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Chinese Company Won’t Wire You Money Part II. Is there a PRC tax problem?

Monday, June 27, 2016 6:02
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China taxes

This is the second in a series of posts about problems encountered when attempting to get paid by a Chinese company. In Chinese Company Won’t Wire You Money. Have the Rules Changed? I looked briefly at the underlying framework of rules applying to foreign conversions and remittances. In this post I consider tax-related issues that can often cause payment delays or defaults. These issues vary depending on the nature of the payment. Let’s look at the three areas of payment encountered most by our China lawyers.

Payments to foreign service providers. These days the Chinese tax authorities routinely impose a tax on all payments from Chinese companies to foreign service providers. The problem is identifying the appropriate tax. Is it withholding, VAT, business tax, income tax or some combination? Even when the appropriate kind of tax, or combination of taxes, has been determined there is little consistency on the percentage amount of tax withheld.

Royalties. Where there is a royalty payment for a technology or an IP transfer, the underlying contract is supposed to be registered, which can be a time-consuming procedure in certain districts. For example, where the royalty is for a license to publish, the license must be approved by the Beijing authorities in charge of that area of publication. Where the license is for a trademark, the license must be registered with the trademark office. If there is no registration, no payment can be made. For royalty payments, the liability to withholding and VAT is clearer but there is still little consistency on the rates of tax and how they are combined.

FDI or M&A. Such payments from China require approval and usually this approval must come from Beijing. Approval is uncertain and the authorities may change their minds. Thus, a transaction that the Chinese side in good faith assumed was approved can be denied at the last minute, due to a sudden and unexplained denial of permission to remit.

There are two difficulties common to all three kinds of remittances.

First, tax authorities in many districts now require proof of the existence of the foreign payment recipient. Compliance with this additional requirement often involves production of a certificate of good standing authenticated by the Chinese embassy or consulate in the foreign country concerned. This is expensive and time-consuming.

Second, the procedures are often interpreted and applied differently from bank-to-bank, branch-to-branch and district-to-district. The tax rates, too, are not always consistent from district-to-district and even within districts from officer-to-officer. The whole situation is in flux.

The result is that there is really no way that any side of a China deal can be completely certain that a payment will go through until after the payment is received.

In my next post I will look at the due diligence you can do to identify or avoid defaults or delays in money transfers out of China.

We will be discussing the practical aspects of Chinese law and how it impacts business there. We will be telling you what works and what does not and what you as a businessperson can do to use the law to your advantage. Our aim is to assist businesses already in China or planning to go into China, not to break new ground in legal theory or policy.



Source: http://www.chinalawblog.com/2016/06/chinese-company-wont-wire-you-money-part-ii-is-there-a-prc-tax-problem.html

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