
                years later when Friendly Trust is wound up and his interest
                in the trust expires.


                Any capital gains or capital losses arising to Brendan from
                the expiry of his interest in Friendly Trust are
                disregarded.


Shares, rights to acquire shares or money paid to an LPR


    197. If a friendly society distributes its accumulated mutual surplus in
         the form of shares or rights to acquire shares and a member or
         insured entity of the friendly society dies during the
         demutualisation before receiving their shares or rights, those
         shares or rights will typically be issued to their LPR.  The LPR
         can then pass the shares or rights to acquire shares to a
         beneficiary of the deceased member or insured entity's estate.


    198. Similarly if a friendly society distributes its accumulated mutual
         surplus in the form of money and a member or insured entity of the
         friendly society dies during the demutualisation before receiving
         the money, then the money will typically be paid to their LPR.


         Disregard capital gains and capital losses


    199. Except where the LPR receives an amount of money under the friendly
         society's demutualisation, capital gains or capital losses arising
         to the LPR will be disregarded from CGT events that happen under
         the demutualisation to an interest of the deceased member or
         insured entity that is affected by demutualisation.  [Schedule 3,
         item 1, subsection 316-55(2)]


         Capital gains and capital losses realised on an amount of money


    200. An LPR that receives an amount of money under a friendly society's
         demutualisation in relation to a deceased member or insured
         entity's interest affected by demutualisation does not disregard
         any capital gains or capital losses arising in relation to the
         receipt of money.  [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraphs 316-60(1)(a),
         (b) and (d) and subparagraph 316-60(c)(ii)]


    201. Instead the LPR calculates whether they realise a capital gain or
         capital loss on the basis that the deceased member or insured
         entity's interests affected by demutualisation have a modified cost
         base or reduced cost base.  The LPR works out the cost base or
         reduced cost base of the deceased member or insured entity's
         interest affected by demutualisation by multiplying the capital
         proceeds they receive by the friendly society's valuation factor.
         [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraph 316-60(2)(b)]


         LPRs that receive both non-monetary capital proceeds and money


    202. Where an LPR receives non-monetary proceeds and money, the LPR will
         realise a capital gain or capital loss only in relation to the
         capital proceeds received in the form of money.  In calculating
         this capital gain or capital loss, the LPR excludes the market
         value of any property other than money they receive from their
         capital proceeds.  [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-60(2)]


         Shares or rights to acquire shares issued to an LPR


         Consequences for the LPR


    203. An LPR that receives shares or rights to acquire shares under the
         demutualisation will receive the same first element of the cost
         base or reduced cost base that the deceased member or insured
         entity would have received.  [Schedule 3, item 1, subsections 316-
         115(2) and 316-200(1)]


      1.


                Further to Examples 3.11 and 3.12.


                Hamish was a member of Friendliest Friendly society at the
                time it announced its intention to demutualise and at the
                time its members approved the demutualisation.  Under
                Friendliest Friendly's demutualisation Hamish was entitled
                to receive 3,000 shares in satisfaction of the rights he had
                against Friendliest Friendly.  Unfortunately, Hamish died
                two days before Friendliest Friendly's demutualisation and
                so the 3,000 shares were issued to Darren, his LPR.


                Any capital gains or capital losses arising to Darren from
                receiving the 3,000 shares in Friendliest Friendly are
                disregarded.


                The first element of the cost base of each of the 3,000
                shares issued to Darren is $2.85.  This is the same first
                element of the cost base that Hamish would have received for
                the shares had he remained alive.


    204. Any capital gain or capital loss arising to the LPR from each of
         the shares or rights passing to a beneficiary of the deceased
         member or insured entity's estate will be disregarded.
         [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-200(2)]


      1.


                Further to Example 3.25.


                Five months after Hamish's death, Darren transfers the 3,000
                shares to Shaun, Hamish's beneficiary.  Each of the shares
                has a market value of $3.45 at the time of the transfer.


                Any capital gains arising to Darren from the transfer of the
                3,000 shares in Friendliest Friendly to Shaun are
                disregarded.


         Consequences for the beneficiary


    205. A beneficiary of the deceased member or insured entity's estate
         that receives these shares or rights will be taken for CGT purposes
         to have acquired each of the shares or rights at the same time as
         the LPR acquired them.  [Schedule 3, item 1, subsection 316-200(4)]


    206. The first element of the cost base or reduced cost base of each of
         the shares or rights that pass to a beneficiary of the deceased
         member or insured entity's estate will be equal to the share or
         right's cost base in the hands of the LPR.  [Schedule 3, item 1,
         subsection 316-200(3)]


      1.


                Further to Example 3.26.


                Shaun receives the 3,000 shares in Friendliest Friendly.
                For CGT purposes Shaun is taken to have acquired each of the
                shares at the time they were issued to Darren (7 November
                2008) rather than at the time he receives the shares from
                Darren.


                Assuming Darren incurred no additional costs from the shares
                being transferred to Shaun, the first element of the cost
                base of each of the shares that Darren receives is $2.85.


         Interest in a lost policy holders trust


         Consequences for the LPR


    207. Any capital gain or capital loss arising to the LPR from an
         interest in a lost policy holders trust passing to a beneficiary of
         the deceased member's or insured entity's estate will be
         disregarded.  [Schedule 3, item 1, section 316-205]


Non-CGT consequences of the demutualisation


         General taxation consequences


    208. A member or insured entity that receives shares or rights to
         acquire shares under their friendly society's demutualisation will
         not need to include any amount in their assessable income as a
         result of receiving these shares or rights [Schedule 3, item 1,
         paragraphs 316-255(1)(a), (2)(a) and (2)(b)].  Alternatively, a
         member or insured entity that receives an amount of money under
         their friendly society's demutualisation will not need to include
         the amount of that money in their assessable income provided it is
         received in connection with the variation or cancellation of their
         interest affected by demutualisation [Schedule 3, item 1,
         paragraphs 316-255(1)(b), (2)(a) and(2)(b)].


      1.


                Further to Example 3.8.


                Apart from the $200 capital gain he realises, David does not
                need to include the $2,000 he receives under Benevolent
                Company's demutualisation in his assessable income.


    209. Similarly, if an entity receives shares or rights to acquire shares
         because of the death of a member or insured entity of the friendly
         society, then that entity will not need to include an amount in
         their assessable income as a result of receiving these shares or
         rights to acquire shares [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraphs 316-
         255(1)(a) and (2)(c)].  Alternatively, an entity that receives an
         amount of money because of the death of a member or insured entity
         of the friendly society will not need to include the amount of
         money in their assessable income provided it is received in
         connection with the variation or cancellation of the deceased
         member or insured entity's interest affected by demutualisation
         [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraphs 316-255(1)(b) and (2)(c)].


    210. A beneficiary of a lost policy holders trust that receives shares
         or rights to acquire shares from the lost policy holders trust will
         not need to include an amount in their assessable income as a
         result of receiving these shares or rights [Schedule 3, item 1,
         paragraphs 316-255(1)(c) and (2)(d)].  Alternatively, a beneficiary
         that receives an amount of money from a lost policy holders trust
         will not need to include the amount of that money in their
         assessable income provided it is received in connection with the
         variation or cancellation of an interest affected by
         demutualisation [Schedule 3, item 1, paragraphs 316-255(1)(d) and
         (2)(d)].


         Franking debits and credits


    211. If the friendly society or a wholly owned subsidiary has a franking
         account and that account is in surplus prior to the
         'demutualisation resolution day', then a franking debit equal to
         the value of the surplus arises at the start of the demutualisation
         resolution day.  [Schedule 3, item 1, section 316-260]


                . This has the effect of reducing the franking account to
                  zero and is broadly consistent with the treatment in
                  Division 9AA of the ITAA 1936.


    212. The friendly society's demutualisation resolution day is discussed
         in paragraph 3.61.


    213. If a franking credit arises in the friendly society or a wholly
         owned subsidiary's franking account because of a distribution
         declared prior to the friendly society's demutualisation resolution
         day, a franking debit equal to the amount of the credit arises in
         the franking account at the same time as the credit arises.
         [Schedule 3, item 1, section 316-265]


    214. A franking credit may arise in the friendly society or a wholly
         owned subsidiary's franking account on or after the society's
         demutualisation resolution day if the society or subsidiary paid a
         pay as you go instalment or income tax on or after that day that is
         attributable to the period before that day.  In these situations, a
         franking debit equal to the amount of the credit will arise in the
         franking account at the same time as the credit arises.
         [Schedule 3, item 1, section 316-270]


    215. Alternatively, a franking debit may arise in the friendly society
         or a wholly owned subsidiary's franking account on or after the
         society's demutualisation resolution day if the society or
         subsidiary received a refund of income tax that is attributable to
         the period before that day.  In these situations, a franking credit
         equal to the amount of the debit will arise in the franking account
         at the same time as the debit arises.  [Schedule 3, item 1,
         section 316-275]


         Exception to the share tainting rules


    216. The share capital account of the friendly society or a company that
         owns all the shares in the friendly society will not become tainted
         if an amount is transferred to the account in connection with the
         friendly society's demutualisation.


                . This is consistent with demutualisations that occur under
                  Division 9AA of the ITAA 1936 and Division 315 of the ITAA
                  1997, to which sections 197-35 and 197-37 of the ITAA 1997
                  apply respectively.


         [Schedule 3, item 19, subsection 197-38(1)]


    217. This exclusion will only apply to so much of the transferred amount
         that, together with any amounts that were previously transferred in
         connection with the demutualisation, does not exceed the sum of the
         cost bases of shares in the company that are issued to members,
         insured entities, successors of a deceased member or insured entity
         or the trustee of a lost policy holders trust.  [Schedule 3,
         item 19, subsections 197-38(2) and (3)]


Application and transitional provisions


    218. These amendments will apply to demutualisations that occur on or
         after 1 July 2008.  This will ensure that friendly societies that
         demutualise on or after this date but prior to the amendments
         receiving Royal Assent may qualify for this relief.  [Schedule 3,
         items 4, 23 and 24]


Consequential amendments


    219. Consequential amendments will be made to exclude friendly societies
         with a life and/or health insurance business from the
         demutualisation relief in Division 9AA of the ITAA 1936 and in
         Schedule 2H to the ITAA 1936.  [Schedule 3, items 2 and 3]


    220. A consequential amendment will be made to section 11-55 of the ITAA
         1997 to direct readers to the non-assessable non-exempt income
         provisions contained in these amendments.  [Schedule 3, item 5]


    221. A consequential amendment will be made to the table in section 102-
         30 of the ITAA 1997 that sets out special rules that affect capital
         gains and capital losses.  [Schedule 3, item 6]


    222. Consequential amendments will be made to the guide material in
         Subdivision 109-B of the ITAA 1997 to direct readers to the
         modified acquisition rules contained in these amendments.
         [Schedule 3, items 7 to 10]


    223. Consequential amendments will also be made to the guide material in
         Subdivision 112-B of the ITAA 1997 to direct readers to the
         modified cost base rules contained in these amendments.
         [Schedule 3, items 11 to 14]


    224. A consequential amendment will be made to Note 3 in section 118-1
         of the ITAA 1997 to direct readers to the CGT exemptions contained
         in these amendments.  [Schedule 3, item 16]


    225. A consequential amendment will be made to the anti-overlap rule in
         subsection 118-20(4) of the ITAA 1997 to ensure that a member or
         insured entity continues to realise a capital gain or capital loss
         when they receive an amount of money under the demutualisation that
         would otherwise be treated as not assessable and not exempt income.
          [Schedule 3, item 17]


    226. A consequential amendment will be made to exclude Subdivision 126-E
         of the ITAA 1997 from applying in relation to a demutualisation
         that Division 316 applies to.  [Schedule 3, item 1, section 316-
         180]


    227. A consequential amendment will be made to paragraphs 149-165(1)(b)
         and 149-170(1)(b) of the ITAA 1997 to ensure that a friendly
         society that qualifies for this relief and is also a mutual
         insurance company or mutual affiliate company will continue to
         qualify for the relief in Subdivision 149-F of the ITAA 1997.
         [Schedule 3, item 18]


    228. Consequential amendments will be made to Division 205 of the ITAA
         1997 to include the franking debits and franking credits that may
         arise to a friendly society (or a wholly owned subsidiary) under
         these amendments.  [Schedule 3, items 20 and 21]


    229. A consequential amendment will be made to exclude friendly
         societies from Division 315 of the ITAA 1997 where friendly
         societies are entitled to the relief provided by these amendments.
         [Schedule 3, item 22]



Chapter 4
Consolidation:  Application of losses with nil available fraction

Outline of chapter


    230. Schedule 4 to this Bill amends the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
         (ITAA 1997) to ensure losses transferred to the head company of a
         consolidated group or a multiple entry consolidated group (MEC
         group) by a joining entity that is insolvent at the joining time
         can be used by the head company in certain circumstances.


Context of amendments


    231. The consolidation regime applies primarily to a group of Australian
         resident entities wholly owned by an Australian resident company
         that choose to form a consolidated group.  Specific rules provide
         for the membership of certain resident wholly owned subsidiaries of
         a foreign holding company (that is, a MEC group).  The references
         in this chapter to a consolidated group include a MEC group.


    232. Following a choice to consolidate, members of the group are treated
         as a single entity for their income tax purposes.  Subsidiary
         entities lose their individual income tax identity on entry into a
         consolidated group and are treated as part of the head company.


    233. When an entity (the joining entity) becomes a member of a
         consolidated group (including an entity that becomes the head
         company of the group) any tax losses and net capital losses of the
         joining entity are transferred to the head company of the group,
         provided certain tests are satisfied (Subdivision 707-A).


    234. Transferred losses are given an available fraction that represents
         the joining entity's market value in proportion to the market value
         of the group as a whole (section 707-320).  The available fraction
         limits the rate at which transferred losses can be used by the
         group.  The objective is to ensure that the group cannot use the
         losses at a substantially faster rate than the joining entity could
         if it had not joined the group.


    235. Where the value of a joining entity's liabilities exceeds the value
         of its assets at the time it joins a consolidated group (that is,
         where the joining entity has a market value of nil at the joining
         time), any losses of the entity that are transferred to the head
         company of the group will have an available fraction of nil.
         Consequently, assuming that no transitional concessions apply, the
         losses can never be used by the group.


    236. Concerns have been raised that inequitable outcomes arise in
         respect of a transferred loss with a nil available fraction where
         the loss is wholly or partly attributable to:


                . a debt that is forgiven after the joining time, resulting
                  in the head company being subject to the commercial debt
                  forgiveness rules (Division 245 in Schedule 2C to the
                  Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936));


                . a debt that is terminated after the joining time,
                  resulting in the head company being subject to the limited
                  recourse debt rules (Division 243); or


                . a liability that is taken by an entity which leaves the
                  group, resulting in the head company making a capital gain
                  because capital gains tax (CGT) event L5 (section 104-520)
                  happens.


Summary of new law


    237. Schedule 4 to this Bill amends the consolidation provisions in the
         income tax law to ensure losses transferred to the head company of
         a consolidated group by a joining entity that is insolvent at the
         joining time can be used by the head company in certain
         circumstances.


    238. Therefore, if the transferred losses of a joining entity have an
         available fraction of nil, the head company can apply the losses
         to:


                . reduce a net forgiven amount under the commercial debt
                  forgiveness rules;


                . reduce a capital allowance that is adjusted under the
                  limited recourse debt rules; or


                . reduce the capital gain that arises under CGT event L5
                  when the joining entity subsequently leaves the group.


Comparison of key features of new law and current law

|New law                  |Current law              |
|If the transferred losses|When an entity (the      |
|of a joining entity have |joining entity) becomes a|
|an available fraction of |member of a consolidated |
|nil, the head company can|group (including an      |
|apply the losses to:     |entity that becomes the  |
|reduce a net forgiven    |head company of the      |
|amount under the         |group) any tax losses and|
|commercial debt          |net capital losses of the|
|forgiveness rules;       |joining entity are       |
|reduce a capital         |transferred to the head  |
|allowance that is        |company of the group,    |
|adjusted under the       |provided certain tests   |
|limited recourse debt    |are satisfied.           |
|rules; or                |Transferred losses are   |
|reduce the capital gain  |given an available       |
|that arises under CGT    |fraction, worked out     |
|event L5 when the joining|based on relative market |
|entity subsequently      |values, that regulates   |
|leaves the group.        |the rate at which        |
|                         |transferred losses can be|
|                         |used by the group.       |
|                         |If a joining entity has a|
|                         |market value of nil, any |
|                         |transferred losses of the|
|                         |joining entity will have |
|                         |an available fraction of |
|                         |nil.  Consequently, the  |
|                         |losses can never be used |
|                         |by the group.            |


Detailed explanation of new law


    239. The operation of the commercial debt forgiveness rules, the limited
         recourse debt rules and CGT event L5 will be modified if:


                . an entity (the joining entity) becomes a member of a
                  consolidated group (including an entity that becomes the
                  head company of the group);


                . a tax loss or net capital loss was transferred from the
                  joining entity to the head company of the group at the
                  joining time under Subdivision 707-A; and


                . the loss is in a bundle of losses for which the available
                  fraction is nil.


         [Schedule 4, item 4, subsection 707-415(1)]


    240. In these circumstances, subject to certain conditions, the head
         company can choose to apply the loss to, broadly:


                . reduce the net forgiven amount under the commercial debt
                  forgiveness rules;


                . reduce the capital allowance adjustment under the limited
                  recourse debt rules; or


                . reduce the capital gain that arises under CGT event L5
                  when the joining entity subsequently leaves the group.


         [Schedule 4, item 4, subsection 707-415(2)]


    241. However, the loss can be applied to reduce the net forgiven amount,
         capital allowance adjustment or capital gain in relation to an
         income year only to the extent that the loss could be utilised by
         the head company for the income year on the assumption that the
         available fraction for the bundle of losses was one.  [Schedule 4,
         item 4, subsection 707-415(3)]


    242. In addition, a loss can be applied to reduce the net forgiven
         amount, capital allowance adjustment or capital gain only to the
         extent that it has not already been applied.  [Schedule 4, item 4,
         subsection 707-415(7)]


Applying the loss under the commercial debt forgiveness rules


    243. The head company can choose to apply the loss under the commercial
         debt forgiveness rules if:


                . the joining entity owed a debt just before the joining
                  time to an entity that was not a member of the group at
                  that time;


                . the loss is wholly or partly attributable to the debt; and


                . Subdivision 245-E in Schedule 2C to the ITAA 1936 (which
                  outlines how the total net forgiven amount is applied)
                  applies in relation to the debt (or another debt that is
                  reasonably connected to the debt) because the debt is
                  forgiven after the joining time.


         [Schedule 4, item 4, item 1 in the table in subsection 707-415(2)]


    244. In these circumstances, the head company can choose to apply the
         loss to reduce the total net forgiven amount mentioned in
         subsection 245-105(1) for the purposes of applying that total net
         forgiven amount to:


                . reduce deductible revenue losses in accordance with
                  subsection 245-105(5);


                . reduce deductible net capital losses in accordance with
                  subsection 245-105(6);


                . reduce deductible expenditures in accordance with
                  subsection 245-105(7); and


                . reduce relevant cost bases of certain assets in accordance
                  with subsection 245-105(8).


         [Schedule 4, item 4, item 1 in the table in subsection 707-415(2)]


    245. However, the amount of the loss that can be applied to reduce the
         total net forgiven amount cannot exceed the gross forgiven amount
         (within the meaning of section 245-75) of the debt to which the
         loss was attributable.  [Schedule 1, item 4, subsection 707-415(4)]


Applying the loss under the limited recourse debt rules


    246. The head company can choose to apply the loss under the limited
         recourse debt rules if:


                . the joining entity owed a limited recourse debt just
                  before the joining time to an entity that was not a member
                  of the group at that time;


                . the limited recourse debt rules apply in relation to the
                  debt; and


                . the loss is wholly or partly attributable to a deduction
                  mentioned in paragraph 243-15(1)(c) for an income year
                  ending before the joining time - that is, the loss is
                  wholly or partly attributable to, broadly, a capital
                  allowance deduction in respect of finance expenditure,
                  refinance expenditure or financed property.


         [Schedule 4, item 4, item 2 in the table in subsection 707-415(2)]


    247. In these circumstances, the head company can choose to apply the
         loss to reduce the deduction mentioned in paragraph 243-15(1)(c)
         for the purposes of working out whether the capital allowance
         deductions are excessive under subsection 243-35(1).  [Schedule 4,
         item 4, item 2 in the table in subsection 707-415(2)]


    248. However, the amount of the loss that can be applied to reduce the
         deduction mentioned in paragraph 243-15(1)(c) cannot exceed the
         amount of the loss that is attributable to the deduction.
         [Schedule 4, item 4, subsection 707-415(5)]


Applying the loss to reduce the CGT event L5 capital gain


    249. The head company can choose to apply the loss to reduce the capital
         gain arising under CGT event L5 if:


                . the joining entity ceases to be a subsidiary member of the
                  group after the joining time; and


                . the entity's liabilities at the leaving time are the same
                  as, or are reasonably connected to, the liabilities that
                  it had at the joining time.


         [Schedule 4, item 4, item 3 in the table in subsection 707-415(2)]


    250. In these circumstances, the head company can choose to apply the
         loss to reduce the amount remaining after applying step 4 in the
         table in subsection 711-20(1) for the purposes of working out
         whether CGT event L5 happens at the leaving time and, if so, the
         amount of any capital gain arising under CGT event L5.  [Schedule
         4, item 4, item 3 in the table in subsection 707-415(2)]


    251. However, the total amount of losses in the bundle of losses that
         can be applied to reduce any capital gain arising under CGT event
         L5 cannot exceed the amount of the capital gain that would be made
         under CGT event L5 assuming the joining entity ceased to be a
         member of the consolidated group just after the joining time.
         [Schedule 1, item 4, subsection 707-415(6)]


Application and transitional provisions


    252. The measure will apply from 1 July 2002 - that is, from the
         commencement of the consolidation regime.  [Schedule 1, item 5]


    253. The measure is to apply from 1 July 2002 as it has been sought by,
         and is beneficial to, taxpayers.  In this regard, the measure
         ensures that losses transferred to the head company of a
         consolidated group by a joining entity that is insolvent at the
         joining time can be used by the head company and therefore are not
         wasted.


Amendment of assessments


    254. Generally, the Commissioner of Taxation can amend an assessment of
         a company, other than a small business entity, within four years
         from the date of the notice of assessment (section 170 of the
         ITAA 1936.


    255. As these amendments apply from 1 July 2002, the period for amending
         assessments will be extended.  That is, the operation of
         section 170 will be modified so that it does not prevent the
         amendment of an assessment if:


                . the assessment was made before the commencement of
                  Schedule 4;


                . the amendment is made within two years after that date;
                  and


                . the amendment is made for the purpose of giving effect to
                  the amendments in Schedule 4.


         [Section 4]


Consequential amendments


    256. Consequential amendments will insert notes into the commercial debt
         forgiveness rules, the limited recourse debt rules and CGT event L5
         to refer to the adjustments made by section 707-415.  [Schedule 4,
         items 1 to 3, subsections 104-520(3) and 243-35(2) of the ITAA 1997
         and subsection 245-105(1) in Schedule 2C to the ITAA 1936]



Chapter 5
Minor amendments

Outline of chapter


    257. Schedule 5 to this Bill makes various minor amendments to the
         taxation laws.


Context of amendments


    258. The amendments seek to ensure the taxation law operates as intended
         by correcting technical or drafting defects, removing anomalies and
         addressing unintended outcomes.  The minor amendments are part of
         the Government's commitment to the care and maintenance of the
         taxation laws.


    259. Minor amendment packages now include addressing issues raised
         through the Tax Issues Entry System (TIES).  The TIES website
         (www.ties.gov.au), which the Australian Taxation Office and
         Treasury jointly operate, provides a vehicle for tax professionals
         and the general public to raise issues relating to the care and
         maintenance of the tax system.  The relevant part of the
         explanatory memorandum identifies TIES issues.


Summary of new law


    260. The issues these minor amendments deal with include:


                . rectifying incorrect terminology;


                . correcting grammatical errors;


                . repealing inoperative material;


                . clarifying ambiguities; and


                . ensuring provisions are consistent with the original
                  policy intent.


    261. Part 1 of this Schedule concerns references to Australian
         Government Ministers, Departments and Secretaries; Part 2 concerns
         the repeal of Part IV of the Taxation Administration Act 1953; Part
         3 has amendments relating to foreign income tax offsets and foreign
         losses; Part 4 has other amendments; and Part 5 is a transitional
         provision for item 344 relating to determining technical and
         further education institutions.


    262. More significant amendments include:


                . putting beyond any doubt that 'taxable Australian real
                  property' in the context of Division 855 of the Income Tax
                  Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997), relating to the types of
                  assets known as 'taxable Australian property' on which
                  foreign residents pay capital gains tax (CGT), extends to
                  a lease over land, with application to CGT events
                  happening on or after 20 May 2009 (items 337 and 338);


                . amending the rules in the income tax law relating to the
                  foreign income tax offset and foreign losses to ensure
                  that:


                  - the rules deeming foreign income tax paid by controlled
                    foreign companies (CFCs) and foreign investment funds
                    (FIFs) on attributed amounts apply only to Australian
                    entities;


                  - relevant foreign losses converted into tax losses can be
                    deducted in calculating a partnership's net income or
                    loss;


                  - previously recouped foreign losses or CFC losses are not
                    eligible to be convertible foreign losses or convertible
                    CFC losses;


                  - it is clear beyond any doubt that the deduction limit
                    for convertible foreign losses does not prevent later
                    year tax losses from being deductible in the current
                    year; and


                  - there is no possible double counting in relation to
                    convertible foreign losses used by an entity before it
                    joined a consolidated group;


                with application in relation to income years, statutory
                accounting periods and notional accounting periods starting
                on or after 1 July 2008 (Part 3, comprising items 258 to
                282);


                . ensuring that the capital gains tax small business
                  concessions interact appropriately with Division 149 (loss
                  of pre-CGT status) of the ITAA 1997, with application in
                  relation to payments made by a company or trust on or
                  after the day this Bill receives Royal Assent (this issue
                  having been identified through the TIES system) (items 329
                  to 336);


                . amending the fringe benefits tax (FBT) law to ensure that
                  gifts to deductible gift recipients do not result in an
                  employer having a FBT liability, with application to the
                  FBT year starting on 1 April 2008 and later FBT years
                  (items 304 and 305); and


                . ensuring that First Home Saver Account trusts operated by
                  superannuation funds are a 'full self-assessment taxpayer'
                  (as defined) for income tax purposes, with application in
                  relation to the 2009-10 and later income years (items 306
                  and 307).


    263. All of the amendments in Schedule 5 commence from the date of Royal
         Assent unless otherwise stated.


Detailed explanation of new law


Part 1 - References to Ministers, Departments and Secretaries


    264. Part 1 amends tax legislation to replace the current references to
         Australian Government Ministers, Secretaries and Departments with
         streamlined references.


    265. There are many references in tax legislation to a specific
         Minister, Department or Secretary of a Department.  This means that
         whenever the title of a Minister or Department changes, there is a
         need to update these references.  In practice, this has rarely
         resulted in updated references by legislative amendment in the
         legislation itself.  Instead, the practice has been to use
         substituted reference orders under sections 19B or 19BA of the Acts
         Interpretation Act 1901.


    266. Substituted reference orders make 'shadow' changes to the
         references in legislation.  They include information relating to
         the existing reference, what needs to be substituted, the affected
         provisions, and the date of effect of the substitution.  The
         Governor-General, acting on the advice of the Federal Executive
         Council, makes the orders.


    267. Substituted reference orders can be difficult to locate.  Even
         experienced users of tax legislation often do not know that the
         orders exist.  The orders themselves become complex to apply as
         shadow amendment is made to shadow amendment.


    268. The revised approach deals with these issues by providing flexible
         and streamlined references that better accommodate future machinery
         of government changes.  The replacement references refer to the
         Minister or Department administering a specified Act of Parliament.


    269. This approach automatically accommodates reallocations of
         ministerial or departmental responsibility.  Administrative
         Arrangements Orders formally allocate executive responsibility
         among Ministers and Departments and are published in the
         Commonwealth of Australia Gazette.


    270. The most current Administrative Arrangements Order can be found at
         either www.comlaw.gov.au or www.pmc.gov.au.  The easiest way to
         find Administrative Arrangements Orders is to use an internet
         search engine and to search the term 'Administrative Arrangements
         Orders'.


    271. A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax Act) 1999 pioneered this
         approach.  It is instructive that the machinery of government
         changes after the election of the Government in 2007 resulted in
         many shadow amendments via a substituted references order for all
         areas of tax legislation except goods and services tax (GST); in
         fact, GST had none.


    272. The new arrangements should prove sustainable:  the only time that
         amendments will typically be needed will be following any repeal of
         the identified Act.  The normal process of making consequential
         amendments as part of the repeal should identify the need for any
         amendments to the taxation provisions.

|Act being   |Provision    |Amendment                        |
|amended     |being amended|                                 |
|Excise Act  |4(1)         |Inserts a definition of 'Finance |
|1901        |             |Minister'.  [Schedule 5, item 1, |
|            |             |subsection 4(1)]                 |
|Excise Act  |4(1)         |Replaces the definition of       |
|1901        |(definitions)|'Industry Minister' with         |
|            |             |'Resources Minister'.  [Schedule |
|            |             |5, items 2 and 3, subsection     |
|            |             |4(1)]                            |
|Excise Act  |162B(5)      |Replaces references to 'Minister |
|1901        |165A(11)     |for Finance' with 'Finance       |
|            |165A(12)     |Minister'.  Also includes the    |
|            |             |word 'and' at the end of both    |
|            |             |paragraphs 162B(5)(a) and (b),   |
|            |             |consistent with modern drafting  |
|            |             |practice.  [Schedule 5, items 4, |
|            |             |5, 10 and 11,                    |
|            |             |subsections 162B(5), 165A(11) and|
|            |             |(12)]                            |
|Excise Act  |165A(1)(b)   |Replaces references to 'Industry |
|1901        |165A(2)(b)   |Minister' with 'Resources        |
|            |165A(3)      |Minister'.  [Schedule 5, items 6 |
|            |165A(4)      |and 7, paragraphs 165A(1)(b) and |
|            |             |(2)(b), items 7 to 9,            |
|            |             |subsections 165A(3) and (4)]     |
|Excise      |3(1)         |In the definition of             |
|Tariff      |(definitions)|'intermediate area', replaces the|
|Act 1921    |             |reference to 'Minister for       |
|            |             |Industry, Science and Resources' |
|            |             |with 'Resources Minister'.       |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, item 12, subsection |
|            |             |3(1)]                            |
|            |             |Repeals the definition of        |
|            |             |'relevant Energy Minister'.      |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, item 12, subsection |
|            |             |3(1)]                            |
|Excise      |3A(1)        |Replaces the reference to        |
|Tariff      |             |'Minister for Industry, Science  |
|Act 1921    |             |and Resources' with 'Resources   |
|            |             |Minister'.  [Schedule 5, item 13,|
|            |             |subsection 3A(1)]                |
|Fringe      |3(1)         |Inserts definitions of 'Finance  |
|Benefits Tax|             |Minister' and 'Finance           |
|(Application|             |Department'.  Also includes the  |
|to the      |             |word 'and' at the end of         |
|Commonwealth|             |paragraph (a) of the definition  |
|) Act 1986  |             |of 'responsible Department',     |
|            |             |consistent with modern drafting  |
|            |             |practice.  [Schedule 5, items 14 |
|            |             |to 16, subsection 3(1)]          |
|Fringe      |7(1)         |Replaces the reference to        |
|Benefits Tax|             |'Department of the Special       |
|(Application|             |Minister' with 'Finance          |
|to the      |             |Minister'.  [Schedule 5, item 17,|
|Commonwealth|             |subsection 7(1)]                 |
|) Act 1986  |             |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Minister for Finance' with      |
|            |             |'Finance Minister'.  The heading |
|            |             |to section 7 is also altered by  |
|            |             |omitting 'Minister for Finance'  |
|            |             |and substituting 'Finance        |
|            |             |Minister'.  [Schedule 5, item 18,|
|            |             |subsection 7(1)]                 |
|Fringe      |47(8)(b)     |Replaces the reference to the    |
|Benefits Tax|             |'Department of Health, Housing,  |
|Assessment  |             |Local Government and Community   |
|Act  1986   |             |Services' with 'Families         |
|            |             |Department'.  [Schedule 5, item  |
|            |             |19, paragraph 47(8)(b)]          |
|Fringe      |136(1)       |Inserts a definition of 'Families|
|Benefits Tax|(definitions)|Department'.  [Schedule 5, item  |
|Assessment  |             |20, subsection 136(1)]           |
|Act 1986    |             |                                 |
|Income Tax  |6(1)         |Inserts definitions of           |
|Assessment  |(definitions)|'Agriculture Secretary'; 'Arts   |
|Act 1936    |             |Department'; 'Defence            |
|(ITAA 1936) |             |Department', 'Defence Minister'  |
|            |             |and 'Defence Secretary';         |
|            |             |'Education Department' and       |
|            |             |'Education Secretary';           |
|            |             |'Employment Department',         |
|            |             |'Employment Minister' and        |
|            |             |'Employment Secretary'; 'Families|
|            |             |Secretary'; 'Health Department', |
|            |             |'Health Minister' and 'Health    |
|            |             |Secretary'; 'Housing Secretary'; |
|            |             |'Immigration Department',        |
|            |             |'Immigration Minister' and       |
|            |             |'Immigration Secretary';         |
|            |             |'Research Department', 'Research |
|            |             |Minister' and 'Research          |
|            |             |Secretary'; 'Trade Department',  |
|            |             |'Trade Minister' and 'Trade      |
|            |             |Secretary'; and 'Veterans'       |
|            |             |Affairs Department', 'Veterans'  |
|            |             |Affairs Minister' and 'Veterans' |
|            |             |Affairs Secretary'.  [Schedule 5,|
|            |             |items 21 to 43 and 45 to 50,     |
|            |             |subsection 6(1)]                 |
|            |             |Inserts a definition of 'social  |
|            |             |security law'.  [Schedule 5, item|
|            |             |44, subsection 6(1)]             |
|ITAA 1936   |16(4)(e)     |Repeals this paragraph and       |
|            |             |replaces it with '... Employment |
|            |             |Secretary, or the Families       |
|            |             |Secretary, for the purpose of the|
|            |             |administration of the social     |
|            |             |security law'.  Also includes the|
|            |             |word 'or' at the end of          |
|            |             |paragraphs 16(4)(a) to (d),      |
|            |             |consistent with modern drafting  |
|            |             |practice.  [Schedule 5, items 51 |
|            |             |and 52, paragraph 16(4)(e)]      |
|ITAA 1936   |16(4)(ea)    |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary to the Department of  |
|            |             |Employment, Education and        |
|            |             |Training' with 'Employment       |
|            |             |Secretary'.  [Schedule 5, item   |
|            |             |53, paragraph 16(4)(ea)]         |
|ITAA 1936   |16(4)(f)     |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary to the Department of  |
|            |             |Health' with 'Health Secretary'. |
|            |             |Also includes the word 'or' at   |
|            |             |the end of paragraphs 16(4)(ea)  |
|            |             |and 16(4)(eb) (after removing    |
|            |             |some now unnecessary words),     |
|            |             |consistent with modern drafting  |
|            |             |practice.  [Schedule 5, items 54 |
|            |             |to 56, paragraph 16(4)(f)]       |
|            |             |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Minister of State for Health'   |
|            |             |with 'Health Minister'.          |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, item 57, paragraph  |
|            |             |16(4)(f)]                        |
|ITAA 1936   |16(4)(fc)    |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary of the Department of  |
|            |             |Family and Community Services'   |
|            |             |with 'Families Secretary'.  Also |
|            |             |includes the word 'or' at the end|
|            |             |of paragraphs 16(4)(f), (fa) and |
|            |             |(fb), consistent with modern     |
|            |             |drafting practice.  [Schedule 5, |
|            |             |items 58 and 59, paragraph       |
|            |             |16(4)(fc)]                       |
|ITAA 1936   |16(4)(h)     |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary, Department of        |
|            |             |Defence' with 'Defence           |
|            |             |Secretary'.  Also includes the   |
|            |             |word 'or' at the end of          |
|            |             |paragraphs 16(4)(fc), (fd), (g), |
|            |             |(gaa) and (gb), consistent with  |
|            |             |modern drafting practice.        |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, items 60 and 61,    |
|            |             |paragraph 16(4)(h)]              |
|ITAA 1936   |16(4)(hb)    |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary to the Department of  |
|            |             |Education and the Secretary to   |
|            |             |the Department of Social         |
|            |             |Security' with 'Education        |
|            |             |Secretary'.  Also includes the   |
|            |             |word 'or' at the end of          |
|            |             |paragraphs 16(4)(h) and (ha),    |
|            |             |consistent with modern drafting  |
|            |             |practice.  [Schedule 5, items 62 |
|            |             |and 63, paragraph 16(4)(hb)]     |
|ITAA 1936   |16(4)(hd)    |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary to the Department of  |
|            |             |Immigration and Ethnic Affairs'  |
|            |             |with 'Immigration Secretary'.    |
|            |             |Also includes the word 'or' at   |
|            |             |the end of paragraphs 16(4)(hb), |
|            |             |(hba), (hc), (hca), (hcaa) and   |
|            |             |(hcb), consistent with modern    |
|            |             |drafting practice.  [Schedule 5, |
|            |             |items 64 and 65,                 |
|            |             |paragraph 16(4)(hd)]             |
|ITAA 1936   |16(4)(j)     |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary to the Department of  |
|            |             |Housing and Construction' with   |
|            |             |'Housing Secretary'.  Also       |
|            |             |includes the word 'or' at the end|
|            |             |of paragraph 16(4)(hd),          |
|            |             |consistent with modern drafting  |
|            |             |practice.  [Schedule 5, items 66 |
|            |             |to 68, paragraph 16(4)(j)]       |
|ITAA 1936   |16(5B)       |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |16(5C)       |'Secretary to the Department of  |
|            |             |Trade' with 'Trade Secretary'.   |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, items 69 and 70,    |
|            |             |subsections 16(5B) and (5C)]     |
|ITAA 1936   |23AF(11) to  |Replaces the reference to the    |
|            |(14)         |'Minister for Trade' with 'Trade |
|            |23AF(18)     |Minister'.  Also includes the    |
|            |             |word 'or' at the end of          |
|            |             |paragraphs (a) to (d) of the     |
|            |             |definition of 'eligible project' |
|            |             |in subsection 23AF(18).          |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, items 71 to 73,     |
|            |             |subsections 23AF(11) to (14) and |
|            |             |(18)]                            |
|ITAA 1936   |73A(6)       |Repeals the definition of        |
|            |             |'Research Secretary'.  [Schedule |
|            |             |5, item 74, subsection 73A(6)]   |
|ITAA 1936   |124K(1)      |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |124K(1A)     |'Minister' with 'Arts Minister'  |
|            |124K(1B)     |and references to 'Secretary to  |
|            |124K(1D)     |the Minister's Department' and   |
|            |124ZAA(1)    |'Minister's Department' with     |
|            |124ZAA(11)   |'Arts Department'.  Also includes|
|            |124ZAB(1)    |the word 'and' in various places,|
|            |124ZAB(2)(c) |consistent with modern drafting  |
|            |124ZAB(3)    |practice.  Finally, the heading  |
|            |124ZAB(4)    |to section 124ZADAB is altered by|
|            |124ZAB(5)    |omitting 'Minister' and          |
|            |124ZAB(6)(a) |substituting 'Arts Minister'.    |
|            |124ZAB(6A)   |[Schedule 5, items 75 to 101,    |
|            |124ZAB(7)    |subsections 124K(1), (1A), (1B), |
|            |124ZAC(1)    |(1D), 124ZAA(1) and (11) and     |
|            |124ZAC(2)(c) |124ZAB(1), paragraph             |
|            |124ZAC(3)    |124ZAB(2)(c),                    |
|            |124ZAC(5)    |subsections 124ZAB(3) to (5),    |
|            |124ZAD       |paragraph 124ZAB(6)(a),          |
|            |124ZADAA(1)  |subsections 124ZAB(6A) and (7)   |
|            |124ZADAB(1)  |and 124ZAC(1), paragraph         |
|            |124ZADAB(2)  |124ZAC(2)(c),                    |
|            |             |subsections 124ZAC(3) and (5),   |
|            |             |section 124ZAD and               |
|            |             |subsections 124ZADAA(1),         |
|            |             |124ZADAB(1) and (2)]             |
|ITAA 1936   |159J(6)      |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |(definitions)|'Department of Health' in        |
|            |             |paragraph (c) of the definition  |
|            |             |of 'invalid relative' with       |
|            |             |'Health Department'.  [Schedule  |
|            |             |5, item 102, subsection 159J(6)] |
|            |             |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary to the Department of  |
|            |             |Social Security' in paragraph (c)|
|            |             |of the definition of 'invalid    |
|            |             |relative' with 'Families         |
|            |             |Secretary'.  [Schedule 5, item   |
|            |             |103, subsection 159J(6)]         |
|ITAA 1936   |202CB(6)     |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary to the Department of  |
|            |             |Social Security' with 'Employment|
|            |             |Secretary'.  [Schedule 5,        |
|            |             |item 104,  subsection 202CB(6)]  |
|ITAA 1936   |202CB(7)     |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |202CE(8)     |'Secretary to the Department of  |
|            |             |Veterans' Affairs' with          |
|            |             |'Veterans' Affairs Secretary'.   |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, items 105 and 107,  |
|            |             |subsections 202CB(7) and         |
|            |             |202CE(8)]                        |
|ITAA 1936   |202CE(7)     |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary of the Department of  |
|            |             |Social Security' with 'Employment|
|            |             |Secretary'.  [Schedule 5, item   |
|            |             |106, subsection 202CE(7)]        |
|ITAA 1936   |251R(5)(d)   |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary of the Department     |
|            |             |whose Minister administers that  |
|            |             |Act' with 'Families Secretary'.  |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, item 108, paragraph |
|            |             |251R(5)(d)]                      |
|ITAA 1936   |251U(1)(f)   |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Minister for Health' with       |
|            |             |'Health Minister'.  Also includes|
|            |             |the word 'or' at the end of      |
|            |             |paragraphs 251U(1)(a), (b), (c), |
|            |             |(ca), (caa), (cb), (cc), (d) and |
|            |             |(f), consistent with modern      |
|            |             |drafting practice.  [Schedule 5, |
|            |             |items 109 to 111,                |
|            |             |paragraph 251U(1)(f)]            |
|ITAA 1936   |264AA(1)     |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary to the Department of  |
|            |             |Primary Industries and Energy'   |
|            |             |with 'Agriculture Secretary'.    |
|            |             |Also the heading to section 264AA|
|            |             |is altered by omitting           |
|            |             |'Department of Primary Industries|
|            |             |and Energy' and substituting     |
|            |             |'Agriculture Secretary'.         |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, item 112,           |
|            |             |subsection 264AA(1)]             |
|ITAA 1997   |25-7 (note)  |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary to the Department of  |
|            |             |Family and Community Services'   |
|            |             |with 'Families Secretary'.       |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, item 113, section   |
|            |             |25-7 (note)]                     |
|ITAA 1997   |30-25(1)     |Replaces the references to       |
|            |(item 2.1.7  |'Minister for Employment,        |
|            |in the table)|Education, Training and Youth    |
|            |             |Affairs' and to 'Minister' with  |
|            |30-30(1)(c)  |'Education Minister'.  [Schedule |
|            |and (d)      |5, item 114, item 2.1.7 in the   |
|            |             |table in subsection 30-25(1) and |
|            |             |items 115 and 116,               |
|            |             |paragraphs 30-30(1)(c) and (d)]  |
|ITAA 1997   |30-75        |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Minister' with 'Families        |
|            |             |Minister'.  [Schedule 5, item    |
|            |             |117, section 30-75]              |
|ITAA 1997   |30-80(1)     |Replaces references to 'Minister |
|            |(item 9.1.2  |for Foreign Affairs' with        |
|            |in the table)|'Foreign Affairs Minister'.      |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, items 118 to 121,   |
|            |30-85(2)(a)  |item 9.1.2 in the table in       |
|            |and (b)      |subsection 30-80(1), paragraphs  |
|            |30-85 (5)    |30-85(2)(a) and (b) and          |
|            |             |subsection 30-85(5)]             |
|ITAA 1997   |30-210(1)    |Replaces references to 'Minister |
|            |30-230(5)    |for Communications and the Arts' |
|            |30-235(1)    |with 'Arts Minister' and to      |
|            |30-240       |'Secretary to the Department of  |
|            |30-295       |the Department of Communications |
|            |30-300(6) and|and the Arts' with 'Arts         |
|            |(7)          |Secretary'.  Also ensures that   |
|            |30-305(1)    |asterisking protocols for defined|
|            |and (4)      |terms are followed.  [Schedule 5,|
|            |30-310(1)    |items 122 to 124, 148 and 149,   |
|            |375-865(2)(b)|subsections 30-210(1), 30-230(5),|
|            |             |30-235(1) and 30-289(4), section |
|            |376-10(1)(b) |30-295, subsections 30-300(7),   |
|            |and (c)      |30-305(1) and (4), 30-310(1) and |
|            |376-230(1)(a)|paragraphs 375-865(2)(b),        |
|            |and (b)      |376-10(1)(b) and (c),            |
|            |376-240(3)(d)|376-230(1)(a) and (b) and        |
|            |             |376-240(3)(d)]                   |
|ITAA 1997   |30-287       |Replaces references to 'Minister |
|            |30-289(4)    |or Secretary for Family and      |
|            |30-289A(3)   |Community Services' with         |
|            |30-289B(1)   |'Families Minister' or 'Families |
|            |and (4)      |Secretary'.  [Schedule 5, items  |
|            |30-289C(1)   |125 to 129, section 30-287,      |
|            |             |subsections 30-289(4),           |
|            |             |30-289A(3), 30-289B(1) and (4),  |
|            |             |and 30-289C(1)]                  |
|ITAA 1997   |30-295       |Replaces references to 'Minister |
|            |30-300(6)    |for Communications and the Arts' |
|            |30-300(7)    |with 'Arts Minister' and         |
|            |30-305(1)    |references to 'Secretary to the  |
|            |30-305(4)    |Department of Communications and |
|            |30-310(1)    |the Arts' with 'Arts Secretary'. |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, items 130 to 135,   |
|            |             |section 30-295 and subsections   |
|            |             |30-295, 30-300(6) and (7), 30-305|
|            |             |(1) and (4) and 30-310(1)]       |
|ITAA 1997   |34-25(1)     |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary to the Department of  |
|            |             |Industry, Science and Tourism    |
|            |             |(the Industry Secretary)' with   |
|            |             |'Industry Secretary'.  [Schedule |
|            |             |5, item 136, subsection 34-25(1)]|
|ITAA 1997   |34-65        |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Department of Industry, Science |
|            |             |and Tourism' with 'Industry      |
|            |             |Department'.  [Schedule 5, item  |
|            |             |137, section 34-65]              |
|ITAA 1997   |40-180(2)    |Replaces references to 'Minister |
|            |(item 10 in  |for Finance' with 'Finance       |
|            |the table)   |Minister'.  [Schedule 5, items   |
|            |40-300(2)    |138 and 139, item 10 in the table|
|            |(item 11 in  |in subsection 40-180(2), item 11 |
|            |the table)   |in the table in                  |
|            |             |subsection 40-300(2)]            |
|ITAA 1997   |40-670(1)(a) |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary of the Department of  |
|            |             |Agriculture, Fisheries and       |
|            |             |Forestry' with 'Agriculture      |
|            |             |Secretary'.  [Schedule 5, item   |
|            |             |140, paragraph 40-670(1)(a)]     |
|ITAA 1997   |40-670(1)(b) |Replaces the reference to 'that  |
|            |             |Department' with 'the Agriculture|
|            |             |Department'.                     |
|            |             |Replaces the reference to 'that  |
|            |             |Secretary' with 'the Agriculture |
|            |             |Secretary'.  [Schedule 5,        |
|            |             |items 141 and 142, paragraphs    |
|            |             |40-670(1)(a) and (b)]            |
|ITAA 1997   |51-32(3)     |Replaces the reference in        |
|            |             |paragraph (b) to 'Minister       |
|            |             |administering section 1 of the   |
|            |             |Defence Act 1903' with 'Defence  |
|            |             |Minister'.                       |
|            |             |Replaces the words 'that Act'    |
|            |             |with 'the Defence Act 1903'.     |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, items 143 and 144,  |
|            |             |paragraph 51-32(3)(b), subsection|
|            |             |51-32(3)]                        |
|ITAA 1997   |52-131(9)    |Updates the note about the       |
|            |(note)       |location on the internet of the  |
|            |             |ABSTUDY Policy Manual to refer to|
|            |             |2009 rather than 2007 and to     |
|            |             |replace the reference to the     |
|            |             |'Department of Education, Science|
|            |             |and Training' with 'Education    |
|            |             |Department'.  [Schedule 5,       |
|            |             |item 145, subsection 52-131(9)   |
|            |             |(note)]                          |
|ITAA 1997   |61-630(3) and|Replaces the references to       |
|            |(5)          |'Minister administering the      |
|            |             |Student Assistance Act 1973 (the |
|            |             |Education Minister)' with        |
|            |             |'Education Minister' and ensures |
|            |             |the reference is asterisked.     |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, items 146 and 147,  |
|            |             |subsections 61-630(3) and (5)]   |
|ITAA 1997   |396-5        |Replaces the references to       |
|            |396-40       |'Minister for Transport and      |
|            |396-65(1) and|Regional Development' with       |
|            |(2)          |'Transport Minister', with       |
|            |396-70       |consequential amendments.        |
|            |(heading)    |[Schedule 5, items 150 to 168 and|
|            |396-70(1)    |171 and 172, sections 396-5 and  |
|            |396-70(5),   |396-40, subsections 396-65(1) and|
|            |(6) and (7)  |(2), section 396-70, subsections |
|            |396-75(1) and|396-70(1) and (5) to (7),        |
|            |(2)          |396-75(1) and (2), 396-80(1) and |
|            |396-80(1),   |(4), paragraph 396-80(5)(b),     |
|            |(4) and      |subsection 396-90(2) and sections|
|            |(5)(b)       |396-100, 396-105 and 396-110]    |
|            |396-90(2)    |                                 |
|            |396-100      |                                 |
|            |396-105      |                                 |
|            |396-110      |                                 |
|ITAA 1997   |396-105      |Replaces the reference to        |
|            |             |'Secretary to the Minister's     |
|            |             |Department' with 'Transport      |
|            |             |Secretary' and 'Minister's       |
|            |             |Department' with 'Transport      |
|            |             |Department'.  [Schedule 5, items |
|            |             |169 and 170, section 396-105]    |
|ITAA 1997   |995-1(1)     |Amends definitions of 'Arts      |
|            |(Dictionary) |Minister' and 'Arts Secretary';  |
|            |             |'Climate Change Minister' and    |
|            |             |'Climate Change Secretary';      |
|            |             |'Environment Minister' and       |
|            |             |'Environment Secretary';         |
|            |             |'Heritage Secretary'; 'Housing   |
|            |             |Secretary'; 'Industry Secretary';|
|            |             |'Transport Department' and       |
|            |             |'Transport Minister'.            |
|            |             |Inserts definitions of           |
|            |             |'Agriculture Department',        |
|            |             |'Agriculture Minister' and       |
|            |             |'Agriculture Secretary'; 'Arts   |
|            |             |Department'; 'Climate Change     |
|            |             |Department'; 'Education          |
|            |             |Department' and 'Education       |
|            |             |Minister'; 'Environment          |
|            |             |Department'; 'Families           |
|            |             |Department', 'Families Minister' |
|            |             |and 'Families Secretary';        |
|            |             |'Finance Minister'; 'Foreign     |
|            |             |Affairs Minister'; 'Heritage     |
|            |             |Department' and 'Heritage        |
|            |             |Minister'; 'Housing Minister' and|
|            |             |'Housing Department'; 'Industry  |
|            |             |Department' and 'Industry        |
|            |             |Minister';  and 'Transport       |
|            |             |Secretary'.  [Schedule 5, items  |
|            |             |173 to 204, subsection 995-1(1)] |
|Income Tax  |30-10        |Replaces references to 'Minister'|
|Assessment  |30-15(1)     |with 'Arts Minister'.  [Schedule |
|(Transitiona|30-15(1)     |5, items 205 to 208,             |
|l           |(note)       |section 3-10, subsection 30-15(1)|
|Provisions) |30-20        |and section 30-20]               |
|Act 1997    |             |                                 |
|Petroleum   |2            |Repeals the definition of        |
|Resource    |             |'certifying Minister'.           |
|Rent Tax    |             |Inserts definitions of 'Resources|
|Assessment  |             |Minister' and 'Resources         |
|Act 1987    |             |Department'.  [Schedule 5,       |
|            |             |items 209 to 211, section 2]     |
|Petroleum   |18(2)        |Replaces references to           |
|Resource    |18(3)        |'certifying Minister' with       |
|Rent Tax    |20(1)        |'Resources Minister' and makes   |
|Assessment  |20(2)(b)     |similar changes. [Schedule 5,    |
|Act 1987    |20(7)        |items 212 to 226, subsections    |
|            |20(8)        |18(2) and (3) and 20(1),         |
|            |20(12)(a)    |paragraph 20(2)(b),              |
|            |             |subsections 20(7) and (8), and   |
|            |             |paragraph 20(12)(a)]             |
|Petroleum   |36B(1)       |Replaces the reference to the    |
|Resource    |             |'Minister administering the      |
|Rent Tax    |             |Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse|
|Assessment  |             |Gas Storage Act 2006' with       |
|Act 1987    |             |'Resources Minister'.  [Schedule |
|            |             |5, item 227, subsection 36B(1)]  |
|Petroleum   |36B(2)       |Replaces references to 'Minister'|
|Resource    |36B(3)       |and 'certifying Minister' with   |
|Rent Tax    |36B(5)       |'Resources Minister' and replaces|
|Assessment  |108(5)       |'Minister's Department' with     |
|Act 1987    |             |'Resources Department'.          |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, items 228 to 230,   |
|            |             |subsections 36B(2), (3) and (5)  |
|            |             |and 108(5)]                      |
|Superannuati|3(3)         |Inserts a definition of 'Finance |
|on          |6(1)         |Minister' and replaces the       |
|Contribution|             |reference to 'Minister for       |
|s Tax       |             |Finance' with 'Finance Minister'.|
|(Application|             |[Schedule 5, items 231 and 232,  |
|to the      |             |section 3, subsection 6(1)]      |
|Commonwealth|             |                                 |
|) Act 1997  |             |                                 |
|Taxation    |2(1)         |Inserts a definition of          |
|Administrati|14Q(1)       |'Immigration Secretary', repeals |
|on Act 1953 |14S(4)(b)(i) |the definition of 'Immigration   |
|            |14S(5)       |Department', and makes           |
|            |             |consequential amendments.        |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, items 233 to 236,   |
|            |             |subsections 2(1) and 14Q(1),     |
|            |             |subparagraph 14S(4)(b)(i) and    |
|            |             |subsection 14S(5)]               |
|Income Tax  |995-1        |Amends paragraph (a) of the      |
|Assessment  |             |definition of 'Transport         |
|Act 1997    |             |Department' and the definition of|
|            |             |'Transport Minister' by replacing|
|            |             |references to 'Auslink (National |
|            |             |Land Transport) Act 2005' with   |
|            |             |'Nation Building Program         |
|            |             |(National Land Transport) Act    |
|            |             |2009'.                           |
|            |             |Clause 2 of the Bill provides for|
|            |             |the commencement provisions for  |
|            |             |these amendments.  [Schedule 5,  |
|            |             |items 237 and 238, section 995-1,|
|            |             |clause 2]                        |
|Taxation    |2(1)         |Inserts definitions of           |
|Administrati|3ED(1)(b)(i) |'Immigration Department',        |
|on Act 1953 |and (ii) and |'Immigration Minister' and       |
|            |(3)(a)(i) and|'migration officer' and makes    |
|            |(ii) and     |consequential changes.           |
|            |(b)(i)       |Clause 2 of the Bill provides for|
|            |3ED(5)       |special commencement provisions  |
|            |             |for these amendments.            |
|            |             |Items 239 to 243 are to commence |
|            |             |at the later of just after the   |
|            |             |start of the day on which this   |
|            |             |amending Bill receives Royal     |
|            |             |Assent and just after the        |
|            |             |commencement of item 1 of        |
|            |             |Schedule 2 to the Migration      |
|            |             |Legislation Amendment (Worker    |
|            |             |Protection) Act 2008 commences.  |
|            |             |[Schedule 5, items 1070 to 1090, |
|            |             |subsection 2(1),                 |
|            |             |paragraphs 3ED(1)(b)(i) and (ii) |
|            |             |and (3)(a)(i), (ii) and (b)(i)   |
|            |             |and subsection 3ED(5), clause 2] |


Part 2 - Repeal of Part IV of the Taxation Administration Act 1953


     1. :  Amendments to the Taxation Administration Act 1953

|Provision being       |What the amendment does              |
|amended               |                                     |
|Part IV               |Repeals inoperative provisions and   |
|3(1)                  |makes required consequential         |
|3(2)                  |amendments.                          |
|3B(1AA)(a)            |Part IV of the Taxation              |
|3B(4) (definition of  |Administration Act 1953, in          |
|'this Act')           |conjunction with section 39B of the  |
|3C(9) (definition of  |Banking Act 1959, previously dealt   |
|'this Act')           |with the protection of Commonwealth  |
|8J(2)(p)              |revenue, and ensured that foreign    |
|14ZQ (definition of   |currency transfers were prevented if |
|'appealable objection |they would have led to the avoidance |
|decision')            |or evasion of an Australian tax      |
|14ZR(1)(a)            |liability.                           |
|14ZZ(a) to (c)        |Part IV ceased to have effect from 1 |
|14ZZN                 |July 1990 when the regulations       |
|14ZZO                 |implementing foreign currency        |
|14ZZP                 |controls were withdrawn.             |
|14ZZS(1)(a) and (b)   |Foreign currency controls have since |
|                      |been replaced by reporting           |
|                      |requirements under the Cash          |
|                      |Transaction Reports Act 1988 and the |
|                      |Financial Transaction Reports Act    |
|                      |1988.                                |
|                      |Consequential amendments include the |
|                      |repeal by item 253 of the definition |
|                      |of 'appealable objection decision' in|
|                      |section 14ZQ and the omission by     |
|                      |items 256 and 257 of the word        |
|                      |'appealable' in various provisions.  |
|                      |These consequential amendments do not|
|                      |remove or reduce any currently       |
|                      |available rights of review by the    |
|                      |Administrative Appeals Tribunal or of|
|                      |appeal to the Federal Court of       |
|                      |Australia.                           |
|                      |The concept of 'appealable objection |
|                      |decision' is necessary under the     |
|                      |current law only to exclude objection|
|                      |decisions made on a taxation         |
|                      |objection under section 14E (see the |
|                      |current definition of 'appealable    |
|                      |objection decision' in section 14ZQ).|
|                      |Section 14E is part of the current   |
|                      |Part IV, which is proposed to be     |
|                      |repealed.  The amended wording of    |
|                      |section 14ZZ (as proposed by item    |
|                      |255) fully retains current rights of |
|                      |review and appeal.                   |
|                      |[Schedule 5, items 246 to 257, Part  |
|                      |IV, sections 14ZZN, 14ZZO, 14ZZP and |
|                      |14ZQ (definition of 'appealable      |
|                      |objection decision'), subsections    |
|                      |3(1), 3(2), 3B(4) (definition of     |
|                      |'this Act') and 3C(9) (definition of |
|                      |this Act), and paragraphs 3B(1AA)(a),|
|                      |8J(2)(p), 14ZR(1)(a), 14ZZ(a) to (c) |
|                      |and 14ZZ(1)(a) and (b)]              |


     2. :  Amendments to the Banking Act 1959

|Provision being       |What the amendment does              |
|amended               |                                     |
|39B                   |Repeals an inoperative provision.    |
|                      |Section 39B depends on Part IV of the|
|                      |Taxation Administration Act 1953,    |
|                      |which is being repealed.  It prevents|
|                      |the bank authority doing certain     |
|                      |things unless the Commissioner of    |
|                      |Taxation (Commissioner) has issued a |
|                      |certificate under Part IV, which has |
|                      |long been inoperative and which is   |
|                      |now being repealed.  [Schedule 5,    |
|                      |item 245, section 39B]               |


     3. :  Amendments to the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act
        1977

|Provision being       |What the amendment does              |
|amended               |                                     |
|Schedule 1, paragraph |Repeals a provision made redundant as|
|(g)                   |a result of repealing Part IV of the |
|                      |Taxation Administration Act 1953.    |
|                      |[Schedule 5, item 244, Schedule 1,   |
|                      |paragraph (g)]                       |


Part 3 - Amendments relating to foreign income tax offsets and foreign
losses


    273. The new foreign income tax offset rules in Division 770 of the ITAA
         1997 were enacted by the Tax Laws Amendment (2007 Measures No. 4)
         Act 2007.  They represented a rewriting and simplification of the
         previous foreign loss quarantining and foreign tax credit rules.
         They included transitional rules under Subdivisions 770-A to 770-C
         of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997 to allow
         certain existing foreign losses of entities to be used under the
         new foreign income tax offset rules.


    274. All the amendments in Part 3 are to apply to income years,
         statutory accounting periods and notional accounting periods
         starting on or after 1 July 2008 - the start date for the new
         foreign income tax offset rules.  This will ensure that the new
         foreign income tax offset rules work as intended from their first
         application and avoid uncertainty in the law by having a common
         application date.  [Schedule 5, item 282]


     1. :  Amendments to the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997

|Provision being       |What the amendment does              |
|amended               |                                     |
|770-135(1)            |Ensures that the section applies only|
|                      |to Australian entities (including    |
|                      |partnerships with at least one       |
|                      |partner that is an Australian        |
|                      |entity).                             |
|                      |Section 770-135 ensures a streamlined|
|                      |set of rules to deem certain foreign |
|                      |income tax paid by CFCs or foreign   |
|                      |investment funds (FIFs) to be paid by|
|                      |the Australian resident taxpayer or  |
|                      |partnership holding the interest in  |
|                      |the CFCs or FIFs in certain          |
|                      |circumstances.                       |
|                      |Foreign income tax paid by           |
|                      |second-tier FIFs (that is, FIFs      |
|                      |indirectly held by Australian        |
|                      |entities through CFCs or other FIFs) |
|                      |was not intended to be eligible for a|
|                      |foreign income tax offset in the     |
|                      |hands of the underlying Australian   |
|                      |entity.                              |
|                      |However, the section could currently |
|                      |be interpreted to apply not only to  |
|                      |Australian entities but also to      |
|                      |foreign entities (such as CFCs and   |
|                      |first-tier FIFs).  On that           |
|                      |interpretation, and in conjunction   |
|                      |with the operation of section        |
|                      |770-130, the Australian entity that  |
|                      |includes in its assessable income and|
|                      |amount attributed from a second-tier |
|                      |FIF via, for example, a CFC or       |
|                      |first-tier FIF, could potentially be |
|                      |eligible for an offset for foreign   |
|                      |income tax paid by that second-tier  |
|                      |FIF, which was not intended.  (Note  |
|                      |that, as CFC income is attributed to |
|                      |the Australian entity directly - and |
|                      |not cascaded down through all the    |
|                      |foreign entities in between, as is   |
|                      |the case with FIFs - all CFCs are in |
|                      |effect first-tier foreign entities   |
|                      |for the purposes of the attribution  |
|                      |and foreign income tax offset rules.)|
|                      |                                     |
|                      |These provisions will continue to    |
|                      |ensure that, where a partnership is  |
|                      |interposed in a chain of companies   |
|                      |with an Australian company at its    |
|                      |base, the foreign income tax paid by |
|                      |the companies in which the           |
|                      |partnership has an interest will not |
|                      |be eligible for an offset in the hand|
|                      |of the Australian company (including |
|                      |where the partnership is interposed  |
|                      |between a CFC and a FIF company).    |
|                      |[Schedule 5, item 258, subsection    |
|                      |770-135(1)]                          |


       2. :  Amendments to the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997

|Provision being       |What the amendment does              |
|amended               |                                     |
|770-1                 |Amends the law by inserting new      |
|                      |subsection 770-1(4) to ensure that   |
|                      |relevant foreign losses converted    |
|                      |into tax losses can be deducted in   |
|                      |calculating the partnership's net    |
|                      |income or loss under section 90 of   |
|                      |the ITAA 1936, and not be in effect  |
|                      |trapped in the partnership holding   |
|                      |them.                                |
|                      |The transitional rules dealing with  |
|                      |foreign losses accumulated under the |
|                      |previous foreign loss quarantining   |
|                      |rules were intended also to apply to |
|                      |entity structures involving          |
|                      |Australian partners and partnerships.|
|                      |                                     |
|                      |However, it would seem that, while   |
|                      |certain foreign losses held by a     |
|                      |partnership on commencement of the   |
|                      |new foreign income tax offset rules  |
|                      |are eligible to be converted to tax  |
|                      |losses under section 770-1 as        |
|                      |intended, there is no mechanism by   |
|                      |which they can be deducted from the  |
|                      |net assessable income of the         |
|                      |partnership (or added to a           |
|                      |partnership loss) under section 90 of|
|                      |the ITAA 1936 and so be distributed  |
|                      |to the partners for use against their|
|                      |own assessable income.  Without such |
|                      |a mechanism, foreign losses could be |
|                      |converted into tax losses but then be|
|                      |'trapped' in the partnership instead |
|                      |of being available to the partners.  |
|                      |[Schedule 5, items 259 and 260,      |
|                      |section 770-1]                       |
|770-5(1)(a) and (b)   |Amends these provisions to ensure    |
|770-5(3)              |that previously recouped foreign     |
|770-10 (heading)      |losses are not eligible to be        |
|770-10                |convertible foreign losses.          |
|                      |It was not intended that the         |
|                      |transitional rules allow an overall  |
|                      |foreign loss that had been previously|
|                      |recouped by an entity under the      |
|                      |former rules in section 160AFD of the|
|                      |ITAA 1936 be a convertible foreign   |
|                      |loss under sections 770-5 and 770-10 |
|                      |of the Income Tax (Transitional      |
|                      |Provisions) Act 1997.                |
|                      |Ensures that step 1 of the method    |
|                      |statement in section 770-10 operates |
|                      |as intended for entities other than  |
|                      |companies.  [Schedule 5, items 261 to|
|                      |267, paragraphs 770-5(1)(a) and (b), |
|                      |subsection 770-5(3), and section     |
|                      |770-10]                              |
|770-165(1)(a) and (b) |Amends the required sections to      |
|770-165(3)            |ensure that previously recouped CFC  |
|770-170 (heading)     |losses are not eligible to be        |
|770-170               |convertible CFC losses.              |
|                      |It was not intended that the         |
|                      |transitional rules allow a CFC loss  |
|                      |that had been previously recouped    |
|                      |under the former section 431 of the  |
|                      |ITAA 1936 be a convertible CFC loss  |
|                      |under sections 770-165 and 770-170 of|
|                      |the Income Tax (Transitional         |
|                      |Provisions) Act 1997.  [Schedule 5,  |
|                      |items 277 to 281, paragraphs         |
|                      |770-165(1)(a) and (b),               |
|                      |subsection 770-165(3), and           |
|                      |section 770-170]                     |
|770-30                |Ensures that the deduction limit     |
|                      |applying to convertible foreign      |
|                      |losses does not prevent later year   |
|                      |tax losses from being deducted in the|
|                      |current year.  This is consistent    |
|                      |with general practice where earlier  |
|                      |year losses are prevented or         |
|                      |restricted from being used by        |
|                      |ownership tests, deduction limits or |
|                      |quarantining (unless otherwise       |
|                      |expressly stated).                   |
|                      |The transitional rules allow an      |
|                      |entity to convert certain foreign    |
|                      |losses incurred before the new       |
|                      |foreign income tax offset rules begin|
|                      |into convertible foreign losses under|
|                      |section 770-1 of the Income Tax      |
|                      |(Transitional Provisions) Act 1997.  |
|                      |These convertible foreign losses are |
|                      |then deductible under Division 36 of |
|                      |the ITAA 1997 like ordinary tax      |
|                      |losses, up to a limit calculated     |
|                      |using the table in                   |
|                      |subsection 770-30(1) of the Income   |
|                      |Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act    |
|                      |1997.                                |
|                      |If the limit is reached, the entity  |
|                      |can deduct no further convertible    |
|                      |foreign loss for that income year,   |
|                      |with any further convertible foreign |
|                      |loss waiting for a future year, as   |
|                      |was intended.                        |
|                      |However, an entity may also have     |
|                      |unrecouped ordinary tax losses, all  |
|                      |of which were incurred after the     |
|                      |oldest unrecouped convertible foreign|
|                      |loss (the further deduction of which |
|                      |may have been deferred because of the|
|                      |limit).  These ordinary tax losses   |
|                      |remain deductible despite the earlier|
|                      |year convertible foreign loss not    |
|                      |being fully deducted.  This is       |
|                      |consistent with general practice in  |
|                      |relation to using losses unless      |
|                      |expressly otherwise stated.          |
|                      |[Schedule 5, items 268 and 269,      |
|                      |section 770-30]                      |
|770-95(b)             |Removes possible double counting in  |
|770-95(c)             |relation to convertible foreign      |
|770-95 (notes 1 and 2)|losses used by a subsidiary entity   |
|                      |before it joined a consolidated      |
|770-100(2)            |group.  This is to ensure that the   |
|770-100(3)            |group's head company is not          |
|770-165(1)(a) and (b) |disadvantaged by an unintended       |
|770-165(3)            |reduction in its convertible foreign |
|770-170 (heading)     |loss deduction limit.                |
|                      |The drafting of the special reduction|
|                      |could be interpreted to account twice|
|                      |for such losses, to the unintended   |
|                      |detriment of the head                |
|                      |company/taxpayer.                    |
|                      |The current transitional rules       |
|                      |include some special rules for head  |
|                      |companies of consolidated groups.    |
|                      |This is the case particularly where a|
|                      |joining entity had converted its     |
|                      |foreign losses incurred before the   |
|                      |new foreign income tax offset rules  |
|                      |began into convertible foreign losses|
|                      |on commencement of the new foreign   |
|                      |income tax offset rules and had used |
|                      |some of these losses before joining  |
|                      |the group (that is, before           |
|                      |transferring these losses to the head|
|                      |company).                            |
|                      |Those special rules were included to |
|                      |reduce the head company's deduction  |
|                      |limit for these losses to the extent |
|                      |that they had been utilised prior to |
|                      |transfer.  [Schedule 5, items 274 to |
|                      |276, paragraphs 770-95(b) and (c),   |
|                      |section 770-95 (notes 1 and 2),      |
|                      |subsections 770-100(2) and (3),      |
|                      |paragraphs 770-165(1)(a) and (b),    |
|                      |subsection 770-165(3), section       |
|                      |770-170 (heading)]                   |


Part 4 - Other amendments and Part 5 -Transitional provision


     3. :  Amendments to the A New Tax System (Australian Business Number)
        Act 1999

|Provision being       |What the amendment does              |
|amended               |                                     |
|25(2) (note 1)        |Changes references to 'Income Tax    |
|41 (definition of     |Assessment Act 1997' to 'ITAA 1997', |
|'electronic           |which is defined to mean the Income  |
|signature')           |Tax Assessment Act 1997 in this Act. |
|41 (definition of     |[Schedule 5, items 283 to 287,       |
|'non-cash benefit')   |subsection 25(2) (note 1), and       |
|41 (definition of     |section 41]                          |
|'withholding payment')|                                     |
|                      |                                     |
|41 (definition of     |                                     |
|'withholding payment' |                                     |
|covered by a          |                                     |
|particular provision  |                                     |
|in Schedule 1 to the  |                                     |
|Taxation              |                                     |
|Administration        |                                     |
|Act 1953)             |                                     |


     4. :  Amendments to the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986

|Provision being       |What the amendment does              |
|amended               |                                     |
|10(3)(a)(v)(B)        |Repeals some references to sales tax |
|10(3D)(c)             |that are no longer necessary in the  |
|                      |law.                                 |
|                      |Section 10 provides for the 'cost    |
|                      |basis' that employers can use to work|
|                      |out the taxable value of car fringe  |
|                      |benefits, and includes outdated      |
|                      |references to sales tax.  Sales tax  |
|                      |has not applied since 1 July 2000.   |
|                      |However, the provision was retained  |
|                      |to cover affected cars that were     |
|                      |still being leased out.              |
|                      |Based on the effective life of cars  |
|                      |it is likely there are few, if       |
|                      |any, pre-2000 vehicles still being   |
|                      |leased out and provided as fringe    |
|                      |benefits. In other words, these      |
|                      |provisions are effectively           |
|                      |inoperative.                         |
|                      |In any event, section 8 (effect of   |
|                      |repeal) of the Acts Interpretation   |
|                      |Act 1901 would apply to any remaining|
|                      |cases to ensure the continued        |
|                      |application of the repealed          |
|                      |provisions.  [Schedule 5, items 288  |
|                      |to 292, sub-subparagraph             |
|                      |10(3)(a)(v)(B), and paragraph        |
|                      |10(3D)(c)]                           |
|42(1)                 |Makes various improvements by, for   |
|                      |example, correcting punctuation.     |
|                      |[Schedule 5, items 293 and 296 to    |
|                      |303, subsection 42(1)]               |
|42(1)(a)(i)           |Removes provisions that increase the |
|42(1)(b)(i)           |taxable value of an in-house benefit |
|                      |where sales tax was not paid, as they|
|                      |are no longer operative.             |
|                      |These provisions relate to the       |
|                      |taxable value of in-house property   |
|                      |fringe benefits.  Both subparagraphs |
|                      |provide that the taxable value is    |
|                      |increased where sales tax was not    |
|                      |paid on the acquisition by the       |
|                      |providers.  Following the            |
|                      |introduction of the GST, this type of|
|                      |event is not subject to sales tax.   |
|                      |[Schedule 5, items 294 and 295,      |
|                      |subparagraphs 42(1)(a)(i) and        |
|                      |(b)(ii)]                             |
|148                   |Amends the FBT law to ensure that    |
|                      |donations made to deductible gift    |
|                      |recipients through salary sacrifice  |
|                      |arrangements do not result in an     |
|                      |employer incurring an FBT liability. |
|                      |The amendment applies from the start |
|                      |of the 2008-09 FBT year to ensure    |
|                      |that consistent treatment applies for|
|                      |the whole FBT year.  The 2008-09 year|
|                      |has been chosen because the bushfire |
|                      |appeals make it particularly         |
|                      |significant for these arrangements.  |
|                      |FBT may be payable by employers who  |
|                      |make donations to deductible gift    |
|                      |recipients under salary sacrifice    |
|                      |arrangements with their employees.   |
|                      |Gifts of $2 or more in cash or       |
|                      |property (subject to certain rules)  |
|                      |to deductible gift recipients are tax|
|                      |deductible (see Division 30 of the   |
|                      |ITAA 1997).                          |
|                      |Under the Commissioner's workplace   |
|                      |giving program, an employer may make |
|                      |donations to deductible gift         |
|                      |recipients on behalf of their        |
|                      |employees from the employee's        |
|                      |after-tax salary and wages.          |
|                      |The Commissioner then allows the     |
|                      |employers to adjust the amount that  |
|                      |must be withheld from an employee's  |
|                      |salary and wages (under the pay as   |
|                      |you go withholding system) to take   |
|                      |account of the deduction the employee|
|                      |will be entitled to for the donation |
|                      |the employer has made on their       |
|                      |behalf.  This allows the employee in |
|                      |effect to obtain the benefit of the  |
|                      |deduction immediately.               |
|                      |If an employee enters into a salary  |
|                      |sacrifice arrangement with their     |
|                      |employer in which they voluntarily   |
|                      |reduce their salary and wages in     |
|                      |return for a benefit, the FBT regime |
|                      |may tax the employer on the benefit  |
|                      |provided.                            |
|                      |FBT applies to fringe benefits       |
|                      |provided to an employee (or their    |
|                      |associates) in respect of their      |
|                      |employment.  The benefit is the      |
|                      |donation made to the deductible gift |
|                      |recipient.  Although a deductible    |
|                      |gift recipient is not likely         |
|                      |ordinarily to be an employee's       |
|                      |associate, the anti-avoidance rule in|
|                      |subsection 148(2) of the Fringe      |
|                      |Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986     |
|                      |treats the deductible gift recipient |
|                      |as the employee's associate as the   |
|                      |benefit is provided under a salary   |
|                      |sacrifice arrangement.  [Schedule 5, |
|                      |items 304 and 305, section 148]      |


       5. :  Amendments to the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936

|Provision being       |What the amendment does              |
|amended               |                                     |
|6(1) (at the end of   |Extends the definition of 'full      |
|the definition of     |self-assessment taxpayer' to include |
|'full self-assessment |the trustee of an FHSA trust (that   |
|taxpayer')            |is, the trustee of a First Home Saver|
|                      |Account trust).                      |
|                      |This amendment ensures that          |
|                      |superannuation funds assess the      |
|                      |liability arising from an FHSA trust |
|                      |in the same manner as the remainder  |
|                      |of the superannuation fund.          |
|                      |Superannuation funds (which will be  |
|                      |offering First Home Saver            |
|                      |Accounts) are already full           |
|                      |self-assessment taxpayers and their  |
|                      |FHSA trusts should not be treated    |
|                      |differently to the superannuation    |
|                      |fund itself.                         |
|                      |The inclusion of FHSA trusts as full |
|                      |self-assessment taxpayers is         |
|                      |consistent with the other entities   |
|                      |listed as full self-assessment       |
|                      |taxpayers.  [Schedule 5, item 306,   |
|                      |subsection 6(1)]                     |
|                      |This amendment applies in relation to|
|                      |the 2009-10 and later income years to|
|                      |ensure that taxpayers and the        |
|                      |Australian Taxation Office have time |
|                      |to update their systems.  [Schedule  |
|                      |5, item 307]                         |
|16(5BA)               |Repeals an inoperative provision     |
|16(5C)                |(subsection 16(5BA)) and makes       |
|16(5C)(a)             |necessary consequential amendments.  |
|                      |Subsection 16(5BA) allows the        |
|                      |Commissioner to provide the Treasurer|
|                      |and others with information about    |
|                      |deductions for shares in companies   |
|                      |listed under the Management and      |
|                      |Investment Companies Act 1983. This  |
|                      |Act was repealed in 2003.  [Schedule |
|                      |5, items 308 to 310, subsections     |
|                      |16(5BA) and (5C), and paragraph      |
|                      |16(5C)(a)]                           |
|82KZL(1)(a)           |Includes the words 'or' or 'and' at  |
|(definition of        |the end of each listed paragraph,    |
|'excluded             |consistent with modern drafting      |
|expenditure')         |practice.  [Schedule 5, items 311 to |
|82KZL(1)(b)           |312, paragraphs 82KZL(1)(a) and (b)  |
|(definition of        |and 82KZL(2)(a)]                     |
|'excluded             |                                     |
|expenditure')         |                                     |
|82KZL(2)(a)           |                                     |
|99H(1)(c)             |Replaces an incorrect reference to   |
|                      |'subsection 12-400(4)' with the      |
|                      |correct reference to 'subsection     |
|                      |12-405(4)'.                          |
|                      |This amendment does not change the   |
|                      |practical effect of the law.  This is|
|                      |because the present incorrect        |
|                      |reference to subsection 12-400(4) is |
|                      |clearly a typographical error.  The  |
|                      |provision makes sense only if the    |
|                      |incorrect reference is read as a     |
|                      |reference to subsection 12-405(4).   |
|                      |The courts would be expected to read |
|                      |the legislation in its correct form  |
|                      |where there was clearly an error of  |
|                      |this kind. For example, Justice      |
|                      |Muirhead in the case of Lindner v    |
|                      |Wright (1976) 14 ALR 105 read an     |
|                      |incorrect reference to subsection (3)|
|                      |as a reference to the correct        |
|                      |subsection (4).  [Schedule 5,        |
|                      |item 313, paragraph 99H(1)(c)]       |
|128W(1)               |Repeals inoperative provisions.      |
|128W(2)               |Subsections 128W(1), (2), (3) and (7)|
|128W(3)               |related to the payment of mining     |
|128W(7)               |withholding tax that became due and  |
|                      |payable before 1 July 2000.  The     |
|                      |provisions relating to the collection|
|                      |and recovery of mining withholding   |
|                      |tax and other amounts are now covered|
|                      |by Part 4-15 of Schedule 1 to the    |
|                      |Tax Administration Act 1953.         |
|                      |[Schedule 5, items 314 and 315,      |
|                      |subsections 128W(1) to (3) and (7)]  |
|                      |The amendment does not apply to any  |
|                      |mining withholding tax that became   |
|                      |due and payable before 1 July 2000.  |
|                      |[Schedule 5, item 316]               |
|161AA(d)              |Replaces references to 'fund that is |
|                      |an eligible superannuation fund (as  |
|                      |defined in section 267)' with        |
|                      |'superannuation fund'.               |
|                      |Section 267 was repealed in 2007 by  |
|                      |Schedule 1, item 8 of the            |
|                      |Superannuation Legislation Amendment |
|                      |(Simplification) Act 2007.  [Schedule|
|                      |5, item 317, paragraph 161AA(d)]     |
|                      |The amendment applies in relation to |
|                      |the 2009-10 and later income years.  |
|                      |[Schedule 5, item 318]               |


       6. :  Amendments to the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997

|Provision being       |What the amendment does              |
|amended               |                                     |
|30-25(1), table item  |Replaces a reference to 'declared by |
|2.1.7                 |a signed instrument to be a technical|
|                      |and further education institution    |
|                      |within the meaning of the Employment,|
|                      |Education and Training Act 1988' with|
|                      |'determined to be a technical and    |
|                      |further education institution under  |
|                      |the Student Assistance Act 1973'.    |
|                      |The Employment, Education and        |
|                      |Training Act 1988 was repealed by the|
|                      |Australian Research Council          |
|                      |(Consequential and Transitional      |
|                      |Provisions) Act 2001.  The Student   |
|                      |Assistance Act 1973 covers the same  |
|                      |relevant ground as the repealed Act. |
|                      |[Schedule 5, items 319 and 344,      |
|                      |item 2.1.7 in the table in subsection|
|                      |30-25(1)]                            |
|30-86(4)              |Replaces the word 'declaration' with |
|                      |the word 'recognition', which is     |
|                      |consistent with the language used    |
|                      |elsewhere in the section.  [Schedule |
|                      |5, item 320, subsection 30-86(4)]    |
|40-425(2)             |Changes the punctuation of the       |
|                      |subsection to make it easier to      |
|                      |understand.  [Schedule 5, item 321,  |
|                      |subsection 40-425(2)]                |
|54-10(2)              |Extends the definition of 'State     |
|54-10(1)(e)           |Insurers' to the whole Act and makes |
|54-10(1A)(e)          |necessary consequential amendments.  |
|995-1(1) (Dictionary) |The term 'State Insurers' is at      |
|                      |present defined only for the purposes|
|                      |of subsection 54-10(2).  Defining a  |
|                      |term for only a portion of the Act is|
|                      |inconsistent with drafting protocols,|
|                      |which require definitions to apply   |
|                      |across the whole Act.                |
|                      |At present, subsection 54-10(2) is   |
|                      |the only provision in the Act that   |
|                      |uses this term.  [Schedule 5, items  |
|                      |322, 323 and 341, paragraphs         |
|                      |54-10(1)(e) and (1A)(e),             |
|                      |subsections 54-10(2) and 995-1(1)]   |
|124-10(3) (note 2)    |Amends a statutory note to ensure it |
|                      |refers to relevant provisions.       |
|                      |Note 2 of subsection 124-10(3) alerts|
|                      |the reader to provisions that modify |
|                      |the consequences of CGT replacement  |
|                      |asset roll-overs.  This amendment    |
|                      |includes in the note a reference to  |
|                      |'Subdivision 124-C (about statutory  |
|                      |licences)'.  [Schedule 5, item 324,  |
|                      |subsection 124-10(3) (note 2)]       |
|124-40(1) (notes)     |Includes a statutory note (note 2) to|
|                      |provide a signpost to provisions in  |
|                      |Subdivision 124-C of the Income Tax  |
|                      |(Transitional Provisions) Act 1997   |
|                      |that modify the CGT statutory        |
|                      |licences roll-over for certain       |
|                      |water-related licences.              |
|                      |A consequential amendment renumbers  |
|                      |the existing unnumbered note as note |
|                      |1.  [Schedule 5, items 325 and 326,  |
|                      |subsection 124-140(1)]               |
|130-90(3)(a)(i)       |Amends the CGT provisions relating to|
|130-90(3)(a)(ii)      |employee share schemes to ensure that|
|130-90(3)(c)          |they operate as intended.  The       |
|                      |amendment clarifies that there is no |
|                      |potential for double taxation in the |
|                      |described circumstance.              |
|                      |Tax Laws Amendment (Budget Measures) |
|                      |Act 2008 amended subsection 130-90(3)|
|                      |to remove double taxation by         |
|                      |disregarding capital gains or capital|
|                      |losses arising when an employee      |
|                      |becomes entitled to shares held in   |
|                      |the trust as a result of exercising a|
|                      |right acquired under an employee     |
|                      |share scheme.                        |
|                      |There arguably remains potential for |
|                      |double taxation in the circumstance  |
|                      |where an employee share scheme right |
|                      |is exercised and the shares remain in|
|                      |the trust because of restrictions    |
|                      |that apply to the shares.  This      |
|                      |creates uncertainty about whether the|
|                      |employee on ultimately acquiring the |
|                      |shares from the satisfaction of a    |
|                      |beneficial interest has acquired the |
|                      |shares as a result of exercising a   |
|                      |right acquired under an employee     |
|                      |share scheme.  [Schedule 5, items 327|
|                      |and 328,                             |
|                      |subparagraphs 130-90(3)(a)(i) and    |
|                      |(ii) and paragraph 130-90(3)(c)]     |
|149-30(1)             |These amendments give effect to a    |
|149-30(2)             |suggestion made through the Tax      |
|152-110(1)            |Issues Entry System.                 |
|152-125(1)(a)         |Amends these provisions (including by|
|152-125(1)(a)(iii)    |making consequential amendments) to  |
|                      |ensure that they apply more          |
|                      |appropriately.                       |
|                      |Section 152-125 (which is part of the|
|                      |CGT small business concessions)      |
|                      |allows a company or trust to make    |
|                      |exempt payments to a CGT concession  |
|                      |stakeholder, including payments      |
|                      |reflecting a capital gain that is    |
|                      |exempt under the 15-year exemption or|
|                      |a pre-CGT capital gain.              |
|                      |The amendments allow the pre-CGT     |
|                      |capital gain that existed on an asset|
|                      |before the operation of Division 149,|
|                      |which turns a pre-CGT asset into a   |
|                      |post-CGT asset where there has been  |
|                      |at least a 50 per cent change in     |
|                      |ownership of a company or trust, to  |
|                      |be distributed tax-free to a CGT     |
|                      |concession stakeholder of the company|
|                      |or trust.                            |
|                      |This is achieved firstly by amending |
|                      |subsection 149-30(1) so that it      |
|                      |comprises two subsections.           |
|                      |The application of new subsection    |
|                      |149-30(1A) and section 149-35 is then|
|                      |ignored for the purposes of          |
|                      |section 152-125.                     |
|                      |The effect of these two amendments is|
|                      |that, where Division 149 has treated |
|                      |a pre-CGT asset as a post-CGT asset, |
|                      |the asset retains its original cost  |
|                      |base and time of acquisition for the |
|                      |purposes of section 152-125.         |
|                      |This means the total capital gain,   |
|                      |comprising the actual pre-CGT gain   |
|                      |and actual post-CGT gain, is treated |
|                      |as a post-CGT gain for the purposes  |
|                      |of allowing that capital gain to be  |
|                      |an exempt amount under subsection    |
|                      |152-125(1).                          |
|                      |The amendments also clarify that, in |
|                      |calculating the period an entity has |
|                      |continuously owned an asset for the  |
|                      |purposes of section 152-110, any     |
|                      |change in majority underlying        |
|                      |interests in the asset is ignored.   |
|                      |This means that the period of        |
|                      |ownership of the CGT asset starts    |
|                      |from the time the entity originally  |
|                      |acquired the asset.                  |
|                      |The amendments similarly result in   |
|                      |any change in majority underlying    |
|                      |interests in an asset being ignored  |
|                      |for testing whether an entity had a  |
|                      |significant individual for at least  |
|                      |15 years for the purposes of section |
|                      |152-110.  [Schedule 5, items 329 to  |
|                      |335, subsections 149-30(1) and (2),  |
|                      |152-110(1), subparagraph             |
|                      |152-125(1)(a)(iii),                  |
|                      |paragraph 152-125(1)(a)]             |
|                      |The Division 152 amendments apply to |
|                      |payments made by a company or trust  |
|                      |on or after the day on which this    |
|                      |Bill receives Royal Assent.          |
|                      |[Schedule 5, item 336]               |
|855-20(a)             |A foreign resident is liable for CGT |
|                      |if the relevant CGT asset is 'taxable|
|                      |Australian property' (as defined).   |
|                      |This includes real property in       |
|                      |Australia.                           |
|                      |The amendment puts beyond doubt that |
|                      |'taxable Australian real property' in|
|                      |this context includes a lease over   |
|                      |land.  This accords with the intended|
|                      |application of the provisions when   |
|                      |introduced.                          |
|                      |A lease in this context would include|
|                      |a sublease.                          |
|                      |The amendment applies in relation to |
|                      |CGT events happening on or after 20  |
|                      |May 2009, the date on which the      |
|                      |amendment was first foreshadowed.    |
|                      |The amendment is to be disregarded   |
|                      |for interpreting the provisions in   |
|                      |their previous form in relation to   |
|                      |CGT events happening before 20 May   |
|                      |2009.  The effect of this is to      |
|                      |ensure that no inference can be drawn|
|                      |from the amendment that the law      |
|                      |operated differently before the      |
|                      |amendment.  This is important because|
|                      |the intention of the amendment is not|
|                      |to change the existing law but merely|
|                      |to clarify how it was always intended|
|                      |to apply.  [Schedule 5, items 337 and|
|                      |338, paragraph 855-20(a)]            |
|960-190(1) (table item|Corrects asterisking of a defined    |
|3)                    |term.  In the ITAA 1997, the drafting|
|                      |protocol is to mark defined terms    |
|                      |with an asterisk but to do so only   |
|                      |for the first occurrence of the term |
|                      |in each subsection (see              |
|                      |subsection 2-15(1)).  However,       |
|                      |'partnership' is included in the list|
|                      |in subsection 2-15(3) of defined     |
|                      |terms not identified with an         |
|                      |asterisk.  [Schedule 5, item 339,    |
|                      |item 3 in the table in subsection    |
|                      |960-190(1)]                          |
|995-1 (paragraphs (a) |Replaces references to 'a person'    |
|and (b) for the       |with 'an individual' given that only |
|definition of 'legal  |an individual can die or be under a  |
|personal              |legal disability.  [Schedule 5, item |
|representative')      |340, section 995-1, paragraphs (a)   |
|                      |and (b) for the definition of 'legal |
|                      |personal representative']            |


       7. :  Amendments to the International Tax Agreements Act 1953

|Provision being       |What the amendment does              |
|amended               |                                     |
|16(4)                 |Omits references to the repealed     |
|16(5)(b)              |section 104 of the ITAA 1936 and     |
|                      |consequentially rewrites the         |
|                      |provision.                           |
|                      |Section 104 was repealed by the Tax  |
|                      |Laws Amendment (Repeal of Inoperative|
|                      |Provisions) Act 2006.  It previously |
|                      |made private companies liable to pay |
|                      |additional tax on undistributed      |
|                      |profits.  It ceased to apply from 1  |
|                      |July 1986 with the introduction of   |
|                      |the imputation system.  [Schedule 5, |
|                      |item 342, subsections 16(4) and (5)] |


       8. :  Amendments to the Tax Laws Amendment (2007 Measures No. 5) Act
          2007

|Provision being       |What the amendment does              |
|amended               |                                     |
|Schedule 7, item 14   |Corrects an error in the Tax Laws    |
|                      |Amendment (2007 Measures No.5) Act   |
|                      |2007 that incorrectly applies an     |
|                      |application provision to a general   |
|                      |regulation-making power also inserted|
|                      |by the Schedule.                     |
|                      |Item 13 of Schedule 7 of the Act     |
|                      |created a general regulation-making  |
|                      |power for the Income Tax             |
|                      |(Transitional Provisions) Act 1997.  |
|                      |The remaining items of Schedule 7    |
|                      |concerned CGT statutory licence      |
|                      |roll-over provisions in Subdivision  |
|                      |124-C of the Income Tax (Transitional|
|                      |Provisions) Act 1997.                |
|                      |Item 14 of Schedule 7 at present     |
|                      |inappropriately applies all the      |
|                      |amendments made by Schedule 7 to CGT |
|                      |events happening in the 2005-06 and  |
|                      |later income years.                  |
|                      |This is inappropriate for the general|
|                      |regulation-making power given that   |
|                      |regulations made under it may have   |
|                      |nothing to do with CGT events.  At   |
|                      |this stage, no regulations have been |
|                      |made for the purposes of the Income  |
|                      |Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act    |
|                      |1997.                                |
|                      |The amendment excludes item 13 from  |
|                      |the application provision.  [Schedule|
|                      |5, item 343, item 14 of Schedule 7]  |

Index

Schedule 1:  Research and development

|Bill reference                              |Paragraph     |
|                                            |number        |
|Item 1, paragraph 73J(1)(c)                 |1.11          |


Schedule 2:  Prescribed private funds

|Bill reference                              |Paragraph     |
|                                            |number        |
|Items 1 and 22, paragraph 26(3)(ga) of the A|2.75          |
|New Tax System (Australian Business Number) |              |
|Act 1999 and section 426-115 in Schedule 1  |              |
|to the TAA 1953                             |              |
|Items 2, 11, 13 to 16, subsection 6(1) of   |2.95          |
|the ITAA 1936, paragraph 31-10(2)(b) and    |              |
|subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997, and   |              |
|subsection 2(1) of the TAA 1953             |              |
|Items 3 and 17, subsection 16(4) of the ITAA|2.80          |
|1936 and subsection 3C(4) of the TAA 1953   |              |
|Items 4 and 10, section 30-15 and paragraph |2.94          |
|31-10(1)(b) of the ITAA 1997                |              |
|Items 4 and 22, item 2 in the table in      |2.23          |
|subsection 30-15(2) of the ITAA 1997 and    |              |
|Subdivision 426-D in Schedule 1 to the TAA  |              |
|1953                                        |              |
|Items 4 and 22, item 2 in the table in      |2.24          |
|subsection 30-15(2) of the ITAA 1997 and    |              |
|section 426-105 in Schedule 1 to the TAA    |              |
|1953                                        |              |
|Items 5, 6 and 7, paragraph (c) of the cell |2.25          |
|in item 2 in the table in subsection        |              |
|30-15(2), paragraph 30-17(1)(b) and         |              |
|subsection 30-125(1) of the ITAA 1997       |              |
|Item 7, subsection 30-125(1) of the         |2.32, 2.35    |
|ITAA 1997                                   |              |
|Item 9, subsection 30-229(2) of the         |2.77          |
|ITAA 1997                                   |              |
|Items 15 and 22, subsection 995-1(1) of the |2.34          |
|ITAA 1997 and section 426-110 in Schedule 1 |              |
|to the TAA 1953                             |              |
|Item 18, item 140 in the table in subsection|2.96          |
|250-10(2) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953     |              |
|Item 22, section 426-105 in Schedule 1 to   |2.30, 2.31    |
|the TAA 1953                                |              |
|Item 22, subsections 426-120(1) and (2) in  |2.43          |
|Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953                  |              |
|Item 22, subsection 426-120(3) in Schedule 1|2.45          |
|to the TAA 1953                             |              |
|Item 22, subsection 426-120(4) in Schedule 1|2.52          |
|to the TAA 1953                             |              |
|Item 22, subsections 426-120(5) to (8) in   |2.50          |
|Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953                  |              |
|Item 22, section 426-125 in Schedule 1 to   |2.55          |
|the TAA 1953                                |              |
|Item 22, subsections 426-125(2), (4) and (6)|2.59          |
|in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953               |              |
|Item 22, subsections 426-125(3), (5), (7)   |2.60          |
|and (8) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953       |              |
|Item 22, subsections 426-130(1) and (2) in  |2.61          |
|Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953                  |              |
|Item 22, subsection 426-130(3) to (5) in    |2.62          |
|Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953                  |              |
|Item 22, section 426-135 in Schedule 1 to   |2.63          |
|the TAA 1953                                |              |
|Item 22, section 426-140 in Schedule 1 to   |2.65          |
|the TAA 1953                                |              |
|Item 22, section 426-145 in Schedule 1 to   |2.66          |
|the TAA 1953                                |              |
|Item 22, subsections 426-150(1) and (3) in  |2.67          |
|Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953                  |              |
|Item 22, subsection 426-150(2) in Schedule 1|2.69          |
|to the TAA 1953                             |              |
|Item 22, subsection 426-150(4) in Schedule 1|2.70          |
|to the TAA 1953                             |              |
|Item 22, section 426-160 in Schedule 1 to   |2.64          |
|the TAA 1953                                |              |
|Item 22, subsections 426-165(1) to (3) in   |2.71          |
|Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953                  |              |
|Item 22, subsection 426-165(4) in Schedule 1|2.72          |
|to the TAA 1953                             |              |
|Item 22, subsection 426-165(5) in Schedule 1|2.73          |
|to the TAA 1953                             |              |
|Item 22, subsection 426-165(6) in Schedule 1|2.74          |
|to the TAA 1953                             |              |
|Items 23 and 24, subsection 30-229(2A) of   |2.93          |
|the ITAA 1997 and subsection 426-115(1) in  |              |
|Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953                  |              |
|Item 26                                     |2.92          |
|Items 27, 29 and 30                         |2.84          |
|Item 28                                     |2.85          |
|Item 31                                     |2.89          |


Schedule 3:  Demutualisation of friendly societies

|Bill reference                              |Paragraph     |
|                                            |number        |
|Item 1, paragraph 316-5(a)                  |3.20          |
|Item 1, subparagraph 316-5(a)(i)            |3.21          |
|Item 1, subparagraph 316-5(a)(ii)           |3.22          |
|Item 1, paragraph 316-5(b)                  |3.24          |
|Item 1, paragraph 316-5(c)                  |3.25          |
|Item 1, paragraph 316-55(1)(a)              |3.33          |
|Item 1, subparagraph 316-55(1)(a)(ii)       |3.30          |
|Item 1, paragraph 316-55(1)(b)              |3.34          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-55(2)                |3.88          |
|Item 1, paragraphs 316-60(1)(a), (b) and (d)|3.89          |
|and subparagraph 316-60(c)(ii)              |              |
|Item 1, paragraphs 316-60(1)(a), (b), and   |3.36          |
|(d), paragraph 316-60(3)(a) and             |              |
|subparagraph 316-60(1)(c)(i)                |              |
|Item 1, subsection 316-60(2)                |3.37, 3.41,   |
|                                            |3.91          |
|Item 1, paragraph 316-60(2)(b)              |3.38, 3.90    |
|Item 1, paragraph 316-60(3)(b)              |3.39          |
|Item 1, section 316-65                      |3.54          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-65(1)                |3.53, 3.56,   |
|                                            |3.59, 3.63    |
|Item 1, subsection 316-65(2)                |3.65          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-70(1) and            |3.60          |
|paragraph 316-70(3)(a)                      |              |
|Item 1, subsection 316-70(1) and paragraph  |3.60          |
|316-70(3)(b)                                |              |
|Item 1, subsection 316-70(2).               |3.62          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-70(4)                |3.61          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-70(5)                |3.60          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-70(6)                |3.63          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-70(7)                |3.63          |
|Item 1, section 316-75                      |3.42          |
|Item 1, section 316-80                      |3.43          |
|Item 1, paragraph 316-80(a)                 |3.44, 3.45    |
|Item 1, paragraph 316-80(b)                 |3.46          |
|Item 1, subsections 316-105(1) and (2)      |3.50          |
|Item 1, subsections 316-105(1) and (2) and  |3.70          |
|316-115(3)                                  |              |
|Item 1, subsections 316-105(1) and          |3.49          |
|316-115(1)                                  |              |
|Item 1, subsection 316-105(3)               |3.48          |
|Item 1, subsections 316-105(3) and          |3.69          |
|316-115(3)                                  |              |
|Item 1, subparagraphs 316-110(1)(a)(i) and  |3.49          |
|(iii)                                       |              |
|Item 1, subparagraphs 316-110(1)(a)(ii) and |3.49          |
|(iv)                                        |              |
|Item 1, paragraphs  316-110(1)(b) and       |3.49          |
|316-110(1)(c)                               |              |
|Item 1, subsection 316-110(2)               |3.49          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-110(3) and           |3.49          |
|section 316-115                             |              |
|Item 1, subsection 316-115(2)               |3.52          |
|Item 1, subsections 316-115(2) and          |3.92          |
|316-200(1)                                  |              |
|Item 1, subsection 316-115(3)               |3.51          |
|Item 1, subsections 316-155(1) and (2)      |3.68          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-155(3)               |3.68          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-155(4)               |3.67          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-155(5)               |3.68          |
|Item 1, section 316-160                     |3.75, 3.85    |
|Item 1, subsections 316-165(1) and (3)      |3.79          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-165(2)               |3.80          |
|Item 1, paragraph 316-165(2)(a)             |3.84          |
|Item 1, paragraph 316-165(2)(b)             |3.81          |
|Item 1, subsections 316-170(1) and (2)      |3.71          |
|Item 1, subsections 316-170(1) and (3)      |3.77          |
|Item 1, subsections 316-170(1) and (4)      |3.76          |
|Item 1, section 316-175                     |3.73          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-175(2)               |3.74          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-175(3)               |3.74          |
|Item 1, section 316-180                     |3.115         |
|Item 1, subsection 316-200(2)               |3.93          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-200(3)               |3.95          |
|Item 1, subsection 316-200(4)               |3.94          |
|Item 1, section 316-205                     |3.96          |
|Item 1, paragraphs 316-255(1)(a), (2)(a)    |3.97          |
|and(2)(b)                                   |              |
|Item 1, paragraphs 316-255(1)(a) and (2)(c) |3.98          |
|Item 1, paragraphs 316-255(1)(b), (2)(a)    |3.97          |
|and(2)(b)                                   |              |
|Item 1, paragraphs 316-255(1)(b) and (2)(c) |3.98          |
|Item 1, paragraphs 316-255(1)(c) and (2)(d) |3.99          |
|Item 1, paragraphs 316-255(1)(d) and (2)(d) |3.99          |
|Item 1, section 316-260                     |3.100         |
|Item 1, section 316-265                     |3.102         |
|Item 1, section 316-270                     |3.103         |
|Item 1, section 316-275                     |3.104         |
|Item 2                                      |3.22          |
|Items 2 and 3                               |3.108         |
|Items 4, 23 and 24                          |3.107         |
|Item 5                                      |3.109         |
|Item 6                                      |3.110         |
|Items 7 to 10                               |3.111         |
|Items 11 to 14                              |3.112         |
|Item 15                                     |3.39          |
|Item 16                                     |3.113         |
|Item 17                                     |3.114         |
|Item 18                                     |3.116         |
|Item 19, subsection 197-38(1)               |3.104         |
|Item 19, subsections 197-38(2) and (3)      |3.106         |
|Items 20 and 21                             |3.117         |
|Item 22                                     |3.21, 3.118   |


Schedule 4:  Consolidation

|Bill reference                              |Paragraph     |
|                                            |number        |
|Items 1 to 3, subsections 104-520(3) and    |4.27          |
|243-35(2) of the ITAA 1997 and              |              |
|subsection 245-105(1) in Schedule 2C to the |              |
|ITAA 1936                                   |              |
|Item 4, item 1 in the table in subsection   |4.14, 4.15    |
|707-415(2)                                  |              |
|Item 4, item 2 in the table in subsection   |4.17, 4.18    |
|707-415(2)                                  |              |
|Item 4, item 3 in the table in subsection   |4.20, 4.21    |
|707-415(2)                                  |              |
|Item 4, subsection 707-415(1)               |4.10          |
|Item 4, subsection 707-415(2)               |4.11          |
|Item 4, subsection 707-415(3)               |4.12          |
|Item 4, subsection 707-415(4)               |4.16          |
|Item 4, subsection 707-415(5)               |4.19          |
|Item 4, subsection 707-415(6)               |4.22          |
|Item 4, subsection 707-415(7)               |4.13          |
|Item 5                                      |4.23          |


Schedule 5:  Minor amendments

|Bill reference                              |Paragraph     |
|                                            |number        |
|Item 1, subsection 4(1)                     |5.16          |
|Items 2 and 3, subsection 4(1)              |5.16          |
|Items 4, 5, 10 and 11, subsections 162B(5), |5.16          |
|165A(11) and (12)                           |              |
|Items 6 and 7, paragraphs 165A(1)(b) and    |5.16          |
|(2)(b), items 7 to 9, subsections 165A(3)   |              |
|and (4)                                     |              |
|Item 12, subsection 3(1)                    |5.16          |
|Item 13, subsection 3A(1)                   |5.16          |
|Items 14 to 16, subsection 3(1)             |5.16          |
|Item 17, subsection 7(1)                    |5.16          |
|Item 18, subsection 7(1)                    |5.16          |
|Item 19, paragraph 47(8)(b)                 |5.16          |
|Item 20, subsection 136(1)                  |5.16          |
|Items 21 to 43 and 45 to 50, subsection 6(1)|5.16          |
|Item 44, subsection 6(1)                    |5.16          |
|Items 51 and 52, paragraph 16(4)(e)         |5.16          |
|Item 53, paragraph 16(4)(ea)                |5.16          |
|Items 54 to 56, paragraph 16(4)(f)          |5.16          |
|Item 57, paragraph 16(4)(f)                 |5.16          |
|Items 58 and 59, paragraph 16(4)(fc)        |5.16          |
|Items 60 and 61, paragraph 16(4)(h)         |5.16          |
|Items 62 and 63, paragraph 16(4)(hb)        |5.16          |
|Items 64 and 65, paragraph 16(4)(hd)        |5.16          |
|Items 66 to 68, paragraph 16(4)(j)          |5.16          |
|Items 69 and 70, subsections 16(5B) and (5C)|5.16          |
|Items 71 to 73, subsections 23AF(11) to (14)|5.16          |
|and (18)                                    |              |
|Item 74, subsection 73A(6)                  |5.16          |
|Items 75 to 101, subsections 124K(1), (1A), |5.16          |
|(1B), (1D), 124ZAA(1) and (11) and          |              |
|124ZAB(1), paragraph 124ZAB(2)(c),          |              |
|subsections 124ZAB(3) to (5),               |              |
|paragraph 124ZAB(6)(a),                     |              |
|subsections 124ZAB(6A) and (7) and          |              |
|124ZAC(1), paragraph 124ZAC(2)(c),          |              |
|subsections 124ZAC(3) and (5),              |              |
|section 124ZAD and subsections 124ZADAA(1), |              |
|124ZADAB(1) and (2)                         |              |
|Item 102, subsection 159J(6)                |5.16          |
|Item 103, subsection 159J(6)                |5.16          |
|Item 104,  subsection 202CB(6)              |5.16          |
|Items 105 and 107, subsections 202CB(7) and |5.16          |
|202CE(8)                                    |              |
|Item 106, subsection 202CE(7)               |5.16          |
|Item 108, paragraph 251R(5)(d)              |5.16          |
|Items 109 to 111, paragraph 251U(1)(f)      |5.16          |
|Item 112, subsection 264AA(1)               |5.16          |
|Item 113, section 25-7 (note)               |5.16          |
|Item 114, item 2.1.7 in the table in        |5.16          |
|subsection 30-25(1) and items 115 and 116,  |              |
|paragraphs 30-30(1)(c) and (d)              |              |
|Item 117, section 30-75                     |5.16          |
|Items 118 to 121, item 9.1.2 in the table in|5.16          |
|subsection 30-80(1), paragraphs 30-85(2)(a) |              |
|and (b) and subsection 30-85(5)             |              |
|Items 122 to 124, 148 and 149, subsections  |5.16          |
|30-210(1), 30-230(5), 30-235(1) and         |              |
|30-289(4), section 30-295,                  |              |
|subsections 30-300(7), 30-305(1) and (4),   |              |
|30-310(1) and paragraphs 375-865(2)(b),     |              |
|376-10(1)(b) and (c), 376-230(1)(a) and (b) |              |
|and 376-240(3)(d)                           |              |
|Items 125 to 129, section 30-287,           |5.16          |
|subsections 30-289(4), 30-289A(3),          |              |
|30-289B(1) and (4), and 30-289C(1)          |              |
|Items 130 to 135, section 30-295 and        |5.16          |
|subsections 30-295, 30-300(6) and (7),      |              |
|30-305 (1) and (4) and 30-310(1)            |              |
|Item 136, subsection 34-25(1)               |5.16          |
|Item 137, section 34-65                     |5.16          |
|Items 138 and 139, item 10 in the table in  |5.16          |
|subsection 40-180(2), item 11 in the table  |              |
|in subsection 40-300(2)                     |              |
|Item 140, paragraph 40-670(1)(a)            |5.16          |
|Items 141 and 142, paragraphs 40-670(1)(a)  |5.16          |
|and (b)                                     |              |
|Items 143 and 144, paragraph 51-32(3)(b),   |5.16          |
|subsection 51-32(3)                         |              |
|Item 145, subsection 52-131(9) (note)       |5.16          |
|Items 146 and 147, subsections 61-630(3) and|5.16          |
|(5)                                         |              |
|Items 150 to 168 and 171 and 172,           |5.16          |
|sections 396-5 and 396-40,                  |              |
|subsections 396-65(1) and (2), section      |              |
|396-70, subsections 396-70(1) and (5) to    |              |
|(7), 396-75(1) and (2), 396-80(1) and (4),  |              |
|paragraph 396-80(5)(b), subsection 396-90(2)|              |
|and sections 396-100, 396-105 and 396-110   |              |
|Items 169 and 170, section 396-105          |5.16          |
|Items 173 to 204, subsection 995-1(1)       |5.16          |
|Items 205 to 208, section 3-10, subsection  |5.16          |
|30-15(1) and section 30-20                  |              |
|Items 209 to 211, section 2                 |5.16          |
|Items 212 to 226, subsections 18(2) and (3) |5.16          |
|and 20(1), paragraph 20(2)(b),              |              |
|subsections 20(7) and (8), and              |              |
|paragraph 20(12)(a)                         |              |
|Item 227, subsection 36B(1)                 |5.16          |
|Items 228 to 230, subsections 36B(2), (3)   |5.16          |
|and (5) and 108(5)                          |              |
|Items 231 and 232, section 3, subsection    |5.16          |
|6(1)                                        |              |
|Items 233 to 236, subsections 2(1) and      |5.16          |
|14Q(1), subparagraph 14S(4)(b)(i) and       |              |
|subsection 14S(5)                           |              |
|Items 237 and 238, section 995-1, clause 2  |5.16          |
|Item 244, Schedule 1, paragraph (g)         |Table 5.3     |
|Item 245, section 39B                       |Table 5.2     |
|Items 246 to 257, Part IV, sections 14ZZN,  |Table 5.1     |
|14ZZO, 14ZZP and 14ZQ (definition of        |              |
|'appealable objection decision'),           |              |
|subsections 3(1), 3(2), 3B(4) (definition of|              |
|'this Act') and 3C(9) (definition of this   |              |
|Act), and paragraphs 3B(1AA)(a), 8J(2)(p),  |              |
|14ZR(1)(a), 14ZZ(a) to (c) and 14ZZ(1)(a)   |              |
|and (b)                                     |              |
|Item 258, subsection 770-135(1)             |Table 5.4     |
|Items 259 and 260, section 770-1            |Table 5.5     |
|Items 261 to 267, paragraphs 770-5(1)(a) and|Table 5.5     |
|(b), subsection 770-5(3), and section 770-10|              |
|Items 268 and 269, section 770-30           |Table 5.5     |
|Items 274 to 276, paragraphs 770-95(b) and  |Table 5.5     |
|(c), section 770-95 (notes 1 and 2),        |              |
|subsections 770-100(2) and (3),             |              |
|paragraphs 770-165(1)(a) and (b), subsection|              |
|770-165(3), section 770-170 (heading)       |              |
|Items 277 to 281, paragraphs 770-165(1)(a)  |Table 5.5     |
|and (b), subsection 770-165(3), and         |              |
|section 770-170                             |              |
|Item 282                                    |5.18          |
|Items 283 to 287, subsection 25(2) (note 1),|Table 5.6     |
|and section 41                              |              |
|Items 288 to 292, sub-subparagraph          |Table 5.7     |
|10(3)(a)(v)(B), and paragraph 10(3D)(c)     |              |
|Items 293 and 296 to 303, subsection 42(1)  |Table 5.7     |
|Items 294 and 295, subparagraphs 42(1)(a)(i)|Table 5.7     |
|and (b)(ii)                                 |              |
|Items 304 and 305, section 148              |Table 5.7     |
|Item 306, subsection 6(1)                   |Table 5.8     |
|Item 307                                    |Table 5.8     |
|Items 308 to 310, subsections 16(5BA) and   |Table 5.8     |
|(5C), and paragraph 16(5C)(a)               |              |
|Items 311 to 312, paragraphs 82KZL(1)(a) and|Table 5.8     |
|(b) and 82KZL(2)(a)                         |              |
|Item 313, paragraph 99H(1)(c)               |Table 5.8     |
|Items 314 and 315, subsections 128W(1) to   |Table 5.8     |
|(3) and (7)                                 |              |
|Item 316                                    |Table 5.8     |
|Item 317, paragraph 161AA(d)                |Table 5.8     |
|Item 318                                    |Table 5.8     |
|Item 319, item 2.1.7 in the table in        |Table 5.9     |
|subsection 30-25(1)                         |              |
|Item 320, subsection 30-86(4)               |Table 5.9     |
|Item 321, subsection 40-425(2)              |Table 5.9     |
|Items 322, 323 and 341, paragraphs          |Table 5.9     |
|54-10(1)(e) and (1A)(e),                    |              |
|subsections 54-10(2) and 995-1(1)           |              |
|Item 324, subsection 124-10(3) (note 2)     |Table 5.9     |
|Items 325 and 326, subsection 124-140(1)    |Table 5.9     |
|Items 327 and 328,                          |Table 5.9     |
|subparagraphs 130-90(3)(a)(i) and (ii) and  |              |
|paragraph 130-90(3)(c)                      |              |
|Items 329 to 335, subsections 149-30(1) and |Table 5.9     |
|(2), 152-110(1), subparagraph               |              |
|152-125(1)(a)(iii), paragraph 152-125(1)(a) |              |
|Item 336                                    |Table 5.9     |
|Items 337 and 338, paragraph 855-20(a)      |Table 5.9     |
|Item 339, item 3 in the table in subsection |Table 5.9     |
|960-190(1)                                  |              |
|Item 340, section 995-1, paragraphs (a) and |Table 5.9     |
|(b) for the definition of 'legal personal   |              |
|representative'                             |              |
|Item 342, subsections 16(4) and (5)         |Table 5.10    |
|Item 343, item 14 of Schedule 7             |Table 5.11    |
|Items 1070 to 1090, subsection 2(1),        |5.16          |
|paragraphs 3ED(1)(b)(i) and (ii) and        |              |
|(3)(a)(i), (ii) and (b)(i) and subsection   |              |
|3ED(5), clause 2                            |              |



 


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