We are glad to see that the HKSAR Government has responded to the industry’s concern on the non-deductibility of SUFs, which represent significant costs invested by mobile network operators for developing their telecommunication businesses in Hong Kong and producing profits from such businesses that are fully taxable.
Apart from SUFs, there are other “blackhole expenditures” that are currently treated as non-deductible capital expenditures under the Hong Kong tax system. These include capital expenditures incurred by taxpayers to acquire other intangible assets such as a licence, a franchise or an indefeasible right of use of data transmission capacity.
Although Hong Kong does not tax capital gains (except in the cases of foreign-sourced asset disposal gains where the tax exemption conditions under the FSIE regime are not met), these intangible assets are very often used by taxpayers in their businesses for generating taxable profits in Hong Kong rather than being sold to derive non-taxable capital gains. In such cases, taxpayers need to pay tax on the assessable profits but cannot claim a tax deduction on the capital expenditures incurred for earning such profits.
To promote greater fairness of the Hong Kong tax system and adopt consistent tax treatments for SUFs and other intangible assets, we urge the government to consider expanding the scope of the proposed tax deduction to cover other blackhole expenditures provided that they are incurred in the production of taxable profits. In the event the intangible asset concerned is disposed of with a non-taxable capital gain, there could be a claw-back of the tax deduction previously granted to preserve tax symmetry.