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A respondent noted that IRAS had issued two Circulars in July 2004 and early June 2005 to spell out the income tax treatment of Limited Liability Partnership (LLP). The two Circulars set out the application of section 24 provisions to a sale of property arising from changes in partnership arrangements under different circumstances (including the sale of property between partnerships). However, the new section 24(5), as crafted, appears to only address the specific situation where a change occurs in a partnership by reason of retirement or death, or the dissolution of the partnership or the admission of a new partner, and not sale of property under other circumstances such as the sale of property between partnerships covered by the IRAS Circulars. The new section also does not appear to be sufficiently comprehensive to give legal effect to the application of section 24 provisions for all circumstances covered by the two IRAS Circulars (for example, the sale of property between partnerships). It is suggested that MOF review the draft section 24(5) against the two IRAS Circulars and consider making appropriate amendment to the draft provision to give effect to policy intent.
MOF’s response: Not accepted. For income tax purposes, partnership assets are owned by the partners, not the partnership. As such, this amendment sufficiently addresses all situations of changes in partners of partnerships for the purposes of section 24 transfers.
The respondent also highlighted that section 24(5), as crafted, treats section 24 as not having been elected in all cases if no election was made under section 24(3) for the provisions in section 24 to apply. In other words, if no election was made, no section 24 treatment would be applied. However, the IRAS Circular states that, for example, that the IRAS may deem section 24 to have been elected for reason of administrative expediency under certain circumstances of partial sale of property. Hence, it is suggested that the new section 24(5) be revised to include provisions which deem application of section 24 treatment under the stated circumstances even if no election were made.
MOF’s response: Not accepted. Section 24(5) is not intended as a provision to deem application of section 24(3) treatment under all circumstances of partial sale of property. With regard to the administrative practice of deeming an election as having been made under section 24, the IRAS supplementary circular on LLP dated 10 June 2005 has clearly explained that it is not policy intent to deem the election under section 24 as having been made in all cases. It is adopted for administrative expediency, which benefits both the partners and IRAS in minimising tax compliance. But where there is an objection by the taxpayer, section 24(5) shall apply. |