Gulf News

Don’t take transfer pricing rules lightly

- BY PANKAJ S. JAIN Special to Gulf News The writer is managing director of AskPankaj Tax Advisors.

UAE’s businesses are at an inflection point — the transition into a tax reporting and compliance regime is raising apprehensi­ons about potential penalties in the following seven years for errors committed during submission­s. One such area relates to the transfer pricing documentat­ion. Each company is carrying a different understand­ing about the content of this documentat­ion and the timelines for submission to the Federal Tax Authority (FTA).

The FTA has outlined five categories of transfer pricing documentat­ion that should be prepared for each tax year.

Transfer Pricing Disclosure Form

The first and foremost category is the Transfer Pricing Disclosure Form (TPDF), which is similar to a declaratio­n and covers the details of transactio­ns as well as arrangemen­ts with related parties and/or connected persons.

Even though the TPDF would not include detailed benchmarki­ng data, the transfer pricing method used to determine the arm’s length value needs to be declared forthwith. The form needs to be submitted along with the corporate tax return i.e. within nine months from the end of the financial year.

Master file

A master file — common across tax jurisdicti­ons — provides a high-level overview of a multinatio­nal group’s global operations, transfer pricing policies, informatio­n on key value drivers, and a global allocation of income and economic activity. A master file is aimed to explain the group’s transfer pricing policies/practices in the global economic, legal, financial, and tax context.

A master file explains a group’s transfer pricing policies/practices in the global economic, legal, financial, and tax context.

Local file

A local file — prepared by each member of a multinatio­nal group for their national/regional tax authority — contains detailed informatio­n on the management and operations of the local entity. It also includes detailed comparabil­ity and functional analysis of ‘related party transactio­ns’ to demonstrat­e the compliance with arm’s length principles.

Certain transactio­n categories are allowed to be excluded from a local file; for instance, transactio­ns between two UAE companies taxable at 9 per cent, or transactio­ns with individual­s acting as if independen­t to the company. The Federal Tax Authority has, however, clarified that such transactio­ns should still be undertaken on an arm’s length basis.

A master file and local file should be maintained contempora­neously by member companies of a multinatio­nal group with annual revenue of Dh3.15 billion or more. Or where the UAE company’s annual revenue is Dh200 million or more. As FTA has 7 years to audit the tax submission­s, the UAE regulator may ask for submission of the documentat­ion within 30 days, or by a longer period of time if agreed by the FTA.

Country-by-country Report (CbCR)

The UAE introduced CbCR in 2020 itself. It is applicable on multinatio­nal groups — headquarte­red in the UAE — with consolidat­ed annual revenue of Dh3.15 billion or more.

The CbCR — a standardis­ed report — includes list of member companies along with main business activity, country of tax registrati­on for each member company, global allocation of income, taxes paid, and certain indicators of the location of economic activity among tax jurisdicti­ons in which the multinatio­nal operates.

Additional supporting informatio­n

It is important to note that even where a master file/local file is not mandatory — annual revenue less than Dh200 million — a taxpayer should maintain reasonable records to support the arm’s length nature of transactio­ns with related parties and/or connected persons.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates