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Finance Act 2013

Part 1: Amendments of CTA 2009

134.Paragraph 1 introduces a new part 15B to CTA 2009 concerning the new relief for video games development. It also explains that there are 5 chapters in part 1 covering the introduction to the relief, how activities are taxed, British video games, certification, qualifying expenditure, losses and entitlement to the relief.

Chapter 1: Introduction

135.New sections 1217A (1) to (6) set out the scope and basic concepts of the legislation contained within each Chapter.

136.New section 1217AA (2) provides that ‘video game’ does not include anything produced for advertising or promotional purposes or gambling.

137.New section 1217AA (3) provides that references to a video games includes the game’s soundtrack.

138.New section 1217AA (4) provides that a video game is regarded as being completed when copies of it can be made and these are made available to the general public.

139.New section 1217AB(2) provides that there can only be one video games development company in relation to a video game.

140.New section 1217AB(3) sets out the general rule that governs whether a company is a video games development company in relation to a video game. The company must be responsible for developing the game and it must be actively engaged in planning and decision making during the design, production and testing of the game; and it must directly negotiate, contract and pay for rights, goods and services.

141.New section 1217AB(4) recognises that there may be more than one company meeting the conditions of 1217AB(3) and provides that where this is the case, the company most directly engaged in the activities referred to is the video games development company in relation to the relevant game.

142.New section 1217AB(5) makes it clear that it is possible that there may be no video games development company in relation to the relevant game.

143.New sections 1217AB (6) to (8) allow for a company not be regarded as a company not meeting the description in 1217AB (3) provided it makes an election in its company tax return for an accounting period. That election has effect in relation to relevant games which begin to be produced in that or any subsequent accounting period.

144.New section 1217AC(1) provides that ‘video game development activities’ include work involved in designing, producing and testing the video game.

145.New section 1217AC (2) provides that HM Treasury may, by regulations, amend subsection (1) and provide that certain activities are or are not video game development activities.

146.New section 1217AD (1) defines what is meant by ‘core expenditure’ in relation to the video game.

147.New section 1217AD(2) provides that any expenditure incurred in designing the initial concept for the video game (e.g. setting out the business case for making a game) and on further debugging a completed video game or carrying out maintenance in connection with a video game is not regarded as core expenditure.

148.New sections 1217AE(1) to (2) provide that for the purposes of the legislation “UK expenditure” means expenditure on goods or services that are used or consumed in the United Kingdom. The nationality of those providing the goods and services has no bearing on whether the expenditure qualifies. The ‘used or consumed’ test does not focus on the supplier of goods and services, but instead concentrates on the recipient or customer as the means of determining UK qualifying expenditure. Any apportionment between non-UK expenditure and UK expenditure is made on a just and reasonable basis.

149.New section 1217AE (3) provides that HM Treasury may, by regulations amend subsection (1).

Chapter 2: Taxation of Activities of Video Games development Company

150.New sections 1217B (2) to (3) provides that the activities of a video games development company in relation to each game will be treated as a separate trade, (“the separate video game trade”) so that where a video games development company makes more than one game it will have more than one trade.

151.New section 1217B(4) sets out when a company is treated as beginning a video game trade which is the earlier of when income is received or the design starts.

152.New section 1217BA (1) provides the basic rules for the computation of amounts to be brought into account for the purposes of determining a profit or a loss.

153.New section 1217BA (2) explains how this works for the first period of account. It brings in as a debit the cost incurred and as a credit the proportion of the income determined by the formula set out in sub paragraph (4).

154.New section 1217BA (3) explains how this works for subsequent periods of account. It brings in as a debit the difference between the costs incurred to date and the corresponding amount for the previous period and as a credit the difference between the proportion of total estimated income treated as earned at the end of the period and the corresponding amount for the previous period.

155.New section 1217BA (4) sets out the formula for calculating the proportion of total estimated income treated as earned at the end of the period of account.

156.New sections 1217BB(1) to (3) set out that income from a video game constitutes any receipts in connection with its making or from its exploitation. This includes:

  • Receipts from the sale of the video game or rights in it;

  • Royalties or other payments for use of the video game or aspects of it (for example characters or music);

  • Payments for rights to produce games or other merchandise;

  • Receipts received by the company by way of a profit share agreement;

  • Income from games held as capital assets (the income will be treated as revenue in nature).

157.New section 1217BC (1) to (2) provide the basic rules for when costs on the video game are taken to be incurred. However, expenditure that is prohibited or limited by the Corporation Taxes Acts is excluded.

158.New section 1217BC (3) addresses the situation where a company is making a video game that is treated as a capital asset in its hands and such expenditure would be capital and naturally fall to be prohibited. Section (3) ensures that such expenditure will instead be treated as being of a revenue nature.

159.New section 1217BD (1) sets out the primary rule that costs are incurred when they are represented in the state of completion of the work in progress.

160.New section 1217BD(2) elaborates on this to make clear that payments in advance are ignored until the work is done and deferred payments are recognised to the extent that work is represented in the stage of completion.

161.New section 1217BD (3) makes clear that only amounts for which there is an unconditional obligation to pay can be treated as incurred.

162.New section 1217BD (4) ensures that where this obligation is linked to income being earned, then the cost can only be included when an appropriate amount of income has been brought into account.

163.New section 1217BE provides that estimates at the balance sheet date for each period of account must be on a just and reasonable basis and must also take into consideration all relevant circumstances.

Chapter 3: Video Games Tax Relief

164.New section 1217C(1) to (6) provide that for a relief to be available a video game must satisfy a number of criteria and also sets out how relief will be given and the procedure for making claims. The criteria include:

  • Being intended for supply;

  • Being a British video game as required by new section 1217CB; and,

  • Having the required level of core expenditure as required by new section 1217CE.

165.New section 1217C (4) provides that where relief has already been given for R&D tax credits on the same expenditure then relief is not available for video games tax relief. This is to prevent double claims on the same expenditure.

166.New section 1217CA (1) provides that a video game must be intended for supply to the general public.

167.New section 1217CA (2) provides that the question of whether this condition is met is to be determined when the video game development activities begin. And also provides for circumstances where a game starts out being intended for supply even if subsequently the intention changes. However, where the original intention is not to supply the game to the general public the condition will not be met.

168.New sections 1217CB(1) to (6) provide that a video game development company must apply to the Secretary of State for a video game to be certified as British and that certain conditions must be met in a ‘cultural test’.

169.New sections 1217CC(1) to (2) provide that for applications for certification of the video game as British are to be made to the Secretary of State and that the application may be for an interim or final certificate.

170.New sections 1217CC (3) and (4) define what is meant by an ‘interim’ certificate and a ‘final’ certificate’.

171.New sections 1217CC(5) to (6) provide that companies must provide the Secretary of State with all documents and information to determine an application and that the Secretary of State may require additional information to be provided for the purposes of the application and a declaration as to its truth.

172.New sections 1217CC (7) to (9) provide that the Secretary of State may, by regulations, amend the application process, particulars required etc.

173.New section 1217CD(1) to (2) provide that the Secretary of State shall certify a video game if he is satisfied that it meets the requirements for an interim or final certificate. However, if the Secretary of State is not so satisfied, he shall not certify the video game.

174.New sections 1217CD(3) and (4) allows an interim certificate to be given subject to certain conditions, and provides that the certificate may, if the Secretary of State wishes, be given an expiry date. In any case an interim certificate expires when a corresponding final certificate is issued.

175.New sections 1217CD (5) and (6) provide that the Secretary of State shall revoke a certificate if it becomes clear that it should not have been issued. A revoked certificate is treated as never having been issued (unless the Secretary of State provides otherwise).

176.New sections 1217CE(1) and (2) impose another condition for relief; that not less that 25 per cent of the core expenditure on the video game must be UK expenditure. HM Treasury may vary this minimum percentage of UK expenditure by regulations.

177.New sections 1217CF(1) and (2) provide that the company may claim an additional deduction, based on its qualifying expenditure on the video game to be taken into account in calculating its profit or loss from its separate video game trade. The additional deduction and the payable tax credit together make up the new tax relief.

178.New section 1217CF (3) defines ‘qualifying expenditure’ for this purpose.

179.New section 1217CF (4) allows HM Treasury, by regulation, to amend subsection (3) and to provide that particular sorts of expenditure are or are not qualifying expenditure.

180.New section 1217CG (1) applies in the first period of account in which the separate video game trade is carried on. For this period, the additional deduction is given by E where E is the lesser of the amount of qualifying expenditure which is UK expenditure or 80 per cent of that amount.

181.New section 1217CG (2) applies in the subsequent periods of account. In such periods the, the additional deduction is E – P where E is now either the lesser of the qualifying expenditure to date (i.e. the sum for the current period and all subsequent periods) which is UK expenditure or 80 per cent of that amount, which ever is less. P is the total amount of additional deduction for all previous periods.

182.New section 1217CG (3) allows HM Treasury to amend section 1216CG.

183.New section 1217CH(1) provides that a video games development company (as defined in new section 1217AB) may claim a video games tax credit in an accounting period for which it has a surrenderable loss.

184.New section 1217CH (2) defines the surrenderable loss. This is the lesser of the trading loss and the available qualifying expenditure.

185.New section 1217CH(3) calculates the available loss for an accounting period as L plus RUL where L is the amount of the company’s loss for the period and, RUL is the amount of any relevant unused loss. RUL is defined further in new section 1217CH (4).

186.New section 1217CH (4) defines “relevant unused loss” of a company as that part of a loss neither surrendered for tax credit under new section 1217CI (1) nor carried forward under section 45 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010.

187.New section 1217CH (5) defines the available qualifying expenditure for the first period of account during which the trade is carried on as the amount E defined in 1217CG (1).

188.New section 1217CH(6) defines the available qualifying expenditure for subsequent periods as E minus S, where E is the amount defined in new section 1217CG(2) and S is the aggregate of the amounts surrendered for video games tax credit in previous periods as defined by new section 1217CI(1).

189.New section 1217CH (7) provides for any necessary apportionments where a period of account of the separate video game trade does not coincide with an accounting period.

190.New section 1217CI (1) provides that a company may surrender all or part of its surrenderable loss for a period.

191.New section 1217CI (2) sets the payable tax credit rate as 25%.

192.New section 1217CI (3) provides that where part of the loss is surrendered a company’s available loss will be reduced by the surrendered amount.

193.New section 1217CJ(1) provides that where a company is entitled to a video games tax credit for a period, and it claims that credit, the Commissioners for Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs will pay the credit to the company.

194.New section 1217CJ(2) provides that an amount of credit that is payable, or an amount of interest payable under section 826 Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988, may be set against any corporation tax that the company owes, and that if it is so set. The Commissioners’ obligation under new section 1217CJ (1) is met.

195.New section 1217CJ (3) overrules new section 1217CJ (1) when the company’s tax return is enquired into by HM Revenue and Customs, so that no payment need then be made to the company. HM Revenue and Customs may however make such provisional payments as it deems fit.

196.New section 1217CJ(4) overrules new section 1217CJ(1) so that when the company owes HM Revenue and Customs any amount of PAYE, Class 1 National Insurance contributions or any amount due no payment need to be made to the company.

197.New section 1217CJ (5) provides that a payment of a video games tax credit is not income for the company for any tax purpose.

198.New section1217CK (1) provides that no amount is to be included in costs for a period if it is still unpaid four months after the period ends.

199.New section 1217CK (2) provides that new section 1217CK (1) does not override the normal operation of new section 1217BD (when costs are taken to be incurred).

200.New section 1217CL is a general anti avoidance provision, which denies video games development tax relief to the extent that it arises from artificially inflated claims.

201.New section 1217CL(1) sets out that where a transaction is attributable to arrangements entered into (wholly or partly) for a disqualifying purpose, that transaction is disregarded in determining the amount of additional deduction or video games tax credit due.

202.New section 1217CL (2) sets out when arrangements are entered into for a disqualifying purpose. This is when their main object, or one of their main objects, is to enable a company to obtain an additional deduction or a video games tax credit that it would otherwise not be entitled to, or a larger deduction or greater amount of video games tax credit than it would otherwise be entitled to.

203.New section 1217CL (3) defines “arrangements”.

204.New section 1217CM (1) to (4) allow HM Revenue and Customs to disclose information to the Secretary of State for the purposes of his functions and also allows for the same information to be disclosed to the British Film Institute.

205.New section 1217CM (5) imposes a duty of confidentiality on any person to whom the information is disclosed under new sections 1217CM (1) and (3).

206.New section 1217CN (1) provides that a person commits an offence if he discloses information about an identifiable person in contravention of new section 1217CM.

207.New section 1217CN (2) provides a defence for a person charged with such an offence that he believed the disclosure to be lawful, or the information had already lawfully been made public.

208.New section 1217CN (3) and (6) sets out the penalties for a person convicted of wrongful disclosure.

209.New section 1217CN (4) provides that a prosecution may only be brought in England and Wales by the Director of Revenue and Customs Prosecution or with the consent of the Director of Public Prosecutions.

210.New section 1217CN(5) provides that a prosecution may only be brought in Northern Ireland by the Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs or with the consent of the Director of Public Prosecutions for Northern Ireland.

Chapter 4: Video Game Losses

211.New section 1217D (2) sets out definitions used later in the section.

212.New section 1217DA(1) to (2) provide for a restriction to losses arising in while a video game is in development to the extent that they may only be carried forward to be set against profits of the separate video games trade in a subsequent period.

213.New section 1217DB (1) applies the section to the accounting period when a qualifying video game is completed or abandoned and to any subsequent accounting periods, if the trade continues.

214.New section 1217DB(2) provides that any trading loss carried forward under section 45 Corporation Tax Act 2010 from a pre-completion accounting period may be treated as a loss, for the purposes of loss relief, of the accounting period into which it is carried forward. This is subject to the restriction in new section 1217DB (3).

215.New section 1217DB(3) restricts the amount of any loss available to be set sideways against other profits of the same, or an earlier period, and to be surrendered as group relief to the amount that is not attributable to video games tax relief (see subsection (6)).

216.New section 1217DB(4) to (5) explain how the amount of loss that may either be deducted from total profits or surrendered as group relief will be restricted to the amount not attributable to video games tax relief.

217.New section 1217DB (6) explains how the loss for video games tax relief is calculated. This loss is the amount of the total loss less the amount of loss there would have been without the additional deduction under Chapter 3.

218.New section 1217DB (7) provides that 1217DB does not apply to losses carried forward or surrendered under new section 1217DC (terminal losses).

219.New section 1217DC(1) provides that this section applies when a video games development company ceases to carry on a separate trade in relation to the video game and has an amount of loss that remains to be carried forward (a terminal loss).

220.New section1217DC(2) and (3) provide that where a video games development company with a terminal loss carries on a another trade in relation to another qualifying video game it can, by election, treat such a loss as being a loss brought forward in the next accounting period following the cessation.

221.New section 1217DC(4) to (6) provide for the situation where a company with a terminal loss is in a group relationship with another company at the time of the cessation and that other company is a video games development company in relation to another qualifying video game. The company with the terminal loss may surrender this loss to another video games development company within the same group provided that company makes a claim for the loss.

222.New section 1217DC (7) provides that HM Treasury may, by regulations make adaptations or such modifications as appear to be appropriate to this section.

223.New section 1217DC (8) defines a ‘qualifying video game’.

Chapter 5: Provisional Entitlement to Relief

224.New section 1217E (1) defines certain expressions for the purposes of Chapter 5.

225.New section 1217E (2) sets out a requirement for reporting in a company’s return whether a video game has been completed or abandoned.

226.New section 1217EA (1) provides that a company is not entitled to relief in an interim accounting period unless an interim certificate accompanies its company tax return.

227.New section 1217EA (2) provides that if an interim certificate is revoked the company loses eligibility for any period in respect of which a certificate has been provided must amend its return(s) accordingly.

228.New section 1217EA(3) provides that where a video game is completed the company tax return must be accompanied by a final certificate, which then covers both the final period and any interim periods. If no such final certificate is provided the company loses eligibility for all periods and must amend it return(s) accordingly.

229.New section 1217EA (4) deals with the abandonment of a video game. If the company abandons video game development activities its tax return for the final accounting period may be accompanied by an interim certificate. The company does not lose entitlement to any earlier relief.

230.New section 1217EA (5) provides that if a final certificate is revoked, the company loses eligibility for all periods and must amend its return(s) accordingly.

231.New section 1217EB(1) provides that the company is not entitled to relief in an interim accounting period unless it includes, in its company tax return for that period, a statement of the planned amount of UK expenditure on the video game, and that amount indicates the condition in new section 1217CE will be met on completion.

232.New section 1217EB(2) provides that where the condition in subparagraph (1) is met but it subsequently becomes apparent that the amount of UK expenditure on completion will be too low, the company loses eligibility for all periods and must amend its company tax return(s) accordingly.

233.New section 1217EB (3) and (4) deal with the completion of the video game. If the video game is completed, or abandoned, its company tax return for the final accounting period must be accompanied by a statement that it has been completed or abandoned, as the case may be, and by a final statement of UK core expenditure on the relevant video game. If the company tax return shows that the amount of UK core expenditure is too low and no such final statement is provided, the company loses eligibility for all periods(s) and must amend its company tax return(s) accordingly.

234.New section 1217EC overrides the normal time limits for amendments of assessments as necessary in order to allow the provisions of Chapter 5 to have effect.

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