Commonwealth of Australia Explanatory Memoranda

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CUSTOMS TARIFF AMENDMENT (INCORPORATION OF PROPOSALS) BILL 2009











                                 2008 - 2009





               THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA






                          HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES






       CUSTOMS TARIFF AMENDMENT (INCOrPORATION OF PROPOSALS) Bill 2009






                           EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM











          (Circulated by authority of the Minister for Home Affairs
                     the Honourable Brendan O'Connor MP)

CUSTOMS TARIFF AMENDMENT (INCORPORATION OF PROPOSALS) Bill 2009








OUTLINE


The purpose of the Customs Tariff Amendment (Incorporation of Proposals)
Bill 2009 (the Bill) is to amend the Customs Tariff Act 1995 (the Customs
Tariff) to incorporate alterations that were contained in Customs Tariff
Proposals tabled in the House of Representatives during 2009.

These Customs Tariff Proposals are:

    . Customs Tariff Proposal (No. 1) 2009, to create a new concessional
      item 41H in Schedule 4 to the Customs Tariff;

    . Customs Tariff Proposal (No. 2) 2009, to amend rates of customs duty
      for certain alcohol and tobacco products in Schedule 7 of the Customs
      Tariff (Chilean originating goods); and

    . Customs Tariff Proposal (No. 4) 2009, to amend rates of customs duty
      for certain beer and grape wine products.


FINANCIAL IMPACT STATEMENT

The measures in the Bill have no financial impact.


CUSTOMS TARIFF AMENDMENT (INCORPORATION OF PROPOSALS) Bill 2009



NOTES ON CLAUSES


Clause 1 - Short Title


This clause provides for the Bill, when enacted, to be cited as the Customs
   Tariff Amendment (Incorporation of Proposals) Act 2009.


Clause 2 - Commencement

1. Subclause (1) provides that each provision of this Act specified in
   column 1 of the table in that subclause commences, or is taken to have
   commenced, on the day or at the time specified in column 2 of the table.
   This subclause also provides that any other statement in column 2 of the
   table has effect according to its terms.

2. Item 1 of the table in this clause provides that sections 1 to 3 and
   anything in the Act not covered elsewhere in the table will commence on
   the day on which the Act receives the Royal Assent.

3. Item 2 of the table provides that Schedule 1 of the Bill commences on
   1 January 2009.

4. Item 3 of the table provides that Schedule 2 of the Bill commences
   immediately after the commencement of the Customs Tariff Amendment
   (Australia-Chile Free Trade Agreement Implementation) Act 2008.  That Act
   commenced on 6 March 2009.

5. Item 4 of the table provides that Schedule 3 of the Bill will commence
   immediately after the commencement of the Customs Tariff Amendment (2009
   Measures No. 1) Act 2009.  That Act commenced on 28 August 2009.

Clause 3 - Schedule(s)

6. This clause is the formal enabling provision for the Schedules to the
   Bill and provides that each Act specified in a Schedule is amended or
   repealed in accordance with the applicable items in the Schedule.  In the
   Bill, the Customs Tariff Act 1995 is being amended.

7. Clause 3 also provides that any other items of the Schedule have effect
   according to their terms.  This is a standard enabling clause for
   transitional, savings and application items in amending legislation.



CUSTOMS TARIFF AMENDMENT (INCOrPORATION OF PROPOSALS) Bill 2009



Introductory comments


8. The Customs Tariff Proposal mechanism is used for effecting alterations
   to the Customs Tariff, particularly when such alterations are required to
   have effect in a short time frame that cannot be achieved through a
   Customs Tariff Amendment Bill.  Customs Tariff Proposals are used most
   commonly for introducing new items, for changing rates of duty or for
   restructuring items in the schedules to the Customs Tariff.

9. When the Parliament is sitting, Customs Tariff Proposals are tabled in
   the House of Representatives, specifying alterations to the Customs
   Tariff.

10. When the Parliament is not sitting for a period exceeding 7 days,
   section 273EA of the Customs Act 1901 (the Customs Act) provides that the
   Minister may publish a notice in the Commonwealth Gazette, specifying
   alterations to the Customs Tariff.  Section 273EA requires that, when
   such a notice is published in the Gazette, a Customs Tariff Proposal must
   be tabled in the House of Representatives, within seven sitting days.

11. Following the introduction of a Customs Tariff Proposal in the House of
   Representatives, the alterations contained in the Proposal are
   incorporated in a Customs Tariff Amendment Bill that is introduced into
   and debated by the Parliament.

12. The Customs Tariff Amendment (Incorporation of Proposals) Bill 2009
   amends the Customs Tariff to incorporate alterations that were contained
   in three Customs Tariff Proposals tabled during 2009, as follows:

    . Customs Tariff Proposal (No. 1) 2009, to create a new concessional
      item 41H in Schedule 4 to the Customs Tariff;

    . Customs Tariff Proposal (No. 2) 2009, to amend rates of customs duty
      for certain alcohol and tobacco products in Schedule 7 of the Customs
      Tariff (Chilean originating goods); and

    . Customs Tariff Proposal (No. 4) 2009, to amend rates of customs duty
      for certain beer and grape wine products.

13. When a Customs Tariff Proposal is incorporated in a Customs Tariff
   Amendment Bill, the commencement provisions of the Bill reflect those of
   the Proposal.  As there is a time lag between the tabling of a Proposal
   in the House of Representatives and the passage of a Bill incorporating
   the Proposal through the Parliament, the commencement provisions of the
   Bill are necessarily retrospective.



Schedule 1 - Incorporating Customs Tariff Proposal (No. 1) 2009


Customs Tariff Act 1995




Item 1 Schedule 4 (after item 41G)


14. Item 1 inserts a new concessional item 41H into Part III of Schedule 4
   to the Customs Tariff.

15. Schedule 4 to the Customs Tariff specifies a number of circumstances
   where imported goods, or classes of goods, are subject to reduced or Free
   rates of customs duty.

16. Item 41H provides duty free entry into Australia for goods for use in
   the testing, quality control, manufacturing evaluation or engineering
   development of motor vehicles designed or engineered, or to be designed
   or engineered in Australia, by motor vehicle producers registered under
   the Automotive Competitiveness and Investment Scheme (ACIS), as set out
   in the ACIS Administration Act 1999, but not necessarily manufactured in
   Australia.  The item also applies to components for use in such motor
   vehicles.

17. The new item should encourage automotive manufacturers to undertake
   design and engineering work for the international automotive market, as
   well as reducing administrative costs in importing such equipment.

18. Item 41H applies to goods that were imported into Australia and entered
   for home consumption on or after 1 January 2009.

19. Item 41H was given effect through the publication of Customs Notice
   (No. 1) 2009 in the Commonwealth Gazette GN 2 of 21 January 2009, under
   the provisions of section 273EA of the Customs Act.  As required by
   section 273EA, Customs Tariff Proposal (No. 1) 2009, containing that
   alteration, was tabled in the House of Representatives on
   11 February 2009.


Schedule 2 - Incorporating Customs Tariff Proposal (No. 2) 2009


Customs Tariff Act 1995



20. The Customs Tariff Amendment (Australia-Chile Free Trade Agreement
   Implementation) Act 2008 (the Chile FTA Act) received the Royal Assent on
   27 November 2008, as Act No. 128 of 2008 and commenced on 6 March 2009.
   This Act gave effect to Australia's tariff commitments under the
   Australia-Chile Free Trade Agreement (the Chile FTA).

21. The Chile FTA Act created a new Schedule 7 in the Customs Tariff to
   specify preferential and phasing rates of duty, as required, for goods
   imported under the Chile FTA (Chilean originating goods).


22. The Chile FTA Act was enacted in 2008 and did not take into account
   subsequent alterations to the Customs Tariff as a result of the February
   2009 Consumer Price Index amendments, which increased rates of excise
   equivalent customs duty applicable to certain spirit-based alcoholic
   beverages, also known as "ready-to-drink" beverages or "alcopops".

23. Customs Tariff Proposal (No. 2) 2009 was tabled in the House of
   Representatives on 25 February 2009 to give effect to those alterations,
   in respect of Chilean originating goods.  Schedule 2 of the Bill amends
   the Customs Tariff to incorporate those alterations.

Adjustment of rates of duty in line with the February 2009 Consumer Price
Index (CPI) increase

24. Section 19 of the Customs Tariff provides that rates of customs duty,
   for certain alcohol and tobacco products, are adjusted automatically,
   twice yearly, in line with movements in the CPI.  Following the release
   of the December quarter 2008 CPI figures, duty rates for these products
   increased with effect from 2 February 2009.

25. The Chile FTA Act, as enacted, did not include these increased rates of
   duty and Customs Tariff Proposal (No. 2) 2009 applied the increased rates
   of duty to alcohol and tobacco products imported under the Chile FTA.

26. The above amendments, contained in Schedule 2 of the Bill, will ensure
   that the excise equivalent component of customs duty on alcohol and
   tobacco products imported under the Chile FTA is the same as the rates of
   duty on those products when imported from other countries.

27. Items 2-8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24-30, 32-40 and 42-53 of
   Schedule 2 of the Bill refer.

28. These amendments are in accordance with the terms of the Chile FTA.

Increased rates of excise equivalent customs duty for "ready-to-drink"
beverages (RTDs or "alcopops")

29. Customs Tariff Proposal (No. 1) 2008 was tabled in the House of
   Representatives on 13 May 2008.  This Proposal increased the rates of
   excise equivalent customs duty applicable to certain "ready-to-drink"
   beverages or "alcopops".  The increased rates of duty took effect from
   27 April 2008.

30. As these increased rates of duty had not then been incorporated in the
   Customs Tariff through a Customs Tariff Amendment Bill, they were not
   included in the Chile FTA Act.  That Act therefore specified lower rates
   of duty for RTDs that are Chilean originating goods.

31. The Customs Tariff Amendment (2009 Measures No. 1) Act  2009 was passed
   by the Parliament in August of 2009 and received the Royal Assent on 27
   August 2009,
   as Act No. 74 of 2009.  This Act incorporated the higher rates of duty
   for RTDs in the Customs Tariff, with effect from 28 April 2008.

32. Customs Tariff Proposal (No. 2) 2009 also contained alterations to the
   Customs Tariff to impose the higher rate of customs duty for those items
   in Schedule 7 that are applicable to RTDs.  These alterations reflect the
   amendments that were contained in the Customs Tariff Amendment (2009
   Measures No. 1) Act 2009.

33. Schedule 2 of the Bill also amends the Customs Tariff to reflect those
   changes to duty rates for RTDs, when imported as Chilean originating
   goods.  These amendments will ensure that the excise equivalent component
   of customs duty on RTDs, when imported under the Chile FTA, is the same
   as the rates of duty on those products when imported from other
   countries.

34. Items 1, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23, 31 and 41 of Schedule 2 of the
   Bill refer.

35. These amendments are in accordance with the terms of the Chile FTA.

Commencement

36. The amendments contained in Schedule 2 of the Bill commence immediately
   after the commencement of the Chile FTA Act.  That Act commenced on 6
   March 2009, the day on which the Chile FTA entered into force.

37. Item 54 of Schedule 2 is an application provision that provides that
   the amendments in Schedule 2 to the Bill apply to goods entered for home
   consumption on or after 6 March 2009, and to goods imported into
   Australia before 6 March 2009, where the time for working out the rate of
   import duty on the goods had not occurred before that date.  For example,
   this application provision will apply to goods that were warehoused on
   importation before 6 March 2009 and not entered into home consumption
   until on or after that date.


Schedule 3 - Incorporating Customs Tariff Proposal (No. 4) 2009


Customs Tariff Act 1995

38. As part of the 2009-10 Budget, the Government announced that it would
   alter the taxation definitions of beer and grape wine product to ensure
   that these goods that mimic spirit based products are taxed as a spirit
   product.  These alterations are contained in Schedules 2 and 3,
   respectively, to the Customs Tariff Amendment (2009 Measures No. 1) Act
   2009.


39. As noted above, this Act received the Royal Assent on 27 August 2009,
   with commencement on 28 August 2009.  The Act created eight new
   subheadings in Schedule 3 to the Customs Tariff that were required to
   preserve the ad valorem component of the customs duty for goods that fall
   outside the revised definitions of beer and grape wine product.

40. Section 19 of the Customs Tariff provides that rates of customs duty,
   for certain alcohol and tobacco products, are adjusted automatically,
   twice yearly, in line with movements in the CPI.  Following the release
   of the June 2009 quarter CPI figures, duty rates for these products again
   increased with effect from 1 August 2009.

41. The Customs Tariff Amendment (2009 Measures No. 1) Act 2009 was
   introduced into Parliament during the first half of 2009 and therefore
   did not take into account the increases in rates of excise equivalent
   customs duty that took effect on 1 August 2009.

42. Customs Notice (No. 2) 2009 was published in a special Commonwealth
   Gazette, S140 of 27 August 2009, under the provisions of section 273EA of
   the Customs Act to increase rates of duty for the newly created
   subheadings.

43. As well as altering rates of duty in Schedule 3 to the Customs Tariff,
   the Notice made equivalent changes for the corresponding items in
   Schedule 5 (US originating goods), Schedule 6 (Thai originating goods)
   and Schedule 7 (Chilean originating goods).

44. In accordance with the provisions of section 273EA, Customs Tariff
   Proposal (No. 4) 2009 was tabled in the House of Representatives, on 16
   September 2009.

45. The publication of Customs Notice (No. 2) 2009 and the tabling of
   Proposal (No. 4) 2009 ensured that rates of customs duty for certain beer
   and grape wine products, on commencement of the Customs Tariff Amendment
   (2009 Measures No. 1) Act 2009, were the same as the rates for other
   alcoholic beverages.

46. In Schedule 3 of the Bill, items 1 to 8 refer to duty rates in Schedule
   3 of the Customs Tariff, items 9 to 16 refer to duty rates in Schedule 5
   of the Customs Tariff, items 17 to 24 refer to duty rates in Schedule 6
   of the Customs Tariff and items 25 to 32 refer to duty rates in Schedule
   7 of the Customs Tariff.

47. The amendments contained in Schedule 3 of the Bill commence immediately
   after the commencement of the Customs Tariff Amendment (2009 Measures No.
   1) Act 2009.  That Act commenced on 28 August 2009.

48. Item 33 of Schedule 3 is an application provision that provides that
   the amendments in Schedule 3 to the Bill apply to goods entered for home
   consumption on or after 28 August 2009, and to goods imported into
   Australia before 28 August 2009, where the time for working out the rate
   of import duty on the goods had not occurred before that date.  For
   example, this application provision will apply to goods that were
   warehoused on importation before 28 August 2009 and not entered into home
   consumption until on or after that date.

 


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