Tax rules on share funds unfair
Anthony Edmonds, of Wellington-based Implemented Investment Solutions (IIS), says the system unfairly disadvantages people who put their money in New Zealand-manufactured global share funds.
He said the fair dividend rate (FDR) regime, which taxes locally-structured global share portfolio investment entities (PIEs) differently to offshore-based products and direct investments, has left many New Zealand investors out-of-pocket and damaged the country’s funds management industry.
Edmonds said: “The FDR tax regime is unfair, as individuals using PIE global share funds, including KiwiSaver schemes, generally pay more tax than those who invest directly in global shares, which includes offshore global share funds.”
He said the Government had created a situation where investors had a tax incentive to invest directly offshore, and in offshore-manufactured funds.
“Imagine the outcry if the Government subsidised Australian lamb for Kiwi consumers.”
Edmonds said the distortion that had been created was evident in IIS’ own range of global share products, which include both PIE and offshore-based funds managed by Russell Investments.
“For every $1 we get from mum and dad investors in our global share PIEs, investors put $10 into the offshore-manufactured solutions we have,” he said.
He said while the decision to invest in global shares outside of PIEs might make tax sense at present, removing the inequity would be a wider boost.
“For one, most KiwiSaver investors, who represent the largest and fastest-growing retail investment sector, must invest offshore via PIEs and therefore cannot access the non-FDR tax incentives,” he said.
"Encouraging mum and dad investors into NZ-manufactured global share funds would also ensure they are covered by local regulations while providing a boost to the New Zealand investment industry.
“The fairest solution would be to change the FDR tax rules to ensure individuals pay the same amount of tax regardless of how they invest in global shares.”
He said the issue needed political attention and he was trying to get traction on it with the IRD. “Is this what they intended? I think investors on the whole are clever at figuring out tax, and what makes a good investment. They’re more clever than people give them credit for.”