| A
person is resident in Australia
if any of the following situations
apply:
- He
is domiciled in Australia
and does not have a permanent
and indefinitely continuing
place of abode abroad;
- He
is not domiciled in Australia
but has been in Australia
either continuously or intermittently
during the fiscal year for
183 days or more (unless
he can satisfy the Commissioner
that his usual place of
abode is outside Australia
and that he does not intend
to take residence up in
Australia and does not intend
to live in Australia for
more than 2 years).
- The
resident goes abroad to
work but his term of employment
abroad is less than 2 years
and he intends returning
to Australia
- Other
factors to be taken into
account and which alone
or in combination indicate
Australian residence are
- The
individual's permanent
home is in Australia
- The
individual's habitual
abode is in Australia
- The
individual's closest
personal and economic
ties are in Australia
Non-residents
are taxed on income "sourced"
in Australia, including the
following situations:
- The
income was earned through
a branch or permanent establishment
located in Australia and
owned by the non-resident
individual. Permanent establishment
normally denotes a physical
presence of more than 6
months in the fiscal year.
-
The income was earned from
a contract accepted by an
Australian agent authorized
to accept contracts on behalf
of a non- resident principal.
Thus although the principal
is non resident it is the
resident agent who accepts
the offer meaning that the
contract is made within
Australia (since under Australian
law the place where the
contract is accepted is
the place where the contract
is made). Where a contract
is made within Australia
the income is deemed to
be sourced from within Australia
for tax purposes. (If the
resident agent only sought
out customers and it was
the foreign principal who
negotiated and executed
the contract then the contract
would have been made outside
Australia and so for tax
purposes the source of income
would be outside Australia).
- A
combination of some or all
of the following circumstances
applied to the contract
executed by the non resident:
- The
contract for services
was signed
in Australia
- The
contract for services
is to be performed
in Australia
- Australian
law is the implied or
express proper
law of the contract
- Australian
currency is
the currency of payment
- One
or both of the parties
to the contract resides
in Australia
-
Rental income from Australian
real estate owned by a non-resident
individual is deemed to
have an Australian source
and is therefore taxable
in Australia.
As
a partial exception to the
rule, an employee will not
pay tax in Australia on his
income if:
- His
employer is non-resident
in Australia, and
- His
employer is resident in
a country which has a double
taxation treaty with Australia,
and
- The
employee stays in Australia
for less than 183 days in
a fiscal year
There
is no separate capital gains
tax in Australia, but capital
gains are taxed as income;
therefore a non-resident's
Australian capital gains (on
'taxable Australian property')will
be taxed, except that the
profitable sale of shares
held by a non-resident in
a resident company are free
of tax provided the shareholding
is not more than 10% and the
shares are shares in a public
company and have been held
for not less than 5 years.
In
June 2004 income tax cuts
for Australian individuals
earning between $52,000 and
$80,000 were passed by the
federal parliament, despite
strongly stated opposition
by the Australian Democrats
and the Green Party.
A
47-11 vote in the Senate secured
passage for the Tax Laws Amendment
(Personal Income Tax Reduction)
Bill 2004, which increased
the personal income tax thresholds
for the 42% and 47% brackets
for the 2005/2006 financial
year.
Speaking
on behalf of the Treasurer
in the Senate, Rod Kemp announced
that over the coming four
years, more than 80% of taxpayers
would remain in or below the
30% tax bracket. The AAP quoted
him as observing that:
"The
personal tax cuts in this
bill continue the government's
commitment to ongoing structural
reform. They increase the
reward for those that wish
to work overtime, seek promotion
or acquire skills, and they
strengthen the international
competitiveness of the tax
system."
In
February, 2006, then Treasurer
Peter Costello set out proposed
improvements to the taxation
arrangements for temporary
residents which he said would
give Australia one of the
most competitive expatriate
taxation regimes in the world.
The
Taxation Laws Amendment (2006
Measure No. 1) Bill 2006,
introduced into parliament
on February 16 of that year,
represented the third time
that the National/Liberal
government had attempted to
make improvements to the expat
tax regime, after two previous
attempts were blocked by Labor
Party opposition.
However,
Costello explained that the
new bill, introduced as part
of the 2005/6 budget, went
further than the previously
blocked legislation which
would have applied a tax exemption
to a temporary resident for
a period of 4 years, only
if the temporary resident
had not been an Australian
resident within the previous
10 years.
"The
Government will now remove
these time limits as they
provide unnecessary disincentives
and distortions for individuals
wishing to remain working
in Australia," Costello
said in a statement at the
time.
The
measure was designed to apply
to holders of a temporary
visa, with the exception of
those who are directly or
indirectly treated as residents
for social security purposes.
Under
the legislation, holders of
a temporary visa are not to
be taxed on foreign source
income. They continue to be
taxed on all Australian source
income and salary and wages
generally, including income
from employee shares or rights.
Further,
under the legislation, capital
gains taxation of temporary
residents were aligned with
non-residents. The combination
of these changes ensure that
the capital gains tax rules
for departing residents do
not apply to temporary residents.
"The
changes will significantly
reduce administrative and
compliance costs. It will
also further reduce the cost
to Australian businesses of
employing expatriates,"
Costello observed, going on
to note that the changes had
been "welcomed"
by business.
"The
Government is committed to
assisting businesses to access
the skilled labour needed
to compete internationally,"
the Treasurer at the time
added.
If
you were a non-resident for
the full year, the following
rates applied for 2005/2006:
Taxable
income |
Tax
on this income |
$0
– $21,600 |
29c
for each $1 |
$21,601
– $63,000 |
$6,264
plus 30c for each
$1 over $21,600 |
$63,001
– $95,000 |
$18,684
plus 42c for each
$1 over $63,000 |
Over
$95,000 |
$32,124
plus 47c for each
$1 over $95,000 |
For
2006/07, these rates were:
Taxable
income |
Tax
on this income |
A$0
– A$21,600
|
29c
for each $1 |
$25,001
– $75,000 |
$7,250
plus 30c for each
$1 over $25,000 |
$75,001
– $150,000
|
$22,250
plus 40c for each
$1 over $75,000
|
Over
$150,000 |
$52,250
plus 45c for each
$1 over $150,000
|
For
2007/08 they were:
Taxable
income |
Tax
on this income |
$1
– $6,000
|
Nil |
$6,001
– $30,000
|
15c
for each $1 over $6,000
|
$30,001
– $75,000
|
$3,600 plus 30c for
each $1 over $30,000
|
$75,001
– $150,000
|
$17,100
plus 40c for each
$1 over $75,000
|
$150,001
and over
|
$47,100
plus 45c for each
$1 over $150,000
|
And
for 2008/09 they were:
Taxable
income |
Tax
on this income |
$0
– $6,000
|
Nil |
$6,001
– $34,000
|
15c
for each $1 over $6,000
|
$34,001
– $80,000
|
$4,200
plus 30c for each
$1 over $34,000
|
$80,001
– $180,000
|
$18,000
plus 40c for each
$1 over $80,000
|
$180,001
and over
|
$58,000
plus 45c for each
$1 over $180,000
|
Non-residents
are not required to pay the
Medicare levy.
|