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Income Tax Amendment, Act 15: what to do
Find out about the practical implications of the Income Tax Amendment Act are, and how you should handle them.

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This Act is effective 1 January 2012 for companies and 1 March 2012 for taxpayers other than companies, except certain changes to the regime with regard to withholding tax on interest, which is deemed to have come into effect on 1 March 2009.

In this newsletter we draw the readers’ attention to any action required to be taken. In a special newsletter on this Act circulated early January, more detail is provided, which can be accessed at this link to our website.

1. Employer Funded Policies

What to do?

Companies:


A number of retirement arrangements have been set up in the past capitalizing on a ‘loop hole’ in the Act. This allowed employers to deduct premiums paid in respect of life policies taken out on the lives of employees (e.g. funeral policies, keyman policies, group life schemes outside an approved fund etc.). The ‘loop hole’ allowed the policy proceeds due in the event of death of any employee to be paid to the employee’s dependents or nominees tax free.

Policy proceeds upon the death of an employee are now taxable in the hands of the employer, if the employer claimed any premiums in respect of the relevant policy for tax purposes, in the past. An employer who maintains such a life assurance scheme needs to introduce a new employment policy to define its intention regarding the impact of tax on the gross proceeds. i.e. will the employer carry the cost or will the cost be passed on to the beneficiary/ies? If the tax is to be recovered from the gross proceeds before affecting payment to any beneficiary/ies, procedures and controls need to be introduced to ensure that the gross proceeds are reduced by the tax effect before paying a benefit.

2. Commutation of Small Pension Fund Annuities

What to do?

Trustees:


Trustees need to consider whether they want to draw their pensioners’ attention to this opportunity, recognizing that the payment of every annuity normally attracts a fee either based on the annuity capital, or a transaction based fee or both.

3. Education Policies

What to do?

Companies:


This means that where one of your staff members claims premiums towards an educational policy against the taxable income administered by your company, we suggest that you consider the following:

 

  1. the employee to provide a copy of the policy to prove that the policy complies with the definition per the Act;
  2. your HR/payroll department to diarise the maturity date of the policy and to introduce a strict routine to follow up on maturity date;
  3. the employee to sign an undertaking, to inform HR/payroll department immediately upon cashing in the policy proceeds and to indemnify your company against any penalty as contemplated in section 11A of schedule 2, should he/she fail to inform your company immediately upon having cashed in the policy proceeds.

Individuals:

To ensure that proceeds from an education policy are not subjected to income tax, the employee needs to ascertain that the purpose of the policy is to provide capital for -

  • education or training at an educational institution of public character;
  • the purpose of obtaining a post-school qualification.

4. Withholding Tax on Interest

What to do?

Individuals:


For financial planning purposes, take into account that there is no withholding tax on bills and bonds issued by Government, regional and local authorities or on negotiable instruments issued by a local bank.

5. Withholding Tax on Services Payments to Non-residents

What to do?

Companies, trustees and individuals:


Ascertain whether you have any business dealings with any foreigner, where no double taxation agreement exists with Namibia (note that SA has a double taxation agreement with Namibia). If you do, ascertain whether these dealings fall into the ambit of the definitions of “entertainment fee”, “management or consultancy fee” or director’s fees. If they do, inform your business associate that you will be obliged to withhold 25% as from 1 January 2012 (all  companies), respectively 1 March 2012 (all tax payers other than a company). Institute systems and procedures to identify taxable services, separately record the tax withheld from the gross amount, ascertain that all amounts withheld are paid over to Inland Revenue on or before the 20th of the month following the month in which any amount was withheld and complete the required form to accompany such payments.

Trustees and directors of unit trust management companies take note that funds and unit trusts are defined to be a ‘company’ and are therefore required to start deducting withholding tax as from 1 January 2012.

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Newsletter: January 2012
Benchtest: December 2011, practical considerations relating to the introduction of withholding tax on foreign services and other changes to the Income Tax Act and more...

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Dear reader

In this newsletter, we look at the practical implications of withholding tax on foreign services and of other changes to the Income Tax Act and there are a few links to very interesting articles that recently appeared in various media.

Please feel free to comment: tell us what you value and how we can improve the content.

Regards

Tilman Friedrich


Tilman Friedrich's Industry Forum

Benchtest Monthly 12.2011

We do not see much excitement coming from our local financial markets over the next year or two. Under these circumstances, diversifying offshore, more specifically to the US would appear worth a consideration. European markets also offer great opportunities if you are brave and if you can be patient.

For the next year or two, interest rates and inflation in the developed world are likely to remain at current levels.  Bourses and economies will be sluggish, particularly in the Eurozone, while there is a fair chance of US rates to start rising over the course of the next year. As US consumer sentiment improves, taxes are likely to be raised dampening any emerging renewed interest in investment markets and equities.


For further analyses and our views download the report, here...

Law and legal snippets


Income Tax Amendment Act –
Act 15 of 2011,  Gazette 4864 of 30 December


This Act is effective 1 January 2012 for companies and 1 March 2012 for taxpayers other than companies, except certain changes to the regime with regard to withholding tax on interest, which is deemed to have come into effect on 1 March 2009.

In this newsletter we draw the readers’ attention to any action required to be taken. In a special newsletter on this Act circulated early January, more detail is provided, which can read on our website or downloaded in PDF format here...

1. Employer Funded Policies

What to do?

Companies:


A number of retirement arrangements have been set up in the past capitalizing on a ‘loop hole’ in the Act. This allowed employers to deduct premiums paid in respect of life policies taken out on the lives of employees (e.g. funeral policies, keyman policies, group life schemes outside an approved fund etc.). The ‘loop hole’ allowed the policy proceeds due in the event of death of any employee to be paid to the employee’s dependents or nominees tax free.

Policy proceeds upon the death of an employee are now taxable in the hands of the employer, if the employer claimed any premiums in respect of the relevant policy for tax purposes, in the past. An employer who maintains such a life assurance scheme needs to introduce a new employment policy to define its intention regarding the impact of tax on the gross proceeds. i.e. will the employer carry the cost or will the cost be passed on to the beneficiary/ies? If the tax is to be recovered from the gross proceeds before affecting payment to any beneficiary/ies, procedures and controls need to be introduced to ensure that the gross proceeds are reduced by the tax effect before paying a benefit.

2. Commutation of Small Pension Fund Annuities

What to do?

Trustees:


Trustees need to consider whether they want to draw their pensioners’ attention to this opportunity, recognizing that the payment of every annuity normally attracts a fee either based on the annuity capital, or a transaction based fee or both.

3. Education Policies

What to do?

Companies:


This means that where one of your staff members claims premiums towards an educational policy against the taxable income administered by your company, we suggest that you consider the following:

  1. the employee to provide a copy of the policy to prove that the policy complies with the definition per the Act;
  2. your HR/payroll department to diarise the maturity date of the policy and to introduce a strict routine to follow up on maturity date;
  3. the employee to sign an undertaking, to inform HR/payroll department immediately upon cashing in the policy proceeds and to indemnify your company against any penalty as contemplated in section 11A of schedule 2, should he/she fail to inform your company immediately upon having cashed in the policy proceeds.

Individuals:

To ensure that proceeds from an education policy are not subjected to income tax, the employee needs to ascertain that the purpose of the policy is to provide capital for -

  • education or training at an educational institution of public character;
  • the purpose of obtaining a post-school qualification.

4. Withholding Tax on Interest

What to do?

Individuals:


For financial planning purposes, take into account that there is no withholding tax on bills and bonds issued by Government, regional and local authorities or on negotiable instruments issued by a local bank.

5. Withholding Tax on Services Payments to Non-residents

What to do?

Companies, trustees and individuals:


Ascertain whether you have any business dealings with any foreigner, where no double taxation agreement exists with Namibia (note that SA has a double taxation agreement with Namibia). If you do, ascertain whether these dealings fall into the ambit of the definitions of “entertainment fee”, “management or consultancy fee” or director’s fees. If they do, inform your business associate that you will be obliged to withhold 25% as from 1 January 2012 (all  companies), respectively 1 March 2012 (all tax payers other than a company). Institute systems and procedures to identify taxable services, separately record the tax withheld from the gross amount, ascertain that all amounts withheld are paid over to Inland Revenue on or before the 20th of the month following the month in which any amount was withheld and complete the required form to accompany such payments.

Trustees and directors of unit trust management companies take note that funds and unit trusts are defined to be a ‘company’ and are therefore required to start deducting withholding tax as from 1 January 2012.

How will all of this work in practice though?

After discussions we held with Namibian Tax Authorities, it appears that Namibians may not need to withhold tax where Namibia entered into a Double Taxation Agreement with the country representing the  tax domicilium of the non-resident or foreign company. It was also pointed out that the Namibian person obliged to withhold tax, must apply the rate agreed between Namibia and the relevant country should this be lower than 25%. Furthermore, we were informed that the process, procedures and documentation are not in place yet and that the first payment date has been extended to 20 March. Refer to this link to access PWC’s newsletter in this context.


Interesting media snippets

The curse of short-terminism

Here is an interesting commentary by Ricco Friedrich (no typo!) of Sanlam Investment Management, on typical human behaviour that prefers to focus on short-term pleasure and how this leads to decisions that will be to your disadvantage in the long-term.

Read this article, look in the mirror and ask yourself, are you wiser?

Investing in a living annuity can ensure stress free retirement...

...if you do the right things, like learning about gaps in pension planning from history, using the available tools to ensure adequate capital, even after death, remembering that inflation, capital growth and your draw down rate are key considerations. Follow this link to an interesting article that appeared in Patricia Holburn’s Money Marketing newsletter in December last year.

Conflicts of interest in the financial services industry...

...are unlikely to benefit you the consumer of financial intermediary advisory services. So what are you doing to protect yourself or your fund or company from falling prey to this everyday phenomenon?

In South Africa the FSB intends to put on the screws to protect the consumer. Follow this link to an article that appeared in Cover magazine in November last year.

tilman-friedrichTilman Friedrich is a qualified chartered accountant and a Namibian Certified Financial Planner® practitioner, specialising in the pensions field. He is a member of the marketing committee of ICAN and a member of the legal and technical committee of RFIN. Tilman is co-founder, shareholder and managing director of RFS.

 

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Financial Intelligence Act and Unit Trust Control Act Amendments
In terms of changes to the Financial Intelligence Act, pension funds are no longer ‘accountable institutions’, and there are changes to the Unit Trust Control Act.

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The Financial Intelligence Act Amendment

Government Notice 235 as published in Gazette no 4850 of 15 December 2011, at long last clarifies the situation of pension funds. Section 19 of Schedule 1 which lists accountable institutions, was amended effective 18 November, by excluding from this list “(a) a registered pension fund or provident fund as defined in section 1 of the Pension Funds Act…and (b) a registered fund as defined in section 1 of the Medical Aid Funds Act…”

For the more technically minded – section 1 of the Pension Funds Act only defines a ‘pension fund’, it does not make mention of a provident fund. Furthermore, retirement annuity funds are also pension funds in terms of the Pension Funds Act. Where does the amendment leave these funds? We believe they will be equally excluded, but was this the intention since they do receive moneys from members of the general public.


The Unit Trust Control Act Amendment


Government Notice 231 as published in Gazette no 4847 of 9 December 2011, introduces a number of changes to the Act. Text in square brackets is removed from the Act, text underlined is inserted.

Amongst other changes, it introduces a definition of ‘assets’ being “…the investments comprising or constituting a unit portfolio of a unit trust scheme, and includes any income and accruals derived there from;”

It deletes the previous definitions of ‘approved securities’ and of ‘liquid assets’.

It introduces a definition of ‘open-ended investment company’, being “…a company with an authorized share capital which is structured in such a manner that it provides for the issuing of different classes of shares to investors, each class of shares representing a separate portfolio with a distinct investment policy;” Is this making reference now to entities such as Stimulus?

The definition of ‘trust deed’ is substituted, now being “…the agreement between a management company and a trustee, and includes a document of incorporation whereby a unit trust scheme is established and in terms of which it is administered;”

The definition of ‘unit trust scheme’ is substituted, now meaning “…any scheme or arrangement [in the nature of a trust], in whatever form, including an open ended investment company, in pursuance of which members of the public are invited [or permitted, as beneficiaries under the trust,] to acquire an interest or undivided share (whether called a unit or by any other name) in one or more unit portfolios and to participate proportionately in the income or profits derived therefrom, whether the value of such interest, unit or undivided share which may be acquired  remains constant or varies from time to time;”

Does this now draw the Allan Gray Namibia Investment Trust and Stimulus into the ambit of the Act?

In line with an amendment to regulation 28 of the Pension Funds Act, it introduces a definition of ‘unlisted assets’ being “…securities other than stock exchange securities and such other securities determined by the registrar by notice in the Gazette;”

The amount of minimum prescribed share capital is removed from the Act. This will presumably be determined in Government Notices from time to time in future.

It introduces a new section dealing with changes in the name of management companies, in their shareholding and directors and provides for the appointment and removal of directors and management staff of such companies.

A number of other specifics in the Act are removed and will presumably be dealt with by the Minister in a less formal manner through proclamation in the Gazette.

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