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Article archive
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Quarter 4 October - December 2019
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Quarter 4 October - December 2014
Quarter 3 of, 2018 archive
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In case you missed it – The company tax Bill that did pass Parliament.
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GST spotlight headed to smaller end of town
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Superannuation Amnesty – Maybe! Maybe Not!
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ATO drills in car-sharing focus this tax time
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What is Bankruptcy?
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Update of Australia's vital statistics
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ATO speaks on risk factors, surveillance triggers for FY19
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ATO’s corporate residency guidance cops backlash
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ATO dispels top tax time myths to clients as clampdown rolls out
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Tools for budgeting, cash flow, Super and more ….
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Guidance for SMSFs on transfer balance reporting
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ATO issues alert on super, tax scams
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Salary sacrifice integrity
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Understanding the evolution of blockchain and cryptocurrencies
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Update to Australia's vital statistics
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Tax Time Checklists- Individual, Company, Trust, Partnership and Super Funds
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SMSFs - Our 'hardest' jobs
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Tax Office reveals adventurous, dubious claims ahead of tax time
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ATO reveals top tax time mistakes, set to contact 1 million taxpayers
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Watch out for charges with incoming GST laws.
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Super savings gap for women stuck at 30%
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‘Wipe the slate clean’: Clients, accountants urged to use new amnesty period
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Statistics for all Australians
In case you missed it – The company tax Bill that did pass Parliament.

Amidst all the drama in Canberra recently, you could be forgiven for missing an important company tax rate change.

       

 

One bill – (Enterprise Tax Plan Base Rate Entities) Bill 2017 actually did get passed by the Senate.

This is an important company and dividend taxation amendment, having both retrospective and prospective impacts.

The lower company tax rate is now dependent on:

  • having an aggregated turnover less that the requisite threshold (i.e. $25 million in 2017-18 and $50 million in 2018-19 and future years), and
  • no more than 80% of a corporate’s assessable income for the relevant year is passive income as defined.

Further, maximum franking credits that can be attached to dividends are to be determined by:

  • assuming the aggregate turnover in the current year is the same as in the previous year; and
  • applying the corporate tax rate for the current year.

It should not be – but to answer the question what company tax rate will I pay – it depends!!

 

 

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