R&D Tax Credit – The Shock of The New
Hopefully, in amongst the Easter chocolate blitz and trips with the kids to see “Nanny McPhee And The Big Bang” (the only G-rated movie on these school holidays), you’ve had time to prepare a compelling submission in response to the 2nd Exposure Draft and Explanatory Materials (the Easter package) detailing the New R&D Tax Incentive. If not, don’t worry. You have until Monday. OK, maybe you can worry just a bit.
Here at MJA, we have had to dispense with our usual practice of circulating our draft response to interested parties well in advance of the submission closing date as only 10 working days were provided to put thoughts together. As a second best alternative, we have decided to make use of the MJA Update to give you a snapshot of the main conclusions that will be contained in our submission.
In a Nutshell
We believe that the Easter package should be treated as though it was the first response to the May 2009 Budget announcement.
We have concluded that the package is legislating a brand new business R&D support program that is a fundamental departure from the established principles and framework of the existing R&D Tax Concession (the Concession) and that 25 years of institutional experience and memory related to the Concession is at real risk of being jettisoned.
We submit that the Easter package is introducing a different type of support for corporate R&D that dramatically narrows the range of eligible activities and expenditures. In doing so, the program has shifted from supporting corporate research and development to corporate research only. This shift is reinforced by the replacement of the current Objects clause with its five promotional objectives with a new Object clause containing one restrictive premise that only business R&D reflecting additionality and spillover merits support.
The eligibility requirements for core and supporting R&D activities have been changed, not clarified, and have added several layers of complexity and uncertainty for program participants. In addition, new legal concepts have been introduced such as ‘production’ and ‘business as usual’ R&D for the first time in the Easter package. The previewed compliance framework shifts the Credit away from the principles of self-assessment to a program controlled by administrators through a range of sectoral guidelines and position statements so that it takes on a form resembling a discretionary grants program delivering support based on the perceived merits, rather than the eligibility, of the R&D.
Further, there are a number of unresolved features of the draft legislation such as expenditure not at risk, overseas expenditure requirements and core technology transition provisions. Critically, the redrafted feedstock expenditure provisions announced in the Easter package have not been made available to stakeholders.
Finally, after a legislative development process that has long been characterised by delay and a lack of true consultation, the Easter package now provides a miniscule amount of response time followed by a rapid timetable by which it becomes operative law on 1 July. For the vast majority of claimants, there will be no transitional process in place for taxpayers to absorb the new legislation and establish new plans and procedures. Rather, there is a hard changeover from the old system to the supposedly brave new world.
Overall, we submit that there is an unacceptable risk that the Easter package will harm Australia’s innovation system by withdrawing critical support for commercially-focused R&D. And remember that it is this aspect of R&D that Australia traditionally lags behind our competitors. There is an urgent need to provide for a comprehensive review of this legislation including a realistic process for its implementation in an orderly fashion. This may well involve a need to delay the introduction of a number of features of the Credit to ensure a smooth transition for taxpayers.
How New is New?
Given the above, it is worth demonstrating as briefly as possible why we agree with the Government that it is a brand new program, rather than a reform of the old one, thereby leading us to conclude that the timetable to convert this draft package into legislation is simply too rushed and likely to involve unintended consequences and outcomes.
Since the consultation process began in earnest, all the Treasury releases have been headed “The new research and development tax incentive”. Recent consultations with Government officials have reinforced the idea that the R&D Tax Credit (the Credit) is being treated as a new program by outlining a different style of administration based upon industry sector-specific guidelines and a compliance framework that will be built from the ground up.
This Government’s emphasis of the fact that the program is a new one stands somewhat in contrast to the policy announcements in last year’s Budget which referred to a tightening of eligibility criteria of the current Concession to better support “genuine R&D”. There was a sense that there would be a significant carryover of the principles and understandings associated with the Concession and the Budget announcement reinforced this notion.
It is now clear that this is not the case. The fact that this is a very brave new world is even more starkly set out in the Easter package than with the 1st Exposure Draft and Explanatory Materials (the Christmas package).
To demonstrate this, take the new definition of R&D activities contained in the Easter package as an example.
A New Definition of R&D
The Treasury’s consultation guide to the Easter package refers to a “clearer” definition of core R&D activities by its use of clear language in the place of ambiguous concepts such as ‘considerable novelty’ and ‘high levels of technical risk’. What they should go to say is that the intended definition of both core and supporting R&D is fundamentally different to the very stable definition that has been in place since 1985.
As you would be aware, eligible activities have been separated into two categories –core and supporting – with separate qualification tests. Previously, activities qualified as eligible R&D activities collectively through the ‘SIE’ or ‘directly related’ pathways. Now they are split into two distinct baskets.
As Treasury has indicated, the new definition of core R&D requires taxpayers to be seeking new information (to solve problems or develop new or improved products and processes) and to need an experiment to uncover that knowledge.
The concepts of systematic, investigative, innovation and technical risk have all been dispensed with. These are concepts that are useful to taxpayers in qualifying their R&D activities and are well understood as opposed to ambiguous. Ten of the current technical objectives – the creation of new or improved products, processes, devices, material and services – have been eliminated and subsumed into the new knowledge objective.
This is an unequivocal narrowing of the definition of core R&D compared to the current Concession and, in fact, to the one contained in the Christmas package. Add the four new classifications of supporting R&D activities and the new restrictive Object clause and you end up with a very different definition of eligible business R&D.
The September 2009 Treasury Consulation Paper stated that the Government was altering the definition to bring it more in line with the Frascati definition. They could no longer credibly maintain that this is the case. The proposed definition reflects the first two elements of Frascati – basic and applied research – but experimental development has been removed.
The new Explanatory Materials confirm the narrowing of the definition. In paragraph 2.16, they indicate that it is not enough to be doing experimental activities if they “merely confirm what is already known”. As displayed in the example projects provided, the suggestion is that the taxpayer will need to be able to prove in a retrospective assessment that the knowledge did not exist anywhere else. Not only is this highly impractical. It also flies in the face of encouraging an innovation system where several companies in an industry pursue the development of new and improved products and processes and the associated knowledge in parallel.
The guidance given to taxpayers as to how to interpret the definition is very open-ended. The Explanatory Materials indicate that qualifying the eligible purpose of the activities is a question of fact based on the overall circumstances of the conduct of the work (paragraph 2.32) without detailing what the key determining criteria might be. It appears as though the Government is seeking to preserve as much discretion as possible when assessing claims. This is apparent from the statement in paragraph 2.32 that says that “…it is possible that activities that are similar in appearance might qualify as supporting activities in one context but not in another.”
As we have been saying all along, the Credit is seeking to institute a scientific definition of R&D that gives voice to the Productivity Commission’s world view of what is “genuine R&D”. Yet that view was not the one put forward in the Cutler Report, the Government’s Innovation White Paper or the May 2009 Budget announcement which all reflected the existing industrial definition.
Suddenly, we are at ground zero and you’ve been given 10 working days to get your head around what it all means!
More Work For Us All To Do
The proposed Credit is new, uncertain and even a bit scary.
We urge you to use the April 19 response and the highly likely Senate Committee as your last remaining opportunities to elicit the Government to pause and take stock of whether the proposed Credit really aligns with its previously announced policy. Hopefully, we can all then move on in a spirit of true consultation to ensure the right R&D outcomes for Australia’s innovation future.
Should you wish to discuss this matter any further, please do not hesitate to contact Kris Gale directly on (02) 9810 7211 or using our contact form to discuss the matters raised in this MJA Update in greater detail.

