By Alan M. Field
Source: The Journal of Commerce
October 22, 2007
Be careful about what you ask for, the
saying goes, because you might get what you want. For years, U.S.
and other multinationals have been asking China to "level
the playing field" for non-Chinese companies. That means
bringing Chinese practices fully in line with those of the World
Trade Organization, which China joined in 2001.
That is about to happen in the realm of corporate income taxes.
Effective Jan. 1, China's new tax reform bill will erase almost
all tax preferences for non-Chinese companies. The changes will
bring China in compliance with WTO regulations that insist that
foreigners and local residents be treated the same way.
Now that tax reform is around the corner, however, some are warning
that it could provide more risks than opportunities for U.S. and
other non-Chinese companies. "This is a major change that
has traps for the unwary," said Jeff Olin, national managing
partner, international taxes, at international accounting firm
Grant Thornton LLP. "This is a complex reform, and there
are more losers than winners."
The new law will bring Chinese corporate tax rates up to a standard
25 percent, and will end the practice of offering different rates
for foreign and domestic companies. Until recently, domestic companies
paid a rate of approximately 33 percent, while many foreign companies
paid just 15 percent and often less, after locating in dozens
of special zones that offered tax holidays. The low rates and
holidays were negotiated by foreign companies with local authorities
who competed to attract investors in an effort to promote employment.
China's new tax reform reflects the Chinese government's conviction
that its tax revenues have not grown at a rate that fully reflects
rising foreign investment and trade with China. It also asserts
the authority of China's central government over provincial authorities
who offered these low rates. "Over the past few years, these
tax concessions have become harder to negotiate," Olin said,
"but we were still able to obtain them for clients."
All that will soon end. Olin said China's central _government
has the perception that taxpayers around the world are "avoiding
their fair share of taxes."
The reform will also affect tax treaties that China has entered
into, particularly its revised treaty with Singapore and its treaty
with Hong Kong, said Peter Huels, managing director, Asia Pacific,
at BDP International, the Philadelphia-based logistics and transportation
company. The Hong Kong treaty "opens some interesting planning
opportunities for Hong Kong residents working in China, due mainly
to different definitions of tax residency, as well as differences
in tax systems," Huels said.
The big winners from China's tax reform, Olin said, are companies
involved in high technology and in research and development. These
companies will pay taxes of only 15 percent. Olin said this preference
is another indication of China's desire to encourage the production
of goods further up the value chain. In addition, a grandfathering
provision stipulates that non-Chinese companies that had five-year
zero-tax holidays will pay no taxes for the next two years, and
then pay 50 percent of the usual corporate tax rate for the following
three years. Other sectors favored by continued tax deductions
will be agriculture, forestry and fisheries.
For all that, the full impact of the reform will not become clear
until after its detailed implementation rules are made public
later this fall. "The paradox is that we don't have detailed
implementation guidelines about how this will be implemented,"
Olin said. He expects those rules to be issued by Nov. 1, but
they could be delayed until December. "Most of the regulations
have been released and are being discussed in many tax forums,
within and outside China," Huels said. "Like all new
tax regulations, many of the provisions have not been tested in
the courts, so no precedents are available."
Olin said the top issue for compliance with the tax reform is
transfer pricing; the prices that non-Chinese companies charge
their Chinese subsidiaries for such products as royalties, management
fees and interest charges. The Chinese apparently believe that
many non-Chinese companies are overcharging their Chinese subsidiaries
in an effort to minimize their tax liabilities in China. To assure
the authorities that they are not doing so, non-Chinese companies
will be required to keep detailed documentation showing that their
subsidiaries aren't being overcharged for components and services
supplied from outside China.
Transfer pricing provisions will affect not only charges for the
transfer of manufactured goods but also management fees and debt
charges to Chinese subsidiaries. For example, if a U.S. company
supplied an executive to manage its Chinese subsidiary, Chinese
authorities will want to be assured that the U.S. parent company
did not overcharge its Chinese subsidiary for the executive's
services, leading to lower profits in China.
"Transfer pricing is nothing new, and the documentation is
similar to that already required in the U.S., Germany, Australia,
the U.K. and other sophisticated jurisdictions," Huels said.
But he added, "All foreign companies need to pay attention
to transfer pricing in dealing with related parties. More and
more tax authorities are becoming increasingly vigilant in scrutinizing
these transactions. Most multinational tax planning involves transfer
pricing in one way, shape or form, and China likewise will view
this as an opportunity to increase its tax revenues."



