RESEARCH
AND DEVELOPMENT TAX CREDIT
FOR SMEs
From
1 April 2000, spending on R&D by SMEs can qualify for R&D
tax credits. The new scheme for R&D tax credits for small
and medium-sized companies (SMEs) was introduced in Finance Act
2000. In support of this, the Secretary of State for Trade and
Industry issued new Guidelines
on the meaning of R&D for tax purposes at the same time,
on 28 July 2000.
The SME R&D
tax credits allow for enhanced tax relief for certain R&D
spending in two ways:
- an increase
in the tax relief SMEs can claim for their qualifying non-capital
R&D expenditure from the usual deduction of 100% to 150%;
- or a payable
R&D tax credit for companies not in profit - a cash payment
of £24 for every £100 spent on qualifying R&D.
This note
provides:
- some background
to the new R&D tax credit measure for SMEs;
- information
on who can claim;
- information
on how this might benefit your business.
The Inland
Revenue are responsible for tax issues including the SME R&D
tax credit. Further information can be found at the Inland
Revenue website
Introduction
The Chancellor
announced proposals for a new R&D tax credit in the 1999 Budget,
for implementation in Budget 2000:
"I
propose a new R&D tax credit which will give new business
and small business - the biggest source of innovative ideas
- cash help to research and develop their innovations even before
they make their first profits.
At a cost
of £150millon a year, this targeted tax cut will underwrite
almost one third of research and development costs for small
business.
Britain
now has one of the best incentives for innovation anywhere in
the industrialised world.
Scientific
innovation is a prime catalyst of growth. And I want a winner's
circle of innovation - inventions that are then developed in
Britain and manufactured in Britain, creating growth and jobs
in Britain".
The Government
aims to create a favourable business climate for businesses to
innovate in the UK. Small and medium-sized companies (SMEs) wishing
to undertake R&D can face particular difficulties. R&D
is often a long-term investment. Smaller companies are the least
well able to sustain this necessary investment over long periods
of time, and do not necessarily have access to funding. The SME
R&D tax credit aims to help overcome these barriers to encourage
R&D, since R&D can help create:
- new and
more competitive products, services and processes;
- new markets;
- high-quality
employment opportunities for skilled people.
The R&D
tax credit was introduced to help SMEs to undertake R&D, either
for the first time, or to encourage them to increase their R&D.
On 28 July
2000 the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry published guidelines
on the meaning of R&D for tax purposes, including a new statutory
definition of R&D, to coincide with the introduction of R&D
tax credits. The definition and guidelines clarify what constitutes
R&D for tax purposes and give businesses added certainty in
their tax affairs. They apply not only to the R&D tax credit
scheme for SMEs, but also for other tax purposes, in particular
to R&D allowances (these capital allowances were previously
called scientific research allowances), which are 100% tax allowances
for capital expenditure. These can be claimed by all businesses
regardless of size. You can find more information about R&D
allowances, R&D tax credits and the guidelines on what constitutes
R&D for tax purposes on the
Inland Revenue website.
SMEs therefore
can qualify for the usual R&D allowance on their qualifying
capital expenditure and the R&D tax credit for SMEs on other
non-capital qualifying spending (i.e. not on the same expenditure).

Who
can claim?
The R&D
tax credit for SMEs is expected to benefit around 4,500 small
and medium-sized companies in the UK at a cost to the Exchequer
of about £150 million a year. These companies are responsible
for about 10% of all UK business expenditure on R&D.
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'Not everyone can claim R&D
tax credits, and not all expenditure qualifies. The most
important conditions are:
- only small and medium sized companies
(SMEs) can claim the SME R&D tax credit. It is not
available to individuals or partnerships (although the
Government is currently consulting on a new
R&D tax incentive for larger companies.
- the company must be a small or
medium-sized enterprise (SME) as defined by the European
Commission for State Aid purposes;
- the R&D does not have to be
undertaken in the UK;
- the company must be entitled to
the ownership rights of any intellectual property arising
from the R&D;
- the eligible R&D costs for
the R&D tax credit are the costs of staff directly
involved in carrying out the R&D, the costs of consumable
stores used in the R&D effort, and certain costs
where R&D is sub-contracted to another person;
- the spending on qualifying R&D
to attract the tax credit must not be less than £25,000
a year in the period it is claimed;
- the expenditure cannot have been
met by a third party;
- the expenditure cannot have been
met in whole or in part by a notified State Aid, such
as a Government grant. While none of the spending on
that project can qualify for the R&D tax credit,
the balance of the project cost funded by the company
will qualify for the normal 100% deduction for revenue
expenditure;
- the payable R&D tax credit
is limited to the amount of the company’s total Class
1 PAYE and NIC payments of the accounting period;
- tax credits can be claimed on qualifying
R&D expenditure made on or after 1 April 2000.
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Q:
How might the SME R&D tax credit benefit your company?
Q:
How does the R&D tax credit for small and medium-sized companies
work?
Claims for
the R&D tax credit (including the payable R&D tax credit)
would be made by an eligible company in the company’s tax return.
- The enhanced
R&D tax relief is 50% of qualifying R&D expenditure,
that is, relief will be given on qualifying expenditure at 150%
of cost. Hence, for a company liable at the 20% rate of Corporation
Tax, it would provide a further saving to the company equal
to 10% of the cost of qualifying R&D, bringing total savings
to 30% of eligible R&D expenditure.
- Companies
not in taxable profit can surrender losses to the Exchequer
in return for a cash payment, termed the payable R&D tax
credit. Broadly, the amount that can be surrendered is the lower
of the 150% of qualifying R&D expenditure and the unrelieved
trading loss for the accounting period. The company will receive
a payment of 16% of the surrendered loss, representing £24 for
every £100 of qualifying R&D expenditure. However, the payment
is limited to the gross amounts PAYE and Class 1 NIC paid by
the companies for the accounting period of the claim.
Q: How
will a company know what counts as R&D?
DTI has published
Guidelines on the meaning of R&D for tax purposes. They have
been given statutory force. The Guidelines support the introduction
of the R&D tax credit (and also clarify the meaning of R&D
for Research and Development allowances, which provides for 100%
relief on capital expenditure relating to R&D).
For those
interested in the relevant legislation, the new definition of
research and development (R&D) for tax purposes is found in
Section 837A Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988, introduced
by Schedule 19 to the Finance Act 2000. It replaces the existing
definition of "scientific research" in section 139(1)(a) CAA 1990
for most purposes. In practice, the new definition does not change
the range of activities that have qualified as scientific research.

Q:
What is an SME?
An SME
is defined in accordance with EC State Aid rules.
Broadly speaking,
a company will be a SME if it, together with any company it controls
by holding 25% or more of the capital or voting rights:
- has fewer
than 250 employees, and
- has an
annual turnover not exceeding Euro 40 million (about £25 million),
or
- has an
annual balance sheet total not exceeding Euro 27 million (about
£17 million).
A company
will not be a SME if 25% or more of the capital or voting rights
in the company are owned by enterprises that are themselves not
SMEs. This rule does not apply to enterprises which are public
investment corporations, venture capital companies or institutional
investors that do not exercise control over the company either
individually or jointly with others.
A company
which is an SME will cease to be one only if it fails to meet
the qualifying conditions over two consecutive years. Similarly,
a company that is not an SME will become one only if it satisfies
the criteria for SMEs over two consecutive years.
Q: How
will an eligible (SME) company claim the R&D tax credit?
- By completing
its self assessment return in the usual way and claiming that
amount which qualifies as R&D for the purpose of the tax
credit (which will be its direct R&D labour costs, plus
the cost of consumables that R&D personnel have used, and
eligible costs of subcontracted R&D).
Q: Will
a minimum level of R&D expenditure be required in order to
qualify?
- Yes. R&D
tax relief can only be claimed if a company's qualifying expenditure
for an accounting period is not less than the minimum threshold
of £25,000 a year. The threshold is increased or decreased proportionally
if the accounting period is more or less than 12 months. The
relief is given on the costs of staff directly involved in carrying
out the R&D, the costs of consumable stores used in the
R&D effort, and certain costs where R&D is sub-contracted
to another person.
Q: Why
only companies?
- Almost
all significant R&D activity carried out by small and medium-sized
businesses is undertaken by companies. Extending R&D tax
credits to unincorporated businesses would make the scheme too
complex or unfair in its application.
Q: What
about SMEs which are incurring R&D expenditure but which are
not in taxable profit?
- A cash
payment will be made to SMEs not in taxable profit. They must
claim the payment in their tax return. The amount that could
be surrendered would be the lower of the 150% of qualifying
R&D expenditure and the unrelieved trading loss for the
accounting period and be within a cap of NIC and PAYE contributions.
The amount payable represents 16% of the surrendered losses,
which is equivalent to 24% of the cost of the R&D.

Q:
What if the company is not yet trading?
- Companies
that are incurring R&D expenditure, but have not yet started
to trade, will be able to benefit from the new relief. The R&D
spending together with the additional deduction from the R&D
tax relief are treated as if they were a trading loss. This
means they can be set against other profits, surrendered as
group relief, or cashed in to the Exchequer. Again, the claim
must be made in the company's tax return.
Q: When
did the new R&D tax measures take effect?
- The new
definition of R&D applies to the year of assessment 2000/01
onwards for income tax and for accounting periods ending on
or after 1 April 2000 for corporation tax.
- R&D
tax credits can be claimed on qualifying R&D expenditure
made on or after 1 April 2000.
Q: How
will the new definition and Guidelines on R&D and the R&D
tax credit affect Scientific Research Associations?
- The new
definition does not apply to Scientific Research Associations
(section 508 ICTA 1988 continues to apply to them), nor to payments
to scientific research associations and universities, colleges,
research institutes and similar institutions. These attracted
tax relief under sections 136(a) and (b) Capital Allowances
Act 1990. The rules have now been moved to a new section 82B
in Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988.
- Commercial
subsidiaries of SRAs could benefit from the R&D tax credit
provided they will own the fruits of the R&D they carry
on and subject to the nature of the work they are undertaking.
They will need to satisfy the same size and ownership considerations
applicable to all SMEs.
Q: How
will an R&D tax credit impact on Research and Development
Allowances?
- On 1 April
2000, Scientific Research Allowances were renamed Research and
Development Allowances. The introduction of an R&D tax credit
has not resulted in changes to the existing treatment of qualifying
capital expenditure.. R&D allowances are given for capital
expenditure on R&D assets and are available to all businesses
- incorporated or unincorporated both large and small. R&D
tax credits are an additional tax benefit given on qualifying
revenue spending on R&D by SME companies.
Q: Why
do we need an R&D tax credit for SMEs?
- DTI, HMT
and Inland Revenue concluded that there is a case for encouraging
small firms to undertake or increase R&D. Many of the most
innovative ideas are to be found in small firms, but resource
constraints can be a major disincentive to them making what
is often a long-term investment in the necessary R&D. A
tax credit for R&D is a way of providing help to a large
number of companies and helps to level the playing field with
other major countries who provide similar arrangements (e.g.
US).
Q: Why
do we think we need a payable tax credit?
- Many small
companies, in particular early stage technology-based firms,
will be making losses, sometimes over many years - partly due
to the need to invest in R&D. The result for such companies
will be that they are "tax-exhausted". That is to
say, they will not have taxable profits and will therefore not
be paying corporation tax. An R&D tax credit based on the
premise that increased tax relief for eligible R&D expenditure
could be offset against profits and thus reduce corporation
tax, would be of no benefit to companies with no taxable profits.
Allowing cash payment of the tax credit to such companies should
encourage them to invest in R&D, allow them to be treated
equitably and help sustain their R&D during their early
and sometimes difficult years.

Q:
Will an R&D tax credit be available for a company's expenditure
against part publicly funded projects?
- Not if
the public funding constitutes a notified State
Aid. A condition of approval for the UK’s R&D tax credit,
under EC State Aid rules, is that individual projects that have
been in receipt of a notified state aid cannot be included
in a company's R&D expenditure for the purposes of the SME
R&D tax credit. This means that R&D projects in certain
programmes (such as LINK and some Smart projects) are not eligible
for the SME R&D tax credit. For example, a Smart Development
Project award recipient cannot apply the 150% deduction in respect
of any R&D spending relating to the project for which the
award was given (i.e. the grant or its own expenditure). However,
the usual 100% deduction can be made for the balance of the
company's spending on the project benefiting from the Smart
award. Qualifying spending on another separate R&D project
can benefit from R&D tax credits as long it has not benefited
from a notified State Aid. On the other hand, a recipient of
a Smart Feasibility Study award can apply the 150% deduction
on the project costs which the company meets from its own resources.
Smart recipients and other similarly affected companies therefore
need to enquire from the scheme administrators whether the award
they receive is a notified or a "de minimis" state
aid. They also need to define carefully the boundaries of their
projects for accounting purposes so that where appropriate they
may still benefit from the SME R&D tax credit.
Q: What
happens if the Inland Revenue opens an enquiry into a claim for
the R&D tax credits?
The Inland
Revenue may enquire into the facts and circumstances of a claim
to R&D tax credits to confirm that the claim meets the conditions
of the scheme. The inspector handling the enquiry will seek to
resolve the enquiry by an agreement. If the company and the inspector
cannot reach agreement about the claim, the General or Special
Commissioners will consider the facts. The tax Commissioners are
an independent body with powers to hear tax appeals.
Q: How
do I find out more?
The Inland
Revenue leads on tax issues, and there is further information
available at their website.
If you are unable to find an answer to your query, David Harris
is the lead Inland Revenue official and can be contacted by e-mail
at david.harris@ir.gsi.gov.uk
or by phone on 020 7438 6761. If you have a business-related query,
the DTI contact on the R&D SME tax credit is Nicholas Munn,
and can be contacted by e-mail at nick.munn@dti.gsi.gov.uk
or by phone on 020 7215 6580.
January 2002

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