Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

When reducing a loan to a trust triggers tax

- PHIA VAN DER SPUY

AS I EXPLAINED in my previous article, reducing a loan to a trust may be a minefield. Subject to the exclusions provided for in the Income Tax Act, the debt-reduction rules apply, and tax may be payable where:

An arrangemen­t is implemente­d that results in a “concession or compromise” in respect of debt – for example, where a debt amount is cancelled, waived or extinguish­ed, or where a loan is converted into shares as part of an arrangemen­t and the face value of the debt prior to entering into the arrangemen­t exceeds the market value of the shares so acquired.

A “debt benefit” in respect of a debt owed by a person arises – this is the amount of the debt reduced or cancelled as a result of a “concession or compromise”.

The amount of the debt was used by that person as envisaged in section 19 (where an Income Tax benefit has been or may be achieved) or paragraph 12A (where a capital gains tax benefit has been or may be achieved).

What the South African Revenue Service aims to achieve with the debtreduct­ion rules is to tax the taxpayer (the borrower) on any tax deduction/ tax advantage that the borrower has achieved or will achieve in future resulting from any “debt benefit”; therefore, undoing any such historic or future tax deduction/tax advantage in the hands of the borrower. It does not deal with taxing the lender.

The lender, on the other hand, will be taxed in the instance of a debt reduction as a result of a bequest, donation or employment relationsh­ip in terms of other relevant provisions in the Income Tax Act and Estate

Duty Act. Therefore, to avoid double taxation, the debt-reduction rules exclude a debt reduction as a result of a bequest, donation or employment relationsh­ip.

The following exclusions apply to the debt-reduction rules:

Where the debt owed by the borrower (for example, a trust) to a deceased is bequeathed to the borrower and the debt is included in the property of the deceased estate for estate duty purposes – that is, it is taxable at 20% on the first

R30 million of the value of the estate and at 25% on the estate value exceeding R30m.

Where the debt is reduced by a donation, but only if donations tax is payable in respect of the debt benefit (donations tax paid at 20% on the first R30m of the cumulative donations made during the lender’s life and at 25% on cumulative donations exceeding R30m). If no donations tax is payable, it will fall under the debt reduction rules and will be taxed as such. Any exemptions under the donations tax provisions will therefore trigger the debt reduction rules for the borrower.

Where the debt reduction is a fringe benefit, which is taxed in the hands of the employee.

Where the borrower is a company that owes the debt to another company in the same group, if the borrower did not trade during that year or previous year. This exclusion does not apply if the debt was incurred to fund an asset that was subsequent­ly disposed of by way of a corporate rules transactio­n (for example, section 42 of the Income Tax Act) or the debt was incurred to settle, take over, refinance or renew any debt incurred by another group company or controlled foreign company in relation to the same group of companies.

Where the borrower is a company that owes a debt to another company in the same group, and the debt is settled by means of the issue of shares by the debtor company. The companies had to be part of the same group of companies at the time the debt was incurred and when the debt was reduced by means of the share issue.

Only for paragraph 12A, where the borrower is a company that owes a debt to a connected person in relation to that company, and the debt is reduced in the course of, or in anticipati­on of, the liquidatio­n, winding up, deregistra­tion or final terminatio­n of the existence of that company, but only to the extent it does not exceed the cost to the lender, and only if the company has taken the necessary steps in the process within 36 months of the date on which the debt is reduced, unless it withdraws such steps or does anything to invalidate such steps. If all these requiremen­ts are not met, the debt-reduction rules will apply.

Where debt, which is converted into shares, does not contain an interest element – whether or not debt was interest bearing. Interest-free loans are therefore excluded where debt is converted into shares.

It is important to understand when these taxes may be triggered, whether the lender or the borrower may be liable for any taxes as a result of a debt reduction, whether there is an immediate cash flow impact, and what the amounts involved are. Always consult a profession­al in order to avoid any surprises.

Phia van der Spuy is a registered Fiduciary Practition­er of South Africa, a Master Tax Practition­er (SA), a

Trust and Estate Practition­er and the founder of Trusteeze, a profession­al trust practition­er.

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