DT2302 - Algeria: Unilateral relief
In some cases, Algerian tax may be calculated not by reference
to accounts but on a percentage of the gross receipts of a
business. Claims to tax credit relief in respect of Algerian tax
imposed on this basis should be considered critically.
In particular, the possibility of extraterritorial taxation,
that is taxation in Algeria of income which by reference to UK
principles would be regarded as having its source in the United
Kingdom or in a third country should be taken into account.
Consequently, in cases where significant amounts of tax are paid in
Algeria, it is important to ascertain what work was actually
performed in Algeria and what profit, by reference to UK tax
principles, was derived from that work. Only that part of the
income from a contract which is derived from the performance of
services in Algeria will be regarded as arising from trading in
Algeria, as opposed to trading with Algeria.
The distinction is demonstrated for tax credit relief
purposes in the case of Yates v GCA International Ltd ('the GCA
case' - INTM161120 last sub- paragraph). The GCA case also shows
the extent to which tax credit relief should be restricted where
taxation is imposed extraterritorially on a gross basis, even where
the tax as such is in principle admissible for the purposes of
unilateral relief.
The general rule derived from the terms of Section 790(4) is
that credit for foreign tax on foreign income must not exceed the
lesser of the foreign tax and the UK tax charged on that income.
This will frequently result, when the foreign tax is imposed on
gross receipts, in a limitation of credit (as in the GCA case) to
the amount of UK tax charged on the foreign income. Hence the
importance, in the case of significant claims, of establishing the
UK tax measure of the foreign income (see INTM163010onwards and
especially INTM163100 concerning management and technical
fees).
