CA24210 - Overseas leasing: Recovery of excess allowances when plant or machinery leased overseas
CAA01/S111 - S113
Plant or machinery may qualify for FYA or a normal WDA before it
is leased overseas. If that happens and the leasing is not
protected leasing
CA24100 you need to recover the excess
allowances, that is allowances at an annual rate higher than 10%,
that have been given. You do this by making a balancing charge. A
disposal value is brought to account to remove the balance of the
expenditure from whatever 25% pool it is in.
This is how you calculate the balancing charge:
Work out the allowances that would have been given if the 10%
rate had applied from the beginning. Deduct this from the total of
any FYA and normal WDAs given. The answer is the balancing charge.
Example David incurs qualifying expenditure of
£10,000 on plant in his chargeable period ended 30 June 2002.
He claims FYA of £4,000 in that chargeable period. He leases
the plant to Jonathan, who is resident in New York, in his
chargeable period ended 30 June 2004. The normal WDA for the
chargeable period ended 30 June 2003 is £1,500 (= 25% x
[£10,000 - £4,000]). So the allowances made total
£5,500 (= £4,000, FYA, + £1,500, WDA). If the 10%
rate had applied from the time when David bought the plant the
allowances would have totalled £1,900 (= 10% x £10,000 +
10% x £9,000 [= £10,000 - £1,000]). The balancing
charge is £3,600 (= £5,500 - £1,900).
This is how you calculate the disposal value that is brought
to account to remove the expenditure from the 25% pool.
Start with the expenditure incurred. Deduct the allowances
made (both FYA and normal WDAs) from it. This gives the disposal
value. Deduct the disposal value from the pool that contained the
expenditure and add it to the overseas leasing pool along with the
balancing charge.
Example In the example above David has to bring a
disposal value of £4,500 (= £10,000 - [£4,000 +
£1,500]) to account. He can add £8,100 (= disposal value
£4,500 + balancing charge £3,600) to his overseas leasing
pool. This means that the balance in the overseas leasing pool is
the same as it would have been if the expenditure had been in the
overseas leasing pool from the start and WDAs had been given at the
10% rate.
There are rules for the case where the person leasing the
plant or machinery overseas acquired it in a connected person
transaction or a series of connected person transactions and the
qualifying activity was not treated as continuing at that time. You
should take account of any FYA or normal WDAs made to the person
from whom the plant or machinery was acquired or the other
connected persons when you calculate the balancing charge. If a
balancing allowance or balancing charge was made to or on the
person from whom the plant or machinery was acquired make a just
and reasonable adjustment to take account of it when you calculate
the balancing charge.
There are special rules for ships because there may be some
allowances that have been postponed and not yet claimed
CA25200. If there are postponed
allowances that have not yet been claimed when a ship is leased
overseas those allowances may not be claimed. You treat them as if
they had been made when you calculate the balancing charge and then
allocate them to the overseas leasing pool along with the balancing
charge and the disposal value.
