On 29 October 2018, the Netherlands initiated a public consultation for the draft legislative proposal to implement the Anti Tax Avoidance Directive II (“ATAD II”). ATAD II deals with hybrid mismatches. The draft documents can be found here.
EU Member States are required to implement ATAD II by 1 January 2020. However, for the measure dealing with so-called reverse hybrid mismatches, the implementation deadline is 1 January 2022.
In this previous article, Intaxify shared a summary on the status of ATAD I and II and some general highlights. In this article, Intaxify zooms in on the specific developments in the Netherlands on ATAD II.
Due to the fact that different countries have different tax qualification rules, taxpayers are currently able to achieve tax benefits from so-called hybrid mismatches. These benefits can for example consist of “double dips” (multiple deductions for one payment) or schemes whereby a deduction is claimed while no corresponding pickup is taxed. ATAD II aims to eliminate these types of structures by taking away the tax benefits.
Hybrid mismatches can be caused by various types of different tax qualifications. For example by different entity qualifications (transparent vs. opaque), different qualifications of certain financial instruments (debt vs. equity), but also due to permanent establishment differences or double residency situations.
Tax benefits can be achieved if Taxpayer A claims a deduction for a e.g. an interest payment (generally tax deductible), while Taxpayer B can claim an exemption on the received payment because from the perspective of Taxpayer B, the payment is a dividend (which may be eligible for an exemption). In this case, a deduction is claimed while no corresponding pickup is taxed.
Under the ATAD II, two rules are proposed to take away the tax benefit. Under the so-called primary rule, Taxpayer A would be denied a deduction if the payment is not taxed at the level of recipient (Taxpayer B). However, if Taxpayer A resides in a third country (and therefore not bound by ATAD II), the secondary rule may apply. In that case, the payment would become taxable at the level of Taxpayer B.
In case of so-called double dip structures, also a primary and a secondary rule are proposed. Under the primary rule, Taxpayer A (the payor) remains allowed to claim a deduction, while Taxpayer B (the recipient) is denied the deduction. However, if the payment is not taxed at the level of the recipient, the secondary rule restricts deduction at the level of the payor.
The proposal furthermore lists a few general elements:
A Dutch corporate tax liability will be introduced for certain structures using a reverse hybrid entity. A reverse hybrid entity is considered opaque from the perspective of the participants in the entity, while the entity is considered tax transparent form the perspective of the entity’s jurisdiction itself. The Dutch CV is one of the types of Dutch entities that may be affected by this new measure.
In case 50% or more of the participants in the reverse hybrid entity classify the entity as opaque, the entity will be “re-classified” to opaque under domestic tax law and become subject to Dutch corporate tax accordingly. This measure therefore takes away the cause of the mismatch as the entity will no longer be “hybrid”.
The measure will however only apply to the extent that the participants are not already liable to tax on income derived from the reverse hybrid entity. For example, a Dutch CV has four participants (A, B, C and D), each owning 25%). One of the participants (D) considers the CV as non-transparent, while the others (A, B and C) consider the CV tax transparent. The CV will then only become partially subject to Dutch corporate tax (i.e. for the 75% that is not included in the taxable base of the participants A, B and C).
The consultation ends 10 December 2018. Further updates are therefore to be expected shortly.
At a glance
Measures effective as per 1 January 2020
- Deductions will be denied if there is no corresponding pickup, or, alternatively, the pickup will be taxed.
- Deductions will be denied in case of double dips to ensure payments are only deducted once.
Measure effective as per 1 January 2022
- Reverse hybrid entities incorporated or registered under Dutch law, may be “re-classified” to opaque and will then become subject to Dutch corporate tax if the participants are not subject to taxation on income derived from the entity.
Impact for the Dutch CV/BV structure
A commonly used tax structure involving the Netherlands that will be impacted by the ATAD II measures is the so-called CV/BV structure. Under this structure, often used by US based multinationals, tax deferral could be achieved. The different tax qualification of the CV (tax transparent vs. opaque) triggered the possibility to defer taxation.
Under this structure, a US company invested in a Dutch CV, who in turn held the shares of a Dutch BV. Under Dutch tax law, the CV may qualify as tax-transparent, meaning that income distributions from the BV would be considered to flow directly to the US entity. The US, on the other hand, considers the CV as an opaque entity, meaning that income distributed by the BV would be considered received by the CV and therefore would not constitute taxable income in the US. The income would therefore remain “somewhere over the ocean” as it was not considered income in the CV from a Dutch perspective, nor in the US entity from a US perspective.
Upon the implementation of ATAD II, this structure will no longer work to obtain tax deferral.