Chapter 8 - Transfer Pricing Flashcards
Aim of TP’s
- give autonomy to local centre managers
- motivate centre managers to improve
- consolidated achieve better performance
Transfer Price
Definitions
inter-company: internal sale or internal purchase
both divisions must benefit
TP’s have to be established and agreed
requirement to set preference to sell or buy internally
Transfer Price
Objective
Goal congruence Performance measure Minimising tax liablity Record movement of goods and services A fair allocation of profits and services
Bases for TP’s (3)
market based
cost based
negoiated
Decision making uses of TP’s
Transfer at opportunity costs.
- Perfect market: market price + minimal premium
- Surplus market: marginal costs
- supply constraint market: marginal costs + shadow price
Performance measurement of TP’s
- perfect market: Optimum = market price + small adjustments
- Surplus capacity:
a. 2 part tarif: Optimum = marginal cost + a lump sum
b. Cost-plus pricing: marginal or full costs + markup
c. Dual pricing: supplying and selling division have each a different transfer price. profit is recorded centrally. - With production constraints: marginal costs + shadow price (unfair to buyer, as there is no alternative supply and prices are set at monopoly level)
International transfer pricing
Cross border trader aims to reduce profitability in high tax jurisdictions and allocate profitability in low tax jurisdictions.
Basic transfer price issues still apply.
60% of companies establish an APA (advanced purchasing agreement)
Note - TP’s are influenced by FX
TP’s can manage cash flows in a country (instead of dividends, which might be subject to local taxes). However this does not work at arms length’s approaches in a particular country.
Government on TP’s
Attract business through low tax rates (tax haven)
- on profits
- on dividends (for holdings)
- or tax treaties with other countries
- a stable economy
- good communications with the ROW
- well developed legal framework