AMT AUG/SEPT 2021

Page 56

054

MEDICAL

Promoting Australia as a destination for life science and medtech manufacturing Australian contract manufacturers servicing the medical devices, biotechnology, and pharmaceutical sectors are sought after by global life sciences and medtech organisations looking to Australia for expertise, assured quality, and value for money in drug/device manufacture. The products may be used for clinical trials in Australia or abroad, or may be finished goods (or to form part of a finished good) ready for sale. By Dr Rita Choueiri. Additional benefits for global organisations to manufacture here include access to the generous Research and Development Tax Incentive (RDTI), especially if they plan to commercialise the results of R&D programs in Australia. Promoting their potential access to cash refunds or general tax benefits could help secure work for Australia over rival jurisdictions. Australia’s generosity to companies that undertake business here will in turn bolster its medtech and life sciences manufacturing expertise through promotion of Australia as a destination for R&D and manufacturing. There are several scenarios where Australian manufacturing activities could be subject to an RDTI claim for overseas companies looking to set up an Australian presence to contract with local manufacturers. There could be R&D in the development of the manufacturing process, the product itself, or use of the product in field or clinical trials. The commercial benefit for undertaking R&D here can vary significantly and depends on a company’s structure, commercial intentions, and global aggregated turnover. There are two mechanisms for an overseas entity (OS Co) to claim the RDTI in Australia for expenses incurred on manufacturing here (each through an eligible Australian presence, the most common being a subsidiary company, ‘Aus Co’). 1. Through an Australian-owned RDTI claim, whereby: Aus Co undertakes R&D for itself (independent of OS Co); bears financial risk with regard to the expenditure it incurs (and therefore does not receive any recoupment or reimbursement of R&D expenditure by the parent company or any other company); owns or has rights to exploit IP it develops (note the IP can vest with OS Co); and controls the R&D activities. The entity undertakes R&D for itself in return for receipt of a right to commercialise the product in a specified territory (e.g. within Australia or surrounds), commensurate with its proportionate efforts in getting that product to market. Transfer pricing advice is required to determine and define the territory. Under this scenario, Aus Co can access the maximum RDTI benefit; a 43.5% refundable R&D tax offset if its global aggregated turnover is below $20m

AMT AUG/SEP 2021

any other contract service it may utilise. Generally, for Australian-owned R&D, it is preferred that OS Co funds Aus Co through debt funding rather than equity – debt funding is seen as stronger evidence of the requirement to bear financial risk, as Aus Co is liable to repay any amounts borrowed from OS Co within a specified timeframe, whereas equity funding may mean Aus Co fails the requirement to bear the financial risk as it is technically OS Co’s funds being used to pay for Australian R&D activities. in FY21, or the company tax rate plus 18.5% (i.e. either 43.5% or 48.5%) for FY22 and beyond. 2. Through a ‘Foreign-owned’ RDTI claim, which allows Aus Co to undertake R&D in Australia for or on behalf of OS Co. This means that in addition to the IP vesting with OS Co, OS Co can fund the R&D activities Aus Co undertakes. Under this scenario Aus Co usually acts as an ‘agent’ for OS Co, undertaking R&D under OS Co’s instruction and control. However, even if a company can access the refundable R&D tax offset (by having a global aggregated turnover below $20m as well as sufficient tax losses), the overall benefit will be largely reduced by mark-ups for transfer pricing and agency fees, reducing the benefit to approximately 16%-19% of R&D expenditure. In contrast, an additional benefit for conducting Australian-owned R&D activities is that Aus Co can also claim expenditure it incurs on activities outside Australia, if they meet eligibility criteria for Overseas Advance Findings – essentially pre-approvals given by regulators regarding eligibility of R&D undertaken overseas. These Findings must be applied for before the end of the first financial year in which R&D expenditure is incurred on overseas activities. It is essential that appropriate legal agreements (such as funding, IP licencing, service, and agency agreements, depending on the claim pathway chosen) and transfer pricing documents (including a Commercial Rationale for Australianowned R&D) are in place between OS Co and Aus Co. Also, Aus Co must have service agreements in place between it and its Australian contract manufacturer and

Despite significant upfront costs involved in structuring and setting up foreign companies to claim the RDTI through an Australian presence in the first year, the set-up costs are only incurred once, while the benefits can be realised for many years, especially for larger projects spanning multiple years. Overseas companies should consider their long-term goals when deciding where to commercialise products. Generally, the OS Co should model its entire business scenario from start to finish (including its exit) for the R&D structure it chooses. Further icing on the cake for profitable medical and biotechnology companies looking to commercialise Australian IP is that they will be eligible to pay tax at a 17% rate (as opposed to 30% for large businesses and 25% for most SMEs) through Australia’s new ‘patent box’ scheme. This will apply to patents applied for after the federal budget announcement at 7.30pm on 11 May 2021, and the concession will be applied to income years starting on or after 1 July 2022. Overall, the Government is keen to support overseas companies looking to conduct R&D and general business in Australia, to help them and their Australian service providers prosper and ultimately benefit the Australian economy. The generous RDTI that overseas companies can access is a winwin for all. Governments, both federal and state, are also contributing vast amounts of cash to Australian manufacturers to ensure our capabilities are world class, in turn attracting more foreign business to Australia. It is onwards and upwards for Australian manufacturing. Dr Rita Choueiri is a scientist and the head of the Melbourne R&D Incentives division at William Buck. www.williambuck.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Worker hearing challenges

4min
page 104

MANUFACTURING HISTORY – A look back in time

4min
pages 120-122

AMTIL FORUMS

18min
pages 108-111

Achieving a completely clean workspace

2min
page 105

Get better results for critical seals/gaskets

5min
pages 106-107

Older cranes deliver new gains

6min
pages 100-101

Verton: Making offshore lifting a breeze

6min
pages 102-103

Sandvik: The next step to unmanned production

6min
pages 98-99

Seco: How sustainability applies to machining

8min
pages 96-97

Holistic approach optimises processes and tool life

3min
page 95

BNNTs - Game-changing nanotech

4min
page 90

Optibelt assists with Australia’s first electric motorbike

2min
page 89

Up-to-spec at Aero Spec

3min
page 91

Iscar: Tool craft for aircraft

9min
pages 92-94

Laminex – A story of manufacturing innovation

4min
page 88

ANCA Motion – Motorising productivity

3min
page 87

New Age Caravans – Combining Industry 4.0 & Lean

6min
pages 84-85

AL-KO: Custom workholding from Dimac

3min
page 86

ESPRIT CAM: Automating multi-spindle program creation

2min
page 81

COMPANY FOCUS Austeng

9min
pages 82-83

Conma Industries - Confident in the future

3min
page 80

Five reasons why we struggle to leverage Industry 4.0

5min
pages 74-75

ONE ON ONE Simon Dawson

13min
pages 76-79

Business intelligence: Bringing clarity

6min
pages 72-73

MTM – Pressing the button on Industry 4.0

8min
pages 68-69

Cutting quotation software slashes customer response times

7min
pages 66-67

Zip Water boosts its fabrication productivity

5min
pages 62-63

Power Laser Genius+ - Next-level laser cutting

3min
page 65

Fabricated metals industry: Integrating business processes

4min
page 64

Identifying compressed air efficiency opportunities

6min
pages 60-61

Stoneglass Industries: Vale, Georges Sara

6min
pages 58-59

Promoting Australia for medtech manufacturing

5min
pages 56-57

AM Hub case study: Vesticam

6min
pages 54-55

Monash supporting India’s COVID-19 battle

3min
page 53

New technique breaks the mould for AM medical implants

4min
page 52

AM Hub case study: Kesem Health

4min
page 51

AM Hub case study: Radetec Diagnostics

4min
page 50

PRODUCT NEWS Selection of new and interesting products

31min
pages 36-43

MedTech – Healthy outlook for Australian innovators

13min
pages 44-49

VOICEBOX Opinions from across the manufacturing industry

28min
pages 30-35

From the Industry

4min
pages 16-17

From the Union

4min
pages 18-19

From the CEO

3min
pages 12-13

From the Ministry

4min
pages 14-15
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.