R&D Tax Credit: A Chance To Be Heard
The Federal Government held two “pre-consultation” sessions in Melbourne (19 June) and Sydney (26 June) to help prepare a discussion paper regarding the new R&D Tax Credit legislation announced in the May Federal Budget. Following the release of the discussion paper in mid-July, a formal consultation process will commence.
Most Significant Outcome of the Sessions
The consultation is being headed by a team organised by the Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research (DIIRS). MJA has been given an explicit invitation to supply the names and contact details of all interested parties who would like to be involved in the planned face-to-face meetings that will form part of the consultation process. We have direct access to the team leader, Tony Weber, who has agreed to respond personally to all such requests. Please contact Kris Gale using our contact form if you would like to be included in the list of organisations that would like to participate.
The following is a summary of the main aspects of the sessions.
Legislation Timetable
July 2009 Release of consultation paper
Winter/Spring 2009 Release of draft legislation
February 2010 Bill released into Parliament
1 July 2010 Program commences
Attendees
The meetings were chaired by Tony Weber of DIISR. Peter Thomas, the Chair of the Tax Concession Committee of the Innovation Australia Board, was also in attendance along with officials from AusIndustry, the Australian Tax Office and Treasury.
Over the two sessions, three companies, five industry associations and six advisory firms were involved. This is a small representation and it is to be hoped that a broader cross-section of views is canvassed following the release of the discussion paper.
Summary of Discussion
The Credit will be placed in the 1997 Tax Act.
The government has directed that the program be drafted so that it is simpler and more predictable than the current R&D tax concession. The government also directed that, to keep the new program revenue neutral at a cost of $1.4 billion per year for the medium term, the eligibility criteria need to be “tightened” in order to support only “genuine” R&D.
It was agreed that ‘revenue neutral’ really means ‘kept at the same cost’.
Four approaches are being considered:
- Rewriting/fine tuning the definition of R&D activities
- Extending the concept of expenditure offsets
- Introduction of special sectoral rules
- Introduction of various forms of claim caps.
A key theme of the discussions concerned whether this exercise should be carried out from first principles (i.e. a “clean sheet of paper”) or a reshaping of the existing tenets of the R&D tax concession. A strong consensus emerged from non-government attendees that the latter is preferable. The strongest theme from the floor was that the major strength of the current program was the relative stability of the definition of R&D and that this should not be unnecessarily altered.
The main conclusions that emerged appear to be as follows:
Sectoral rules and claim caps are unlikely to fly.
Definitional change is hard to achieve in terms of the key concepts. Explicitly excluding certain activities was seen as a preferable way to go.
Considerable discussion focused on the SIE/directly related meanings and differences. The attendees fed back to government that the easiest place to rule out “non-genuine” R&D activities is in the list of excluded activities. The hope was expressed that the discussion paper will provide such a list for specific comment and response. The concern was expressed that the negative statements contained in the Cutler Report regarding mining and heavy engineering in terms of “whole of mine ” claims and receipt of “disproportionate assistance” has greatly unsettled the current program. The paper needs to detail what are the real concerns, beyond the numerical dollars involved, that the government harbours about this R&D. If it is truly non-genuine, reasons need to be given.
The extension of the current feedstock expenditure offset definitely appeals to the policy makers.
There is a battle to be fought here. It appears that this is seen as the best way to restrict R&D claims conducted in the production environment by large organisations. The group pointed out that the current offset (introduced in 1996 for political reasons) applies to expenditure on eligible R&D activities, genuine R&D if you will, under the Act. Further incursions may lead to a program that incentivises only R&D that is not seen as likely to commercialise as companies will not ultimately access the incentive in production trials except in the (hopefully) rare instances of technical failure.
A wide range of other issues was canvassed in the two meetings. These included unlimited amendment powers, guaranteed returns provisions, on own behalf provisions, R&D planning requirements and program delivery (including an AusIndustry charter).
Conclusion
The more specific the involvement of companies and industry bodies in the post-July consultation, the better.
There is an accumulation of assumptions, assertions and unsubstantiated opinions that the government administrative bodies are bringing to this process that, if not carefully refuted, could easily result in an R&D tax credit that is available on such a restrictive basis that it will fail to impact the R&D planning processes of corporate Australia, particularly in the large company sector. It needs to be remembered that the Top 100 company groups conduct 75% of Australian business R&D expenditure. These corporates will receive a lower rate of support (10 cents) than SMEs (15 cents) under the proposed credit, they are to be excluded from the refundable component and they are to lose the premium component. If the industrial nature and the commercial focus of the support is lost through definitional change or wide-ranging offsets, the damage to Australian corporate R&D culture could be immense.
We look forward to working with you in shaping a truly effective R&D tax credit through the consultation process.
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Innovation Commentary on 2009 Budget
MJA’s managing director, Kris Gale, will be attending the 2009 Federal Budget innovation briefing, at the invitation of the Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and Research.
We will bring you news of the highlights (and any lowlights) as they relate specifically to innovation policy, R&D tax concessions (or credits), grant funding and other government incentives shortly after the lock-up has completed at 7.30pm.
You can look forward to an MJA Update Article and email (if you’re a subscriber) tomorrow night, followed by a more detailed look at the changes within 24 hours of the budget.
Our initial reactions have been written up here: http://mjassociates.com.au/mja-update/budget-2009-innovation-policy-announced/
New Blog Post: Here’s to the Australian Risk-Takers, Doers and Makers of Things
Reading through the transcript of Barack Obama’s inauguration speech, one paragraph really stood out to me. It addressed the historical contribution of the risk-takers, doers and makers of things to America’s freedom and prosperity.
Perhaps that’s what we could do with a dose of now?
You can read the Innovation is Industry Policy blog entry here.
Do you know what happened 4,279 days ago today?
Something happened 4,279 days ago that changed the relationship between government and industry significantly. Do you know what it was?
In order to answer that question, you need to know some history.
You need to have a sense of the budget deficit inherited by the brand new coalition government in 1996. You need some understanding of the lengths they needed to go to in order to balance the books. In fact, we need to go back a little further.
28 days earlier…
4,307 days ago the government achieved a major limitation to the types of claims under the R&D tax concession by simultaneously introducing:
- the obligation for companies to offset their expenditure on feedstocks processed or transformed in R&D against any products derived,
- changes to the arrangements for interest, pilot plant, and core technology; and
- a clarified definition of R&D.
On 23 July 1996 these changes were set in place.
And these changes were understood
The business lobby had played a significant role in the coalition’s victory, and clearly understood from the outset that it would need to give something up in order to help balance the budget. Through a process of consultation and discussion these areas were identified and agreed, the merits of change debated and the benefits weighed against the costs, and the R&D tax concession was amended.
But 28 days later, at 7.30pm on 20 August 1996 the government acted unilaterally to slash the R&D tax concession from 150% to 125%. This change broke the trust and certainty around the R&D tax concession that had slowly allowed it to enter into corporate long range planning at a rate where it could change project economics. This trust taken time to establish, and was crowned by the permanent extension of the R&D tax concession in 1992/93.
Why does this history lesson matter?
Fast forward to budget time 2008. Just as in 1996 a new government is at the reins. Just as in 1996 there is a need for prudent fiscal judgement. And just as in 1996 a process of consultation around R&D, innovation and tax is underway (www.innovation.gov.au/innovationreview).
The economic picture looks different this time: it is now the surplus that is the problem, and the spectre of inflation the issue. But what’s similar is that the government is putting the final touches on a budget with a clear need to make cuts.
It’s all about the consequences…
In 1996 the drop in R&D investment was immediate and significant, and it came at a time when the economy really needed industry to be making counter-cyclical investments. Instead of R&D changing due to market forces what happened was that the certainty that industry needed from the R&D tax concession had disappeared.
In fact, 12 years later the 125% rate continues to have an impact with few project capital proposals before Australian boards taking into account any permanent cash saving from the concession. At 7.5% it doesn’t significantly change project economics.
Further, the 175% incremental concession (aside from its practical challenges) is still “new” to industry. It has not yet been bedded down and fully accepted, and given that the introduction of the 175% international tax concession came at a time before the 175% incremental concession was settled in the mind of industry this change adds up to uncertainty and risk on the planning horizon.
What are the similarities between 2008 and 1996?
But surely this is just scaremongering. Although there are some similarities, such as the change in government, the budget challenge, there is consultation going on. And the Cutler Review’s website suggests that over 600 submissions have been received (although from those on the website at present, few are from industry. Australia’s powerful science lobby is in full flight). Innovation is at the front of mind at the moment.
After all, we’re in the middle of the National Innovation Festival.
But there is always the seed of doubt, a grain of uncertainty, the germ of an idea at that at budget time what is a powerful, market driven R&D tax concession could be seen as a form of industry assistance for incremental innovation. But that of itself is not a bad thing.
At the level of benefit currently derived by the majority of program participants, the R&D tax concession is a vital business environment variable that has some level of certainty around it.
Conclusion
This is the time for government to listen to industry’s submissions, to learn from the mistakes of that first Howard-Costello budget in 1996, and to address all industry R&D and innovation programs from a position of consultation and vision, rather than applying the spending scalpel to cure a patient still ravaged by the unnecessary and imprudent cut 4,279 days ago.
Visit www.innovationisindustrypolicy.com and vote on the level of after-tax benefit you would need to put R&D tax benefits into your company’s capital and project planning processes.
And if you’re already using the benefit of the program in your approval calculations let me know!

