The existing Chapter VII guidance on shareholder activities has historically been relatively short. The proposed revised guidance goes deeper into the topic, with much more structure, including specific discussion of costs associated with shareholder activities and activities performed by a shareholder that nevertheless satisfy the benefit test.
The draft makes three points that are directly relevant to the UK management expenses debate:
- First, the fact that an activity is performed by the parent, even by senior management, does not automatically make it a shareholder activity. Equally, it does not automatically mean that a service has been provided to subsidiaries. The answer depends on the functional and factual analysis of the activity actually performed;
- Second, the draft recognises that a parent may carry out activities connected with the management, coordination and protection of its investment. But where those activities are performed other than solely because of the parent’s ownership interest, and where subsidiaries receive a sufficiently direct benefit, those activities may be intragroup services; and
- Finally, shareholder activities may be performed by another associated enterprise, with associated costs being recharged in accordance with the arm’s length principle. Whether such costs should be borne by the shareholder or its subsidiaries will depend on the facts and circumstances of each case.
The consultation example on group-wide training illustrates the point. A parent introduces new business procedures and develops training for the group. The parent benefits economically from the initiative, but the subsidiaries also benefit because they receive training they would otherwise have had to perform themselves or purchase externally. On those facts, the draft treats the activity, fully or partially, as a service to the subsidiaries. That is very close to the practical question HMRC set UK taxpayers through the management expenses campaign.
The important point is that holding company costs need to be analysed with some precision. Some costs will be genuinely shareholder costs. Some will be properly expenses of managing the holding company’s investment business. Some activities may only incidentally benefit subsidiaries. But some costs sitting in a holding company may, on closer review, relate to services for which subsidiaries would have been willing to pay.