Distinguishing closely held companies for taxation purposes: The Australian experience 1930-1972
Lynne Oats
Accounting History Review, 2005, vol. 15, issue 1, 35-61
Abstract:
Early in the life of Australia's income tax, the government, sensitive to loss of taxation revenue through artificial arrangements to divert taxable profits from individuals to companies where they would be taxed more lightly, saw fit to provide a special taxation regime for closely held companies. From the first attempts by the government to distinguish closely held companies for tax purposes in 1930, until the final legislative changes in 1972, there arose a highly unsatisfactory situation in which taxpayers sought, through increasingly artificial means, to subvert the legislative purpose with the aim of tax avoidance. The government's response throughout was inadequate in a number of respects, and fuelled the fires of tax avoidance through inept drafting of the relevant legislation and delayed treatment of perceived abuses by taxpayers.
Keywords: Taxation; corporation tax; close companies; tax avoidance; creative compliance (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2005
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DOI: 10.1080/09585200500032719
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