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The EU VAT Treatment of Vouchers (FM nr. 157) 2019/6.3.3.6
6.3.3.6 Taxation of the ‘private use’ of services.
Dr. J.B.O. Bijl, datum 01-05-2019
- Datum
01-05-2019
- Auteur
Dr. J.B.O. Bijl
- JCDI
JCDI:ADS597156:1
- Vakgebied(en)
Omzetbelasting / Levering van goederen en diensten
Omzetbelasting / Bijzondere OB-regelingen
Omzetbelasting / Vergoeding
Voetnoten
Voetnoten
Based on the fundamental principle underlying the common system of VAT which is the right to deduct VAT, as an integral part of the VAT scheme, which in principle may not be limited. It is exercisable immediately in respect of all the taxes charged on input transactions. See, for example, CJEU case C-74/08, PARAT Automotive Cabrio Textiltetőket Gyártó Kft. v Adó- és Pénzügyi Ellenőrzési Hivatal, Hatósági Főosztály, Észak-magyarországi Kihelyezett Hatósági Osztály, ECLI:EU:C:2009:261, paragraph 15 and the case law cited there.
CJEU case C-460/07, Sandra Puffer v Unabhängiger Finanzsenat, Außenstelle Linz, ECLI:EU:C:2009:254, paragraph, 54.
Article 11A(1)(c) of the EU VAT Directive.
Opinion of Advocate General Sharpston in case C-371/07, Danfoss A/S and AstraZeneca A/S v Skatteministeriet, ECLI:EU:C:2008:590.
Opinion of Advocate General Sharpston in case C-371/07, Danfoss A/S and AstraZeneca A/S v Skatteministeriet, ECLI:EU:C:2008:590, paragraphs 41-43.
See CJEU case C-415/98, Laszlo Bakcsi v Finanzamt Fürstenfeldbruck, ECLI:EU:C:2001:136, paragraph 47.
See CJEU case C-415/98, Laszlo Bakcsi v Finanzamt Fürstenfeldbruck, ECLI:EU:C:2001:136, paragraph 47.
In the sense that similar transactions should be treated the same from a VAT perspective.
Article 26 of the EU VAT Directive.
The activities qualify as ‘restaurant services’ as in Article 6 of Council Implementing Regulation (EU) No 282/2011 of 15 March 2011 laying down implementing measures for Directive 2006/112/EC on the common system of value added tax, OJ L 77, 23 March 2011, p. 4.
Article 75 of the EU VAT Directive.
Article 16 of the EU VAT Directive.
The activities do not qualify as ‘restaurant services’ as in Article 6 of Council Implementing Regulation (EU) No 282/2011 of 15 March 2011 laying down implementing measures for Directive 2006/112/EC on the common system of value added tax, OJ L 77, 23 March 2011, p. 4, because “The supply of prepared (…) food (…), whether or not including transport but without any other support services, shall not be considered restaurant or catering services (…)”.
Article 75 of the EU VAT Directive.
Proposal for a Sixth Council Directive on the harmonization of Member States concerning turnover taxes – Common system of value added tax: Uniform basis of assessment, COM(73) 950 of 20 June 1973, Bulletin of the European Communities 1973, Supplement 11/73, OJ C 80, 5 October 1973, p. 10.
See CJEU case C-371/07, Danfoss A/S and AstraZeneca A/S v Skatteministeriet, ECLI:EU:C:2008:711, paragraph 46 and the CJEU case law cited there.
For taxation of the private use of services, not being the use of business assets, the relevant provision reads as follows (underlining by me, JB):
“Each of the following transactions shall be treated as a supply of services for consideration:
(…);
the supply of services carried out free of charge by a taxable person for his private use or for that of his staff or, more generally, for purposes other than those of his business.
Member States may derogate from paragraph 1, provided that such derogation does not lead to distortion of competition.”
In my view the system of (in principle: full) VAT deduction followed by taxation of the private use also applies to services. This view is mainly based on the same grounds as I used above for arguing that these rules apply to any type of goods. Services for which it is impossible to establish the amount or extend of the private use at the time that the VAT on the purchase of these services can be deducted, should be treated the same way as the goods described above. As an example, I take a company lease car. A company leases cars under an operational lease scheme (which is considered a service similar to hiring the cars) and puts the cars at the disposal of some of its employees free of charge. These employees are allowed to use the car for private purposes. The actual private use can only properly1 be taxed under a system of full deduction followed by an adjustment of that deduction for private use, either by taxing the private use or by retroactively disallowing (adjusting) the deduction. The first adjustment system is, in my view, covered by the relevant provision in the EU VAT Directive. The current EU VAT rules do not provide for the application of the second system in case of private use.
The adjustment provision for services not being the use of business assets does not contain the rule that it only applies ‘where VAT (…) was wholly or partly deductible’, which is included in the provisions regarding the application or use of business goods. I was unable to find an explanation of the absence of this condition in any of the official documents concerning the proposals for any of the EU VAT directives or adjustments thereof. In my view, however, the absence of this requirement is not an indication that the provision should not apply to bought-in services (as some people think, see below), but rather that the aim or goal of the provision is more than only an adjustment of the VAT that was previously deducted. The aim is, rather, to ensure equal treatment as between a taxable person, who was able to deduct the VAT on the acquisition or construction of those goods, and a final consumer, by preventing the former from enjoying an advantage to which he is not entitled by comparison with the latter who buys the goods and pays VAT on them.2
The relevant provision refers principally to services supplied by staff, and staff costs (in the form of salary) do not bear VAT. However, where a single, composite supply should be classified as a supply a service, the goods used will normally have been subject to VAT. And the taxable amount, for all supplies referred to in the relevant provision, is ‘the full cost to the taxable person of providing those services’.3
An example derived from the opinion of Advocate General to the CJEU Sharpston in the Danfoss and AstraZeneca-case4 would be the extension of the home of a building contractor’s home, using some of his employees and materials from his stockyard. Input VAT will already have been deducted on the materials used, but output tax must now be levied on that same cost, together with the cost of providing the labour, in order to place the contractor in (almost) the same position, vis-à-vis VAT, as a private individual obtaining the same goods and services. However, if the VAT on the materials would not have been deducted, e.g. because they were sourced from a private individual, VAT should be levied on these materials as part of the service as well, because if the contractor would have purchased exactly the same service, consisting of exactly the same components, VAT would have been due on the entire supply (including all its components) as well.
Not everyone agrees with that latter view. According to Advocate General Sharpston in the Danfoss and AstraZeneca-case, 5 including the cost of supplies on which input tax was not deductible in the taxable amount would run counter not only to the scheme of Articles 16 and 26 of the EU VAT Directive as a whole but also to the fundamental principle of neutrality of VAT for taxable persons. Consequently, taxation under Article 16 or 26 of the Sixth Directive is conditional not only on classifying the supply as an application for private use, but also on the deductibility of any VAT borne by cost components. Therefore, according to Sharpston, any components that bear non-deducted VAT should not be taxed as a result of these provisions (insofar as the VAT was not deducted). As mentioned, I disagree. The purpose of the relevant provisions is to ensure equal treatment of this business and a private consumer that would have to purchase the same service from a third party. A third party would also have charged VAT on the components that he purchased without being able to deduct VAT.6 This would be different if the taxable person would first withdraw the goods from his business, because that would remain untaxed, and then would use those non-business assets as elements in the total supply.7
Below I have included an example of supplies of goods and a supply of services provided without consideration for private purposes. With these examples I demonstrate that, from a point of fiscal neutrality,8 taxing the ‘elements’ of a total supply on which no VAT was deducted may lead to (slightly) unequal situations.
Example 1: supply of services.
The owner of an Indonesian restaurant decides that, for his birthday, he will close his restaurant for one evening and invite friends and family to enjoy an evening of elaborate Indonesian cuisine. Preparation time by his kitchen staff of four is 32 hours. His serving staff of two works for a total of 12 hours that evening. The VAT incurred on all of the ingredients was deducted upon purchase.
Under the current EU VAT rules, the above is considered a supply of a service made for consideration, and therefore subject to VAT.9,10 The taxable amount for this service is ‘the full cost to the taxable person of providing the services’.11 In my view, under those rules, the ‘full cost’ includes the 44 hours worked by his staff, even though no VAT was incurred or deducted on this element of the ‘full cost’.
Example 2: supply of goods.
The owner of an Indonesian restaurant decides to celebrate his birthday at his private home and to invite friends and family to enjoy an evening of elaborate Indonesian cuisine. Preparation time by his kitchen staff of four is 32 hours. The food is transferred to dishes and other containers owned by the restaurant owner. He transports the food to his house and puts it on tables in his house. The food is kept warm on ‘hot trays’ (owned by himself privately), presented as a buffet. There is no serving staff present: he and his guests will have to take the food themselves. The VAT incurred on all of the ingredients was deducted upon purchase.
Under the current EU VAT rules, the above is considered a supply of goods for consideration that is subject to VAT, ‘where the VAT on those goods or the component parts thereof was wholly or partly deductible’.12,13 The taxable amount for this supply is ‘the purchase price of the goods or of similar goods or, in the absence of a purchase price, the cost price, determined at the time when the application, disposal or retention takes place’.14 In my view, this does not include the 32 hours worked by the kitchen staff. This is the main difference with the result in the first example.
The above demonstrates that the purpose of the provisions that treat certain supplies that are made for free as supplies that are made for consideration, which is equal treatment of a taxable person making free private use of supplies by his business, and the same supplies purchased by a private individual. Ensuring an even more equal treatment would require a change in the EU VAT rules, for example by using the ‘open market value’ as the taxable amount for the transactions that are deemed to be made for consideration. Assuming that a private individual would also pay the open market value, this would ensure equal treatment. Be that as it may, and keeping in mind that, according to the CJEU, the mentioned ‘equal treatment’ is the purpose of the relevant provisions, it should also be borne in mind that in the explanatory notes to these provisions it was mentioned that ‘the same could have been achieved by disallowing VAT deduction’.15
This raises questions about the purpose of the relevant provisions. In my view, given the fact that the EU VAT is a taxation of expenditure for private consumption, and given the fact that the CJEU has repeatedly decided that these provisions are intended to ensure treatment as between a taxable person who applies goods or services for his own private use or for that of his staff and a final consumer who acquires goods or services of the same type,16 which is a reflection of the principle of neutrality, I would argue that the provisions should also ensure the taxation of elements that would have been subject to VAT if purchased as a private individual.