Ford has enlisted the Internal Revenue Service as it fights attempts by Australian authorities to wrest billions of dollars from the carmaker, a new tactic in attempts by American companies to avoid local taxes.
The Australian Taxation Office is in the midst of similar fights with other major corporations, including oil major ExxonMobil, aluminium manufacturer Alcoa, the world’s largest gold miner Newmont and PepsiCo.
The ATO said a growing number of foreign companies were enlisting authorities where they are headquartered to help fight off tax bills. “This may reflect the increase in cross-border dealings globally and an increasing awareness of [mutual agreements] as a process for dispute resolution, as well as the ATO’s focus on ensuring that multinational companies do not misprice their cross-border transactions,” the spokesman said.
A tax treaty with the US allows for the IRS to be included in any dispute.
Ford has expanded its Australian market share, even after stopping manufacturing in Australia in 2014. A decade on, its Australian subsidiary has tripled revenue, generating more than $6 billion last year. The company’s stoush with the ATO relates to its accounts between 2014 and 2019 when Ford generated around $19 billion in revenue.
A Ford spokesman declined to detail how much money the ATO claims it is owed, only that it disagreed with the proposed bill. The ATO and the IRS were “currently in discussions to resolve this dispute”, he added.
Ford’s Australian subsidiary did not pay any income tax between 2014 and 2019. In five of those six years, the company reported a loss, with an $8 million profit in 2018 its only surplus.
But taxable income was reduced considerably by what the company claims is spending on research. Ford’s Australian business expensed close to half a billion dollars per year in research and development in both 2016 and 2017. Ford also used deferred tax assets to reduce its tax obligations.
“It is often country against country to get the higher taxing rights,” said Nolan Sharkey, an international tax researcher at the University of Western Australia. “When American authorities come in to bat for the American company, they are not necessarily doing it so they can pay less Australian tax, they’re effectively doing it to increase American taxing rights.”
US President Donald Trump has signalled it does not support global tax treaties, including those signed under the Biden administration, and has directed government agencies to consider whether taxes levied by other countries are discriminatory toward American companies.
“On day one of his presidency he signed an executive order disavowing the OECD Global Minimum Tax deal,” said Adrian Blundell-Wignall, a former senior official at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. “This is like the holy grail for Trump.”
The OECD brokered the Global Tax Minimum – a rule adopted by 137 countries including Australia – in the hope of curbing tax avoidance by imposing a 15 per cent minimum rate on the profits of multinational companies, regardless of where those profits are reported.
Trump’s attitude toward global tax could flow into how US agencies dealt with disputes between American companies and Australian tax officials, said Sharkey. “It could change the culture to be even more aggressive and more pro-America – if that is possible.”
The ATO is already mired in disputes with major US corporations.
It is at odds with ExxonMobil over the interest rates that the company’s subsidiary charged when lending money to its Australian business. The dispute, first reported by The Australian Financial Review in 2018, escalated to encompass 13 years of accounts filed by its Australian subsidiary.
In 2021, Exxon set aside a provision of $21 million to cover a potential payout over the ATO stoush, which has subsequently risen to $70 million.
In accounts filed with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission in April, Exxon said it also expects “years of litigation” against the ATO over a separate tax dispute relating to the petroleum resource rent tax applied to its Bass Strait oilfields in 2016, 2017 and 2018.
Pittsburgh-based Alcoa is embroiled in a separate legal stoush with the ATO over the price its Australian companies sold alumina to related parties in Bahrain. The ATO has increased the size of its claim for the alleged underpayments to more than $1 billion, based on penalties and interest.
Last month, the Administrative Review Tribunal ruled in Alcoa’s favour and rejected the ATO’s claims that Alcoa had sold alumina too cheaply. The ATO and Alcoa remain embroiled in a Federal Court dispute on the matter.
Australian tax officials are also appealing a Federal Court decision in favour of PepsiCo to the High Court. That matter relates to money paid to PepsiCo and its Singaporean business by Schweppes, which manufactures and distributes several of PepsiCo’s brands including Pepsi.
Colorado-headquartered Newmont is also awaiting judgment from the Federal Court on an $84 million claim by the ATO. The dispute – over whether the company should pay capital gains tax after an internal restructure – has continued for more than a decade.
Peter Ker covers resource companies for The Australian Financial Review, based in Melbourne. Connect with Peter on Twitter. Email Peter at pker@afr.com