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Title: Presentation to President


1
Presentation to Presidents Advisory Panel on
Federal Tax Reform
  • International Provisions of the Internal Revenue
    CodeMarch 31, 2005

Willard Taylor
2
Outward and Inward Investment
  • In teaching international tax, it is common to
    deal separately with outward and inward
    investment that is, investment from and
    investment into the US
  • Export income (e.g., the DISC, FSC, ETI and
    domestic production rules) is generally thought
    of as a third category
  • Most of the debate and complaints relate to
    outward investment

3
Whats different?
  • Witnesses on other subjects have spoken about the
    complexity and other problems of the Code
  • Whats different in the case of outward
    investment from the US?

4
Whats different? contd
  • First, the growth of international trade and
    investment have made the US tax rules much more
    important than when they took shape in 1962
  • A creditor nation and a modest exporter of
    capital in 1962, the US is now a large capital
    exporter and importer and also the worlds
    largest debtor nation

5
Whats different? contd
  • Second, the different rhetoric and values that
    drive the debate on the taxation of foreign
    income
  • Not about fairness to US individuals and domestic
    economic efficiency, but
  • rightly or wrongly, framed as a choice between
    capital export and capital import neutrality
    (and sometimes national neutrality)
  • Essentially, which country (residence or
    source) has the first claim to tax
  • Foreign taxes treated as an operating expense,
    not a tax credit

6
Whats different? contd
  • Third, the probable inability to achieve the goal
    of any system for taxing foreign income without
    some international con-sensus on the choice and
    on rates of tax, at least among major trading
    partners

7
Whats different? contd
  • The capital export/import neutrality debate
  • Invokes issues of national competitiveness and
    world economic welfare
  • There are other systems in the world for taxing
    foreign income ? such as a territorial (or
    exemption) system
  • In a pure territorial or exemption system,
    foreign income of domestic taxpayers is simply
    not taxed and no foreign tax credit is allowed

8
Whats different? contd
  • But choosing a different system would not
  • solve the complexity and other problems discussed
    hereafter or
  • significantly change the terms of the debate

9
Where are we today?
  • General agreement that the inability to resolve
    competing arguments has resulted in a system for
    taxing the foreign income of US taxpayers that
    is
  • not effective or administrable
  • complex, easily avoided by the well advised and
    a trap for the poorly advised
  • schizophrenia in the tax system with rules
    that lack coherence and often work at cross
    purposes
  • absurd in its level of complexity
  • a jerry-rigged system, and/or
  • a cumbersome creation of stupefying complexity
  • In the words of practitioners and academics

10
Where are we today? contd
  • Remarkably, no consensus on the economic
    consequences of what we now have
  • Does it or does it not make US-owned businesses
    less competitive than foreign-owned businesses?
  • Hard to believe that the present complexity does
    not make US business less competitive than it
    could be in the absence of the complexity

11
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment
  • How did we get to where we are?
  • Started in 1954 with a system that, broadly
  • deferred taxing earnings of US-owned foreign
    subsidiaries until repatriated
  • allowed a foreign tax credit for foreign income
    taxes on foreign income, but not in excess of the
    US tax on that income
  • A progression, from 1962 through 2004, of ever
    more complicated limitations on
  • the deferral of tax, and
  • the foreign tax credit

12
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment contd
  • Because of a concern that the 1954 Code unfairly
    favored foreign investment by US persons over
    domestic investment,
  • The 1962 Act limited the deferral of US tax on
    un-repatriated earnings of foreign subsidiaries
  • These limitations were expanded in the 1975, 1976
    and 1986 Acts

13
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment contd
  • Because of a concern that the foreign tax credit
    permitted the use of foreign taxes on one class
    of income against US tax on another,
  • The 1962 Act created a separate foreign tax
    credit basket for passive interest income
    taxes on income in that basket could not be used
    against US tax on other income
  • More baskets were added in the 1975, 1976, 1984
    and 1986 Acts

14
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment contd
  • Since the foreign tax credit is limited to the US
    tax on foreign source taxable income, the foreign
    tax credit rules require an allocation of
    expenses
  • Including, with modifications in 2004, interest
    expense incurred by US corporations

15
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment Sources of complexity
  • What were the sources of complexity resulting
    from the limitation on deferral?
  • Income of foreign subsidiaries that was not
    eligible for deferral had to be put in categories
  • Foreign personal holding company income 1962
  • Foreign base company sales and services income
    1962
  • Income from insurance 1962, 1986 and 1988
  • Oil related income 1975
  • Shipping and aircraft income 1975
  • Sales of property that did not produce active
    income 1986
  • Income from commodities transactions 1986
  • Income from foreign currency transactions 1986
  • Income from a banking or similar business 1986

16
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment Sources of complexity contd
  • What were the sources of complexity resulting
    from the limitation on deferral?
  • Host of special rules for
  • Business rents and royalties
  • Income from sales or services outside of the
    foreign subsidiarys country of incorporation
  • In-country related party dividends, interest,
    rents and royalties
  • Income from notional principal contracts

17
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment Sources of complexity contd
  • What were the sources of complexity in the
    foreign tax credit changes?
  • Growth in separate baskets
  • Passive interest income 1962
  • Some dividend income 1984
  • Foreign oil related income 1975
  • All passive income 1986
  • High withholding tax interest 1986
  • Financial services income 1986
  • Shipping and aircraft income 1986
  • Dividends from certain non-controlled foreign
    corporations 1986

18
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment Sources of complexity contd
  • What were the sources of complexity in the
    foreign tax credit changes?
  • In the basket system
  • The need to identify taxes on specific types of
    income
  • To separately allocate expenses to that income
  • To do this for taxes paid and expenses incurred
    through tiers of entities
  • To relate these calculations to income
    eligible/not eligible for deferral

19
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment Other provisions
  • Focusing on the foreign tax credit and the
    anti-deferral rules should not diminish the
    importance of other legislative changes in the
    last 50-plus years rules for
  • International boycotts 1976
  • Cross-border mergers and acquisitions
    principally, 1976
  • Stapled entities 1984
  • Related party factoring income 1984
  • Passive foreign investment companies 1986
  • Functional currency and foreign exchange gain
    or loss 1986
  • Related party transfers of intangibles 1986
  • Dual consolidated losses 1986

20
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment Regulations, etc.
  • In evaluating what has happened since 1962, need
    also to grasp that
  • Many statutory changes have since enact-ment been
    further amended in some cases, reversing the
    original legislative solution
  • Many of the statutory changes were followed by
    pages and pages of explanatory IRS regulations
  • The IRS on its own has issued significant
    regulations affecting outward investment

21
Other developments the check-the-box regulations
  • One specific set of regulations deserves a
    comment -- the check-the-box regulations
  • Provided the ability, for 1997 and later years,
    to choose whether an entity would for tax
    purposes be a corporation, a branch or a
    partnership
  • A revolution for foreign operations of US
    taxpayers
  • Simplified the task of reporting foreign income,
    but
  • Allowed the use of hybrid branches to undercut
    the anti-deferral rules
  • An entity treated as a corporation for purposes
    of the foreign countrys tax law but not for US
    tax purposes

22
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
American investment Jobs Creation Act of 2004
  • What ultimately became the American Jobs Creation
    Act of 2004 had the articulated objectives of
    simplification and rolling back some of the
    anti-deferral rules
  • Some simplification but more than offset by the
    complexity of other newly-enacted rules
  • Did not even begin the process of addressing
    broad simplification or the development of
    coherent rules
  • Dropped the ball on
  • corporate expatriations
  • earnings stripping --- the deductibility of
    interest paid to related foreign persons

23
Inward Investment
24
Evolution of Code provisions on inward
investment
  • Rules on inward investment i.e., US
    invest-ment by foreign persons
  • Big change in US position since 1954 now a
    major importer of capital and the worlds largest
    debtor nation
  • Inward investment rules
  • Do not reflect the debate on capital
    import/export neutrality
  • Generally, lack a political constituency for
    reform
  • Have remained more constant than the outward
    investment rules, taking (again) the 1954 Code as
    a starting point

25
Evolution of Code provisions on inward
investment contd
  • In 1954, and for many years prior thereto, the
    rules for taxing inward investment consisted of
  • A flat 30 tax, collected by withholding at
    source, on US source dividends, interest,
    royalties and like income of a foreign person
    that did not otherwise carry on business in the
    US
  • Tax at the regular individual or corporate rate
    on the US business income of foreign persons
    that is, on income that was effectively
    connected with a US business

26
Evolution of Code provisions on inward
investment contd
  • There was (and is) the rule that requires taxable
    income from transactions between
    commonly-controlled corporations to reflect arms
    length dealings
  • Of great importance, because inward invest-ment
    typically is through foreign-owned US
    subsidiaries
  • Apart from the statutory earnings stripping
    rules, arms length pricing is the main rule that
    protects the US tax base from mispricing between
    US subsidiaries and their foreign affiliates
  • Section 482 of the Code

27
Inward investment What are the problems?
contd
  • What are the problems in the US taxation of
    inward investment?
  • Complexity although possibly not to the same
    extent as for outward investment
  • Specific rules that are neither administrable
    nor, as a practical matter, are in fact
    administered
  • Other rules that are out of date e.g., they
    turn on physical presence in the US and the
    source of income

28
Conclusions
29
Are there solutions?
  • What are the issues with the way the Code and
    regulations have evolved?
  • General agreement that the subpart F and foreign
    tax credit rules are stupefying in their
    complexity and not administrable the same could
    be said about some of the inward investment rules
  • No easy solution
  • Changing to a territorial or exemption system
    would neither simplify nor fundamentally change
    the terms of the debate
  • Nor are all of the 1962-2004 changes, however
    complex, bad and it would therefore be a
    mistake to simply go back to the 1954 Code

30
Are there solutions? contd
  • Like the system we now have, a territorial (or
    exemption) system would have to
  • Classify income as foreign or domestic
  • Distinguish between passive and active business
    income
  • Address how passive (or non-exempt) income will
    be treated (e.g., no deferral and a foreign tax
    credit?)
  • Distinguish between partially and wholly-US owned
    foreign corporations
  • Allocate expenses between foreign and domestic,
    and passive and active business, income
  • Enforce arms length pricing among affiliates

31
Are there solutions? contd
  • A territorial system would also have to
  • Address foreign branches of US corporations
  • Possibly distinguish between good and bad
    foreign tax systems (and systems that are
    someplace in between)
  • Deal with the transition from the existing to the
    new system (e.g., what happens to untaxed
    retained earnings?)

32
Are there solutions? contd
  • Simplification is not possible without
  • In the case of outward investment, a serious
    compromise between proponents of capital export
    and capital import neutrality
  • In the case of inward and outward investment, a
    serious intent to simplify for that reason alone
  • Need also to consider tax treaties and the
    desirability of international consensus

33
Appendix 1
  • Evolution of Code provisions on outward
    investment

34
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment
  • How did we get to where we are?
  • Historically, the US has
  • been a foreign tax credit country,
  • that deferred taxing foreign earnings of foreign
    subsidiaries until repatriated, and
  • classified corporations as foreign or not on the
    basis of where incorporated, not where managed or
    controlled
  • Not the only model in the world, but neither was
    the US model uncommon at the time

35
1954 Code
  • The 1954 Code rules on outward investment allowed
    a foreign tax credit for direct and indirect
    foreign income taxes
  • Limited to the US tax on foreign source income,
    calculated on a country-by-country basis
  • Generally, a credit for foreign taxes paid by a
    foreign corporation on earnings distributed to a
    10 or greater US corporate shareholder

36
1954 Code contd
  • Earnings of US-owned foreign corporations were
    not taxed until repatriated
  • Further, certain branches of US corporations
    could elect to be treated as foreign corporations
  • There was (and is) a general rule that taxable
    income from transactions between commonly
    controlled corporations, whether US or foreign,
    must reflect arms length terms
  • Other than passive income of foreign personal
    holding companies
  • In Section 482 of the Code

37
1954 Code contd
  • Special provisions were essentially limited to
    Western Hemisphere Trade, China Trade Act and
    possessions corporations
  • In effect, subsidies for operations in specific
    geographic areas
  • The basic rules had been unchanged for many years
  • In origin, the rules did not respond to any
    stated theoretical view i.e., were not in
    response to any capital export/import neutrality
    debate

38
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment the 1962 Act
  • The Kennedy Administration thought that these
    rules unfairly favored foreign over US investment
  • Sought in 1962 to end deferral for all of the
    income of US-owned foreign corporations
  • Not pure capital export neutrality because of
    exceptions would have retained deferral for
    earnings from less developed countries and also
    in part for income of export trade corporations

39
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment the 1962 Act contd
  • Got instead an end to deferral for so-called
    subpart F income with back-up rules which
    treated
  • untaxed earnings of a controlled foreign
    corporation as repatriated if used to make
    investments in United States property, and
  • gain from the sale of stock of a controlled
    foreign corporation as a dividend to the extent
    attributable to retained earnings

40
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment the 1962 Act contd
  • Thus, a combination of capital export and capital
    import neutrality
  • Set the framework for the debate in the next
    50-plus years about which system was the better
    one
  • Also put the Code distinctly on the path to
    complexity

41
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment the 1962 Act contd
  • What were the sources of complexity resulting
    from the limitation on deferral?
  • Income of foreign subsidiaries that was not
    eligible for deferral had to be put in categories
  • Foreign personal holding company income
  • Foreign base company sales and services income
  • Income from insurance
  • Oil related income
  • Shipping and aircraft income
  • A host of special rules for
  • business rents and royalties
  • income from sales or services outside of the
    foreign subsidiarys country of incorporation
  • income from a banking, financing or similar
    business

42
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment the 1962 Act contd
  • The 1962 Act also introduced a separate foreign
    tax credit basket for foreign taxes on passive
    interest income
  • Idea was that the foreign tax credit limitation
    which limits the credit to the US tax on foreign
    source taxable income ought to be applied
    separately to each basket of income
  • so that taxes on one basket of income could not
    be used to offset US tax on another basket of
    income
  • or, colloquially, no cross-crediting

43
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment the 1986 Act
  • What were the sources of complexity in the
    1975-1986 tax legislation?
  • In the basket system,
  • the need to identify taxes on specific types of
    income
  • to separately allocate expenses to that income
  • to do this for taxes paid and expenses incurred
    through tiers of entities
  • to relate these calculations to income
    eligible/not eligible for deferral

44
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment the 1986 Act contd
  • What were the sources of complexity in the
    1975-1986 tax legislation?
  • The further expansion of the categories of
    subpart F income to include, e.g.,
  • A much broader class of insurance income
  • Banking, financing and similar income
  • Foreign oil related income
  • Commodities income
  • Shipping income
  • Foreign exchange gain

45
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment the 1975 Act
  • In 1975, special foreign tax credit rules were
    enacted for foreign oil and gas income
    ultimately
  • Credits for taxes on foreign oil and gas
    exploration income were limited to the US tax
    rate
  • Credits for taxes on foreign oil related income
    were subject to a limitation that was comparable
    in intent but different
  • Recapture if foreign oil and gas extraction
    losses offset domestic income
  • Subpart F income expanded in 1975 to include
  • foreign base company oil related income
  • foreign base company shipping (including
    aircraft) income

46
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment the 1976 Act
  • The 1976 Act further tightened up what had been
    started in 1962 in 1976
  • No more deferral for earnings from less developed
    countries
  • Recapture of foreign losses used to offset
    domestic income
  • Capital gains rate differential taken into
    account in the foreign tax credit limitation
  • Repeal of the per country calculation of the
    limitation on foreign tax credit henceforth, a
    worldwide calculation

47
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment the 1984 Act
  • The 1984 Act added
  • A new foreign tax credit basket for certain
    dividend income
  • A rule to prevent US source income from becoming
    foreign source when it was received by a US-owned
    foreign corporation and paid out to (or included
    in income by) US persons

48
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment the 1986 Act
  • To the separate baskets for interest, dividend
    and foreign oil and gas income, the 1986 Act
    added 4 new baskets, in addition to an expanded
    passive income basket
  • High withholding tax interest, financial services
    income, shipping income and dividends from
    non-controlled Section 902 corporations
  • In many cases with sub-baskets e.g., export
    financing income was excluded from high
    withholding tax interest and high-taxed income
    from passive income
  • The baskets were applied on a look-through basis
    to dividends, interest and other income from
    foreign subsidiaries

49
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment the 1986 Act contd
  • The 1986 Act also rewrote the rules for
    determining foreign source taxable income, and
    thus the allowable foreign tax credit
  • Required an allocation of domestically-incurred
    interest expense to determine foreign source
    taxable income
  • Dramatically affected the foreign tax credit
    limitation
  • The allocation reduced foreign source income by
    an expense that was not deductible in the foreign
    country
  • Provided statutory rules (replacing 1977
    regulations) for the apportionment of R D
    expenses

50
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment 1986 Act contd
  • 1986 Act expanded Subpart F to include income
    from
  • insurance outside of the foreign corporations
    country of incorporation
  • sales of property that did not produce active
    income
  • commodities transactions
  • foreign currency transactions
  • a banking or similar business
  • shipping, even though reinvested
  • In 1988, the insurance rules were amended again
    to apply subpart F to related party insurance
    income of a foreign insurance company owned to
    the extent of 25 or more by US shareholders

51
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment Regulations
  • In evaluating what happened between 1962 and
    1986, need to grasp that
  • Many of the statutory changes were followed by
    pages and pages of explanatory IRS regulations
  • Most of the statutory changes have since
    enactment been further amended (with exceptions,
    special rules and complex definitions), in some
    cases on a regular basis
  • A number of the statutory changes (e.g., the
    treatment for subpart F purposes of income from
    the conduct of a banking or similar business)
    reversed, then reversed again, the original
    legislative solution

52
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment Regulations contd
  • Apart from the statutory changes, the IRS
    independently issued extensive regulations on a
    number of major international subjects,
    including, e.g.,
  • In 1991, the definition of a creditable foreign
    income tax
  • The standards for arms length pricing in the
    90s, the IRS embarked on a major and on-going
    effort to cover specific situations, such as
    transfers of tangible and intangible property

53
Other developments the check-the-box regulations
  • For 1997 and later years, the classification of
    an entity as a corporation, a branch or a
    partnership became (under the check-the-box
    regulations) largely elective
  • The check-the-box regulations
  • Were a simplification for domestic entities, but
    a revolution for foreign operations of US
    taxpayers
  • The ability to elect to treat foreign entities as
    branches or as partnerships has vastly simplified
    the task of reporting foreign income, but
  • IRS had not thought through the implications of
    the check-the-box regulations on foreign
    operations

54
Other developments the check-the-box
regulations contd
  • Elective classification permits
  • the use of hybrid branches to eliminate
    foreign tax
  • and thus replicate the low-taxed foreign income
    that subpart F was directed at
  • The IRS sought to address hybrid entities in
    the so-called hybrid branch payment rules, but
    Congress objected and these have not been adopted
  • An entity treated as a corporation for purposes
    of the foreign countrys tax law but not for US
    tax purposes

55
Other developments the check-the-box
regulations contd
  • The check-the-box regulations also permit the
    separation of foreign taxes from the underlying
    foreign income, either through
  • partnership allocations (which has been
    addressed) and
  • the use of reverse hybrid entities
  • An entity treated as a corporation for US tax
    purposes but as transparent for purposes of the
    foreign countrys tax law

56
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment contd
  • To focus on the foreign tax credit and subpart F
    is not to diminish the importance of other
    changes in the last 50-plus years
  • The enactment in 1976 of the international
    boycott rules
  • Apart from reporting, disallow credits and end
    deferral and other benefits for income from
    boycott operations
  • The repeated changes, beginning largely in 1976,
    to the rules in Section 367
  • These govern the extent to which reorganizations
    and exchanges that are tax-free if purely
    domestic will be tax-free if a foreign
    corporation is involved
  • The 1984 enactment of Section 269B, relating to
    foreign corporations whose ownership is stapled
    to the ownership of a US corporation

57
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment contd
  • The 1984 rules that treat income from related
    party factoring as interest received from a
    related party for subpart F and specified other
    purposes
  • The enactment in 1986 of the passive foreign
    investment company rules
  • impose penalty taxes on US shareholders of
    broadly-defined passive foreign investment
    companies
  • Co-existed until 2004 with foreign personal
    holding company and foreign investment company
    rules

58
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
investment contd
  • The 1986 enactment of rules that establish a
    functional currency and thus foreign exchange
    gain or loss for non-functional currency
    transactions
  • The 1986 amendment which specified that the
    income from a related-party transfer of an
    intangible had to be commensurate with the
    income from the intangible
  • The 1986 prohibition on the use of a dual
    consolidated loss of a dual resident
    corporation to reduce the income of other
    members of a US consolidated group

59
Evolution of Code provisions on
outwardinvestment American Jobs Creation Act
of 2004
  • What ultimately became the American Jobs Creation
    Act of 2004 had the articulated objective of
    reforming subpart F and foreign tax credit
    rules essentially targeting what had happened
    in 1986 and rolling back some capital export
    neutrality rules
  • There was some simplification
  • E.g., the elimination of some baskets, of the
    foreign personal holding company and foreign
    investment company rules
  • But that simplification was more than offset by
    the complexity of other newly-enacted rules, such
    as the new elective interest allocation rules

60
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
invest-ment American Jobs Creation Act of 2004
contd
  • The Act lacked balance and perspective did not
    comprehensively address, or even begin the
    process of addressing, broad simplification or
    the development of coherent rules
  • The provisions of the Act
  • were mostly borrowed from industry-inspired wish
    lists, and
  • what was ultimately included or not, and its
    effective dates, responded to revenue projections
    and the lobbies influence

61
Evolution of Code provisions on outward
invest-ment American Jobs Creation Act of 2004
contd
  • Dropped the ball on
  • the treatment of corporate inversions, and
  • whether the earnings stripping rules needed
    revisions in order to achieve a different balance
    between the treatment of foreign and US-owned US
    corporations

62
Appendix 2
  • Inward Investment

63
Evolution of Code provisions on inward
investment
  • Rules on inward investment i.e., US
    investment by foreign persons
  • Do not involve the capital export/import
    neutrality debate
  • Do not, with exceptions, have a political
    constituency for reform
  • Have remained more constant than the inward
    investment rules, taking (again) the 1954 Code as
    a starting point

64
Evolution of Code provisions on inward
investment contd
  • In 1954, and for many years prior thereto, the
    rules for taxing inward investment consisted of
  • A flat 30 tax, collected by withholding at
    source, on US source dividends, interest,
    royalties and like income of a foreign person
    that did not otherwise carry on business in the
    US
  • Tax at the regular individual or corporate rate
    on the US business income of foreign persons
    that is, on income that was effectively
    connected with a US business

65
Evolution of Code provisions on inward
investment contd
  • There was (and is) the rule that requires taxable
    income from transactions between
    commonly-controlled corporations to reflect arms
    length dealings
  • Of great importance, because inward investment
    typically is through foreign-owned US
    subsidiaries
  • Apart from the statutory earnings stripping
    rules, arms length pricing is the main rule that
    protects the US tax base from mispricing between
    US subsidiaries and their foreign affiliates
  • Section 482 of the Code

66
Evolution of Code provisions on inward
investment contd
  • The principal changes in the treatment of
    inward investment since 1954 have been
  • The 1966 enactment of rules which eliminated
    uncertainties about the tax consequences of, and
    thus encouraged, investment in US stocks,
    securities and commodities
  • The 1980 imposition of tax at regular rates on
    gain from a sale of an interest in US real estate
  • including an interest in a US corporation
    predominantly invested in such assets the
    so-called FIRPTA tax

67
Evolution of Code provisions on inward
investment contd
  • The imposition in 1984 of withholding by a
    purchaser of US real property as a means of
    collecting the FIRPTA tax
  • The 1984 repeal of the 30 withholding tax on
    portfolio interest paid to unrelated foreign
    investors,
  • reflects the importance of permitting US
    borrowers to access foreign capital
  • The 1984 enactment of a statutory rule for
    determining when a non-citizen is a US resident
    and therefore subject to full US tax

68
Evolution of Code provisions on inward
investment contd
  • The 1986 imposition of withholding tax on a
    foreign partners share of partnership income
    attributable to a US business
  • The 1986 enactment of source rules for
    international communications and space and ocean
    activity income
  • The 1987 enactment of a statutorily mandated
    minimum rate of investment return for foreign
    insurance companies doing business in the US

69
Evolution of Code provisions on inward
investment contd
  • The 1986 enactment of branch taxes
  • Repatriation of profits of a US branch treated
    substantially as a dividend from a US subsidiary
  • Interest paid by a branch treated substantially
    as a payment of interest by a US subsidiary

70
Evolution of Code provisions on inward
investment contd
  • The 1986 revision to the rules for taxing
    transportation income of foreign shipping and
    airline companies
  • Limited the historical equivalent exemption
    rule to publicly traded companies or companies
    locally owned
  • Imposed a 4 excise tax on the gross US source
    transportation income of a company not eligible
    for the exemption to the extent the income is not
    taxable as income from a US business

71
Evolution of Code provisions on inward
investment contd
  • The 1989 enactment, and 1993 extension to
    guaranteed debt, of the earnings stripping
    rules
  • Disallow a current deduction for interest paid
    to, or on debt guaranteed by, a related foreign
    person that would otherwise reduce taxable income
    by more than 50
  • The 1993 enactment of anti-conduit rules
    directed at avoidance of US withholding tax
    through the use of tax treaty provisions

72
Evolution of Code provisions on inward
investment contd
  • The 1996 enactment of rules on the expatriation
    of individual taxpayers
  • The 1997 enactment to deal with withholding on
    interest, dividend and like payments to hybrid
    entities

73
Inward investment What are the problems?
contd
  • What are the problems in the US taxation of
    inward investment?
  • Complexity -- although possibly not to the same
    extent as for outward investment
  • As in the case of outward investment, many of the
    statutory amendments have been followed by pages
    and pages of IRS regulations
  • Other complex regulations have been initiated
    without legislative prompting -- e.g., those
    dealing with
  • withholding at source on interest and dividends,
    and
  • with the taxation of US branches of foreign banks

74
Inward investment What are the problems?
contd
  • What are the problems?
  • Many of the rules are neither administrable nor,
    as a practical matter, are in fact administered
  • E.g., the PFIC or FIRPTA rules
  • The rules for determining the taxability of
    increasingly important items of income are out of
    date they turn on physical presence and
    source
  • For example, income from e-commerce and in some
    cases from derivatives
  • Residence-based sourcing does not work in a world
    with abundant tax havens

75
Inward investment What are the problems?
contd
  • Rules for determining arms length pricing for
    services, intangibles and other items are not
    working well
  • the so-called advance pricing agreement program
    is not an answer

76
Appendix 3
  • DISCs, FSCs and Domestic Production

77
The DISC regime was enacted in 1971 to permit
deferral of export-related income
  • US has a history of providing tax benefits for
    exports
  • 1962 Act included special rules for export trade
    corporations whose qualification as such
    depended on US manufacture or production
  • In 1971, went further and enacted the DISC
    (Domestic International Sales Corporation)
    rules a partial roll back of the anti-deferral
    measures in the 1962 Act
  • A DISC is a U.S. corporation which devotes 95 of
    its activities to exports, and
  • Usually a paper corporation through which its
    US parent channels exports
  • Earnings not taxed until distributed
  • GATT countries objected to DISCs because the
    deferral of domestic tax had the effect of an
    export subsidiary

78
In response to GATT objections, the US enacted
the FSC provisions in 1984
  • In 1984, deferral benefits of DISCS were ended
    an interest charge on deferred income
  • Enacted FSC (Foreign Sales Corporation)
    provisions to respond to GATT rulings which
    approved of tax exemptions for activities
    abroad
  • A foreign corporation owned by a U.S. exporter
  • Allowed to contract with a related U.S. entity to
    produce all of its products, thus substantially
    skirting the abroad requirement
  • Rule of origin required imported components to
    contribute no more than 50 of the exports fair
    market value
  • The WTO found the FSC regime to be an illegal
    export subsidiary

79
ETI was U.S.s response to the WTO ruling
  • In 2000, the ETI (Extraterritorial Income)
    legislation repealed the FSC provisions and
    exempted from tax qualifying foreign trade
    income, which included
  • 30 of foreign sales and leasing income
  • 1.2 of foreign trading gross receipts
  • 15 of foreign trade income
  • Like the FSC provision, ETI
  • Only exempted export income
  • Retained the 50 rule of origin
  • The WTO ruled the ETI regime to be illegal in 2002

80
American Jobs Creation Act of 2004
  • The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 responded
    by phasing-out the ETI system and phasing-in a
    reduced rate of tax for income from qualified
    domestic production

81
Appendix 4
  • US income tax treaties

82
US income tax treaties
  • Treaties cut back on the reach of the Code by,
    among other things
  • reducing the rates of US withholding tax on
    dividends, interest, royalties and like items
  • using a more restrictive permanent
    establishment test before business income is
    taxed
  • limiting the US tax on service income of
    individuals
  • providing rules for foreign taxes eligible for
    credit
  • Treaties also provide a process for resolving
    conflicting tax claims between taxing authorities

83
US income tax treaties contd
  • In 1954, the US had some 18 income tax treaties
  • There are now more than 60, and US negotiations
    now generally begin with a model treaty
  • The spread of treaties can only be good, but US
    treaties have also become a separate body of
    knowledge
  • The terms differ materially, in part because
    entered into at different times
  • Limitation-on-benefit articles, which vary from
    treaty to treaty, are as complicated as any
    provision of the Code

84
Appendix 5
  • Some possible simplifications

85
Simplifications?
  • Eliminate provisions which are out-of-date or
    whose complexity cannot be justified, such as
  • Are foreign tax credit limitations on FOGEI and
    FORI needed, given the subsequent regulatory
    definition of creditable foreign taxes?
  • Would it be simpler to treat related party
    factoring income as interest for all tax
    purposes?
  • Are the anti-conduit regulations needed now
    that most US tax treaties have limitation on
    benefit articles?
  • Can the reach of the PFIC rules be justified?
  • If hybrid entities erode subpart F, shouldnt
    the subpart F rules be revised to accept that?
    Or, if not, the check-the-box regulations changed?

86
Simplifications contd
  • Eliminate provisions which are out-of-date or
    whose complexity cannot be justified, including
  • In light of the repeal of the withholding tax on
    portfolio interest, do the compliance rules
    imposed on banks and other intermediary holders
    of debt make sense?
  • If dividend flows can be replicated by
    derivatives, is there any point in imposing
    withholding tax on portfolio dividends?
  • In the case of a foreign and domestic
    corporation, do we need the stapled entities rule
    in Section 269B?
  • Can the Section 367 regulations on corporate
    inversions be eliminated now that Congress has
    addressed the subject in Section 7874?
  • With changes in securities markets, is the bank
    loan exception to the portfolio interest
    exemption still relevant?

87
Simplifications? contd
  • Eliminate (or move elsewhere) provisions whose
    purpose seems more driven by ideology than sound
    tax policy
  • The FIRPTA tax on sales and dispositions of US
    real property (and the related withholding tax)
  • The international boycott participation and
    related bad country rules
  • The rules relating to dual consolidated losses of
    dual resident entities
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