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The Australian Treasury has issued a Consultation Paper titled “Multinational Tax Integrity: Public Beneficial Ownership Register” relating to the Government’s proposal to introduce a public register of beneficial ownership information to record who ultimately controls, owns and receives benefits from a legal entity operating in Australia.
The proposal, if adopted, will have a very wide-ranging impact and will affect around 3 million Australian legal entities of all shapes and sizes, including large and small private companies, managed investment schemes, corporate collective investments vehicles and even family trusts.
The Treasury has issued a Consultation Paper titled “Multinational Tax Integrity: Public Beneficial Ownership Register” relating to the Government’s proposal to introduce a public register of beneficial ownership information to record who ultimately controls, owns and receives benefits from a legal entity operating in Australia. The proposal, if adopted, will have a very wide-ranging impact and will affect around 3 million Australian legal entities of all shapes and sizes, including large and small private companies, managed investment schemes (MISs), corporate collective investments vehicles (CCIVs) and even family trusts.
The proposal to introduce a public register of beneficial ownership information is part of the Government’s election commitment to ensure that multinational enterprises (MNEs) pay a fairer share of tax.
The Consultation Paper states that reform is required to further align Australia with international standards and to address gaps in regulatory coverage.
The Consultation Paper suggests the current lack of transparency surrounding beneficial ownership information provides an opportunity to:
It is proposed that Australia largely adopts the UK approach to beneficial ownership and requires a regulated entity to include on their beneficial ownership register any entity or individual who either:
In recognition that regulated entities may not always be aware of all beneficial owners, it is also proposed that ultimate beneficial owners must identify themselves and provide relevant information to the relevant regulated entity.
The beneficial ownership register would be required to include the following information for:
The Consultation Paper is seeking feedback on privacy considerations.
The proposed new regime contains an unusual approach to enforcement and compliance: largely outsourcing compliance responsibility onto the relevant entities themselves.
Penalties would apply to regulated entities, their officers, and the beneficial owners for non-compliance with the new regime.
The regulated entity would be given the power to request information from persons it suspects to be a beneficial owner. If the person does not provide them with this, they would have the power to issue a “warning notice” and if the information was still not provided they may serve a “restrictions notice” to prevent the person from dealing in their interests. Specifically, this would prevent a person from selling or transferring their interest or exercising any rights associated with the interest and would prevent a regulated entity from issuing securities with respect to that interest or making any payment in respect of the interest (unless the regulated entity is liquidated).
The Consultation Paper states that listed entities are expected to continue to identify their beneficial ownership through the substantial holding notice and tracing notice regimes in the Corporations Act. It is therefore proposed that listed entities would not be required to maintain a beneficial ownership register. However, the Government is considering opportunities to expand and harmonise these regimes and the Consultation Paper poses a number of questions in relation to potential changes to the regimes.
The Government is proposing to strengthen the existing enforcement regime applying to listed entities in respect of the substantial holding notice and tracing notice regimes. Under the new arrangements, ASIC would have powers to make orders restraining the disposal, acquisition, and exercise of rights attached to interests in listed entities where satisfied a person has, without reasonable excuse, failed to comply with the substantial holding notice or tracing notice regimes.
As noted above, the proposed beneficial ownership register is part of the Government’s election commitment to ensure that MNEs pay a fairer share of tax.
However, the proposal goes way further than that and, on one view, represents a significant policy overreach and will impose a significant regulatory and compliance burden on millions of entities (including ‘mum and dad’ businesses and family trusts) which have absolutely nothing to do with the tax avoidance practice of MNEs. Describing the proposed new regime as a proverbial ‘sledgehammer to crack a walnut’ would be apt to describe just how wide-ranging the proposed reforms are.
The compliance cost of the proposed new regime should not be understated. For example, if the cost of compliance per entity is, say, $1,000 on average (noting that there is both an obligation to create the register and an ongoing to keep it updated), this would translate to the imposition of a $3 billion cost onto Australian entities. One might query how this could be considered proportionate, reasonable and justifiable in light of the fact that the policy objective of the proposed reform is to address the tax avoidance practice of MNEs.
If the proposed reform really is about ensuring that MNEs pay a fairer share of tax, then surely a more efficient and appropriate way of achieving this policy objective would be to define what a MNE is in the applicable legislation and then to require only those entities to prepare a public register of beneficial ownership.
Finally, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) held on 22 November 2022 that public access to the European Union’s (EU’s) equivalent of the beneficial ownership register constituted a serious interference with fundamental rights. The EU provisions provided access to the name, month and year of birth, nationality, country of residence, and nature and extent of the beneficial ownership to any member of the public and to any relevant government authorities. This was a departure from the previous requirement that the person or organisation seeking access to the information had to demonstrate a legitimate interest. The ECJ held that this breached Articles 7 and 8 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU. Although this is European law, the decision highlights the significant potential privacy issues with the Government’s proposal.
The contents of this publication are for reference purposes only and may not be current as at the date of accessing this publication. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication.
© Herbert Smith Freehills 2025
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