Tax Bill enacted
The Taxation (Annual Rates for 2022-23, Platform Economy, and Remedial Matters) Bill (No 2) received Royal assent on 31 March 2023.
The new legislation contains measures relating to the platform economy, new GST apportionment rules, dual resident and DTA non-resident companies, FBT exemptions for certain forms of employer-subsidised commuting options, cross-border workers, flood relief measures, and build-to-rent property.
Supporting material on this legislation can be found on Inland Revenue’s website here. For further information on the above and other changes contained in the new legislation, please get in touch with your usual EY Tax Advisor.
New reporting obligation for impacted NZ Payment Service Providers to Inland Revenue
Regulations were passed on 15 December 2022 that widen the scope of businesses who meet the definition of a Payment Service Provider (“PSP”) and are required to complete regular reporting to Inland Revenue. A PSP is a business that participates in a payment system by facilitating payments for goods and services between customers and merchants and we anticipate will impact a wide range of obvious and less-than-obvious businesses.
The reporting will be on the aggregate sale figures of merchants, not on the PSP themselves, or the individual customers of each merchant. The Inland Revenue website has more information on these new regulations, including why they are collecting this information, the nature of the information and similarities (and differences) to the equivalent Australian Taxation Office reporting process. The page can be found here.
The first data collection period is intended to be related to the 6-month period 1 April – 30 September 2023 with submission of the data by 7 November 2023 (i.e. 6 weeks to report).
Treasury releases Interim Financial Statements
The Treasury has released interim financial statements for the Government of New Zealand for the seven months ended 31 January 2023. Some key figures include the operating balance before gains and losses recording a deficit of $2.4 billion, which is close to the forecast deficit of $2.3 billion. This variance has been largely offset by a number of SOEs that had stronger than expected results. Core Crown tax revenue was $64.7 billion, which is $0.4 billion below forecast.
For more information, see the release by the Treasury here