The Minister for Revenue and Assistance Treasurer, Peter Dutton, today introduced the Tax Laws Amendment (Small Business) Bill 2007 which will standardise the eligibility criteria for small business tax concessions from 1 July 2007.
“Under the new legislation, small businesses will only have to apply one eligibility test relating to the size of the business, to access a range of small business concessions,” Peter Dutton said.
Any business with aggregated annual turnover of less than $2 million will be able to access any of these concessions, subject to satisfying any existing eligibility criteria not related to business size.
“The previous law had separate eligibility tests for the goods and services tax (GST), the Simplified Tax System, the capital gains tax (CGT), the fringe benefits tax (FBT) and pay as you go (PAYG) instalments small business concessions.
“Small business meeting the new $2 million annual turnover test will be able to choose those concessions that meet its business needs — businesses will not be obliged to adopt any concessions not suited to their requirements,” the Minister for Small Business and Tourism, Fran Bailey said.
These concessions are:
- CGT 15-year asset exemption
- CGT 50 per cent active asset reduction
- CGT retirement exemption
- CGT roll-over provisions
- simpler depreciation rules
- simplified trading stock rules
- immediate deductions for certain prepaid business expenses
- choice to account for GST on a cash basis
- annual apportionment of input tax credits for acquisitions and importations that are partly creditable
- choice to pay GST by instalments
- FBT car parking exemptionPAYG instalments based on notional tax.
Small business entities will also have the benefit of a limited two-year amendment period.
Existing eligibility thresholds for accessing CGT, FBT and PAYG instalments concessions will be retained.
A single definition of small business will result in reduced compliance costs for up to 2 million Australian small businesses.
“This demonstrates again the Government’s commitment to reducing red tape and compliance costs for small businesses,” Fran Bailey said.
This Bill also contains other measures, announced in the 2006-07 Budget to improve access to small business concessions. These measures include:
- increasing the maximum net asset value test for accessing CGT concessions from $5 million to $6 million;
- extending the roll-over relief available under the uniform capital allowance regime to any business with a turnover of less than $2 million that choose to deduct amounts for depreciating assets; and
- increasing the GST cash accounting threshold from $1 million to $2 million.
The total cost to Government of the measures in this Bill, and savings to small business, is $295 million over the forward estimate period.