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In a triangular transaction in which a Taiwan-based Company A receives
an order for goods from another Taiwan-based Purchaser B, and orders the goods from
an overseas Vendor C, with all the customs clearance to be handled by the Purchaser
B in its own name, how should the Company A issue government uniform invoices (GUIs)?
On 29 October 2008 the Ministry of Finance (MOF) issued a new ruling
revoking its previous ruling issued on 20 September 2001. Under the new ruling, the Company A in the scenario above should
issue the Vendor C a duplicate-form GUI for the difference (which should be treated
as commission) between the payment it receives from the Purchaser B and its payment
to the Vendor C, or for the commission that it charges for the transaction.
Under the 20 September 2001 ruling, before the Company A issued an
GUI for a triangular transaction such as the one described above, it should first
decide whether its role in the transaction was a seller or an agent in order to
decide what content of a GUI it had to issue. However,
this approach has often led to disputes between the tax collection authorities and
taxpayers over whether the Company A acted as a seller or merely as an agent.
If the Company A acted as the seller in the transaction, then it
had to issue a GUI to the Purchaser B in the amount of the sale, but when the imported
goods were cleared through customs Purchaser B also had to pay business tax on them.As a result, the Purchaser B would be
taxed twice for the same transaction and had to apply for tax refund from the tax
collection authorities. This would
place extra administrative burdens on both the tax collection authorities and taxpayers.
In order to resolve the disputes encountered
in practice, on 29 October 2008 the MOF issued its above new ruling, and revoked
its ruling of 20 September 2001.
Because of the new ruling, Taiwan-based companies conducting triangular
transactions described above will from now on have to pay business tax for only
the commission received. However, the
new ruling did not clearly state whether refunds of taxes and fines for the cases
already assessed are possible, and thus this will be subject to the MOF's further
confirmation.