Alan’s 8.10 editorial 08.06.17

Tax June 8 2017
Well, back in April it was reported that the Tax Office’s win against multi-national energy company, Chevron, in the Federal Court could result in Chevron being liable for an extra $340 million in tax
But it now turns out Chevron could be liable for much more
Chevron told the Senate inquiry into corporate tax avoidance yesterday that “the total difference in primary tax on all years currently in dispute is $1.062 billion”
The facts of this dispute are pretty straightforward
In 2003 Chevron set up a shelf company in the US
That shelf company then borrowed $3.7 billion from banks in the US at 1.2% interest and on-lent that money to Chevron Australia at 9% interest
This inter-company loan allowed Chevron Australia to write-off those 9% interest payments against its Australian tax bill
It also allowed Chevron to transfer profits from its Australian operations to the US (via these interest payments) tax free
The Tax Office spent 6 years building its case against Chevron
In 2015 it won in the Federal Court
Chevron appealed
That appeal was rejected by the full Federal Court in April
Chevron says it will now appeal to the High Court
Since 2003 Chevron, which has paid no company tax in Australia for the last 5 years, has reportedly set up so-called “transfer pricing” inter-company loans to the value of $24 billion
These outfits may have met their match in Australian Tax Commissioner, Chris Jordan