One of the provisions that was not in the initial provisional notifications is article 4 on dual resident entities. A decision was made by the government to adopt this provision. It was generally in line with the policy and with a number of prior tax treaties that had been negotiated by Canada. Adopting such provision will allow us to have a greater consistency across our tax treaties for resolving cases of dual resident entities involving non-individuals.
There was also a decision in article 5 effectively to allow countries that currently have committed to providing for an exemption system to change that to a credit system to ensure that taxpayers are not inappropriately getting double tax or a lower rate of tax. It won't have an impact specifically on Canada's elimination of double taxation, because we currently, in our treaty policy and in all of our tax treaties, already provide for foreign tax credit, but it was viewed that allowing other countries to ensure such similar protection was desirable.
Article 8 was another provision that was proposed to be included. Article 8 applies to dividend transfer transactions. The way the tax treaty works is that it has two withholding rates. Our domestic rate would be 25%. Treaties generally reduce that rate to 15% or 5% if the particular corporation to which the dividend is paid has a certain threshold of holdings or control in the dividend-paying company.
The provision in article 8 provides that to obtain the lower rate, they must have exceeded the threshold of ownership or control for a minimum of 365 days prior to the payment of the dividend. This is to avoid artificial transactions in which they increase their ownership just prior to their dividend paying date. It was viewed as something that would be beneficial and that the CRA would be able to administer. It is something that we propose to include in the updated notifications.
Similarly, there is article 9, which deals with capital gains from alienation of shares or interests of entities that derive their value primarily from real property. Generally speaking, under a tax treaty, the source country in which the company that derives its value from real property exists would retain its right, on a disposition of those shares or other interests, to tax that disposition to the extent that the value of the shares principally derive their value from real property.
There were some abusive transactions in which companies, just prior to the distribution of those shares, put a lot of cash into the company such that the value of the real property fell below the threshold, or they sold a property prior to that specifically to avoid the source country having the right to tax. The treaty provision now would ensure that if that threshold were crossed at any time in the 365 days preceding the disposition, the source country would have the right to tax that provision. Including that in Canada's tax treaties was seen to be desirable.