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Assess
the benefits
Financial
aspects associated with the DASS
By
Wg-Cmdr David Lindsay
ADF members may receive a generous and wide range of benefits under
the Defence Assisted Study Scheme (DASS) and the Career Transition
Assistance Scheme (CTAS).
Primarily,
the DASS supports members seeking to undertake educational and training
courses related to their work or related to a likely change in their
ADF career. It also supports vocational courses related to a members
intended career following discharge.
The
CTAS is aimed solely at assisting members to make the transition
to civilian employment following discharge. The vast majority of
ADF members will, at some stage in their careers, access benefits
under one or both of the schemes. There are two financial aspects
to be aware of:
- the
allowable tax deductions for any costs that are not paid or reimbursed
by Defence; and
- the
effect of having received some financial support from Defence
on entitlements and liabilities that are based on gross income.
These
include entitlements to Government-funded benefits administered
by Centrelink, and child support payments.
Obviously, members should be aware of the allowable tax deductions
to claim all tax deductions to which they are entitled.
Further,
members should be aware of some (possibly) hidden or unanticipated
financial implications associated with the benefits-so they can
budget and plan accordingly.
Some
of the benefits available under the DASS and the CTAS are not subject
to Fringe Benefits Tax (FBT). However, other benefits are subject
to FBT and are reportable on member annual payment summaries. The
fringe benefits reportable amount is not included in the calculation
of tax payable by a member, but it may be used in the calculation
of various surcharges and income tests for certain government benefits
such as:
- Medicare
levy surcharge;
- deduction
for personal superannuation contributions;
- rebate
for personal superannuation contributions;
- rebate
for contributions to spouses superannuation;
- superannuation
contributions and termination payments surcharge;
- repayments
under the Higher Education Contribution Scheme (HECS) or the Post-graduate
Education Loan Scheme (PELS);
- child
support obligations; and
- entitlement
to certain income-tested government benefits.
The
first table below details the benefits that may be gained through
DASS, whether out-of-pocket expenses are allowable tax deductions,
and whether benefits received are FBT-reportable. Remember that
all FBT-reportable benefits will appear on annual payment summaries
and may have flow-on effects depending on each members circumstances.
Note
that reimbursement rates for courses sponsored under the DASS may
vary.
The
information in the table is based on members being reimbursed 75
per cent of approved costs which typically include student administration
fees, purchase of compulsory text books required for the course,
and either a HECS cost or tuition fees.
Note
also that reimbursement rates for approved studies are capped depending
on the type of course.
The
second table details the various benefits that may be gained through
the CTAS, whether out-of-pocket expenses are allowable tax deductions,
and whether benefits received are FBT-reportable.
Examples:
The following examples demonstrate the potential impact of an FBT-reportable
benefit on the gross income of a serving member.
Example
1:
This example relates to a member approved to study under DASS.
The
member pays HECS of $750 and student administrative fees of $250,
totalling $1000.
After
completing the approved study, the member is reimbursed 75 per cent
of the $1000 HECS reimbursed $563, student administration
fees reimbursed $187, totalling $750.
Had
the member not been reimbursed the $187, the member could have claimed
it as a tax deduction. However, because Defence reimbursed the member,
effectively Defence can claim the $187 as a tax deduction (For those
familiar with tax rules, this is the otherwise deductible
rule). Therefore, the taxable value of the benefit is $750 minus
$187, ie $563.
FBT
is payable (by Defence) on the $563 at the FBT rate of 48.5 per
cent (0.485).
The
grossed up taxable value is $563 x 1/(1 - FBT rate) that is $563
x 1/(1 - 0.485) . This equals $1093.
The
FBT payable by Defence is $1093 x 0.485, ie $530.
The
members reportable fringe benefits amount will include the
FBT ($530) plus the taxable value of the benefit ($563). This might
affect child support payments or Centrelink-paid benefits (refer
to the list of surcharges and income tests for certain government
benefits). However, the member will not be required to pay additional
tax.
Example
2:
This example relates to a member approved to undertake Career Transition
Training costing $3000 and associated travel costing $1000. The
taxable value of the benefit is $4000.
FBT
is payable (by Defence) on the $4000 at the FBT rate of 48.5 per
cent (0.485).
The
grossed up taxable value is $4000 x 1/(1 - FBT rate), that is $4000
x 1/(1 - 0.485) . This equals $7767. The FBT payable by Defence
is $7767 x 0.485, ie $3767. The members reportable fringe
benefits amount will be the FBT ($3767) plus the total benefit paid
($4000).
This
might affect child support payments or Centrelink-paid benefits
(refer to the list of surcharges and income tests for certain government
benefits). However, the member will not be required to pay additional
tax.
These
examples demonstrate the need for members to seek assistance from
their accountant and advice from Centrelink to identify the implications
of receiving benefits under the DASS or the CTAS.
| Course
type |
Financial
benefit |
FBT
Reportable |
Allowable
tax deduction? |
DASS-sponsored
HECS-based course
(DASS level 1 or 2relevant to ADF career or current job) |
Student
administration fees |
No |
Members
are reimbursed 75%*. Any amount not reimbursed is tax deductible |
| Text
books (paid for DASS level 1 course only) |
No |
Members
are reimbursed 75%* of costs, up to $250, for texts. Any amount
nor reimbursed is tax deductible. |
| HECS |
Yes |
Not
tax deductible. HECS is not an allowable deduction. Members
are reimbursed 75%* of HECS. |
DASS-sponsored
fees-only course
(DASS level 1 or 2relevant to ADF career or current job) |
Student
administration fees |
No |
Members
are reimbursed 75%*. Any amount not reimbursed is tax deductible |
| Text
books (paid for DASS level 1 course only) |
No |
Members
are reimbursed 75%* of costs, up to $250, for texts. Any amount
not reimbursed is tax deductible. |
| HECS |
Yes |
Not
tax deductible. HECS is not an allowable deduction. Members
are reimbursed *75% of HECS. |
DASS-sponsored
fees-only course financed by member using PELS
(DASS level 1 or 2relevant to ADF career or current job) |
Student
administration fees |
No |
Members
are reimbursed 75%*. Any amount not reimbursed is tax deductible. |
| Text
books (paid for DASS level 1 course only) |
No |
Members
are reimbursed 75%* of costs, up to $250, for texts. Any amount
not reimbursed is tax deductible. |
| PELS
payment or debt |
Yes |
Members
are reimbursed 75%* of the PELS payment or liability. Not tax
deductible. PELS is not an allowable deduction. |
DASS
short vocational course for resettlement
(not required for ADF job) |
Course
fees |
Yes |
No.
Not deductible if course of study is to enable member to change
jobs or occupation. |
| DASS
short vocational course related to, but not mandatory for current
job |
Course
fees |
Yes |
Members
are reimbursed *75%. Any amount not reimbursed is tax deductible. |
| (* The percentage reimbursed is subject to change.
Members currently sponsored are unaffected by any change.) |
| CTAS
benefit |
FBT-reportable |
Allowable
tax
deduction |
| Assistance
to develop resume |
No |
No
(Defence pays) |
| Career
Transition Training (CTT) (formal vocational courses) |
Yes.
Unless directly related to the members current income
earning activity |
No
(Defence pays) |
| Travel/accommodation
for CTT |
Yes |
No
(Defence pays) |
| Career
transition management counselling (eg: job search techniques,
developing skills for interview, job matching) |
No |
No
(Defence pays) |
| Part-day
travel allowance for on-job-experience/CTT |
No,
but shown on payment summary as an allowance and PAYG amount
withheld |
No |
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