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Jurisdictional Issues in Business Taxation 13-1 Chapter 13 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
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13-2 State and Local Tax Increasingly, firms and their tax advisors are formulating strategies to reduce state and local taxes, such as real and personal property taxes, unemployment taxes, and sales & use taxes For a state tax to be constitutional, it must not discriminate against interstate commerce E.g., an income tax of 3% for resident corporations and 5% for non resident corporations would be unconstitutional
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13-3 State and Local Tax State taxes can only be levied on businesses having nexus - degree of contact between business and the state Nexus can be established via Legal domicile: nexus in the state where incorporated Physical presence: employees or real or personal property; however, sales reps alone do not create nexus Regular commercial activity is argued by some states to create an economic nexus; the law is still unclear Other issues: catalog sales, internet sales
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13-4 Apportionment of State Income States may tax only the income attributable to a firm’s in-state business activity; how is State X’s share of Corporation C’s taxable income determined? Under UDITPA (Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act) model, apportion based on factor weights Sales Payroll Property (cost) Over 1/2 of the states double-weight sales; this favors in-state businesses Other states only consider sales factor
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13-5 International Business Transactions - Jurisdiction Tax treaties govern the jurisdiction to tax as well as exceptions related to tax rates Business activities are taxed only by the country of residence (incorporation) unless the firm maintains a permanent establishment in another country E.g., a fixed location, such as an office or factory, with regular commercial operations (but not merely exporting) If there is no tax treaty, uncertainty may exist as to what level of activity triggers jurisdiction
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13-6 International Jurisdiction - continued Double taxation may result from two jurisdictions claiming the right to tax the same income The U.S. taxes the worldwide income of its citizens, permanent residents, and domestic corporations If the U.S. corporation has a branch that is doing business as a permanent establishment, both the foreign country and the U.S. will tax the branch income
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13-7 International Jurisdiction - continued What relief exists for double taxation? Deduction for foreign taxes, or Foreign tax credit
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13-8 The Foreign Tax Credit In the U.S., relief usually comes from a foreign tax credit Applies only to income taxes – not foreign excise, value-added, sales, property or transfer taxes Reduces U.S. taxes by foreign income taxes paid These rules are extremely complex; this chapter teaches the basics
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13-9 Foreign Tax Credit Limitation The U.S. will only grant a credit up to the amount of [U.S. tax rate x foreign source taxable income] FTC limit = U.S. tax x (foreign income / worldwide income) If the firm has paid more foreign tax than the FTC limit, the firm is allowed 1 year carryback, 10 year carryforward Carryovers are limited to the annual FTC limit discussed above
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13-10 FTC Planning Firms can cross-credit between high- and low- tax- rate country income Without cross-crediting, here’s the problem Pay tax on income in Japan branch at 50% of $100, only claim $35 FTC Pay tax on income in Ireland branch at 10% of $100, only claim $10 FTC Total U.S. tax on $200 x 35% = $70 - $45 FTC = $25 U.S. tax paid + $60 foreign tax paid = $85 total worldwide tax burden
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13-11 FTC Planning - Cross Credit With cross-credit, you combine all similar type foreign source income to compute the limitation FTC limit = $70 US tax x ($200 foreign income / $200 worldwide income) = $70 Total U.S. tax on $200 x 35% = $70 - $60 actual foreign taxes paid = $10 U.S. tax paid + $60 foreign tax paid = $70 total worldwide tax
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13-12 Organizational Forms - Direct Taxation Foreign branch or partnership - the U.S. corporation is fully taxed on branch or (share of) partnership income The U.S. corporation has a direct foreign tax credit for income taxes paid by branch or partnership The export operation, branch or partnership may be owned by any entity in the domestic group: e.g. by a U.S. headquarters corporation or by a separate domestic subsidiary created for that purpose
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13-13 Organizational Forms - Foreign Subsidiary US corporations often create subsidiaries under the laws of a foreign jurisdiction to operate foreign businesses The foreign sub is not part of the consolidated U.S. return What is the impact of this type of arrangement on losses? The losses of the foreign subsidiary cannot offset income of the parent and vice versa
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13-14 Foreign Subsidiary The U.S. does not generally have the right to tax subsidiary income until it is paid back to the U.S. parent company (i.e., “repatriated”) When a dividend is repatriated out of after-tax earnings The dividend is foreign source earnings The dividend is “grossed-up” (add back tax) to a pre-tax amount The associated tax generates a “deemed-paid” foreign tax credit if the US corporation owns 10% or more of the voting stock of the foreign subsidiary
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13-15 Deferral of U.S. Tax Foreign subsidiary income is not taxed in the U.S. until repatriated. Large tax savings result from earning income in low-tax countries and delaying repatriation U.S. tax is deferred until repatriation Under U.S. GAAP (APB Opinion 23), firms can avoid recording deferred tax if they state that the earnings are “permanently reinvested”
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13-16 Deferral Creates Incentives for Tax Avoidance Tax deferral creates incentives to shift income artificially into low-rate countries (i.e.,“tax havens”) Examples Place cash in Bermuda subsidiary bank account - earn interest tax-free Sell goods at low prices to Cayman Islands; resell at high prices to foreign customers - earn tax-free profit U.S. law prevents above abuses
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13-17 Controlled Foreign Corporations (CFCs) CFC is a foreign corporation in which U.S. shareholders own > 50% voting power or stock value If a CFC earns certain types of income, the law treats it as if it were immediately distributed to the shareholders Subpart F income is “artificial” because it has no commercial or economic connection to the CFC’s home country
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13-18 Controlled Foreign Corporations (CFCs) Subpart F income of a CFC is taxed as constructive dividend to all U.S. shareholders >= 10% stock interest Examples Foreign-based company sales income; resale out of country with little value added passive income Loans from CFC back to U.S. parent are treated as constructive dividends and taxed
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13-19 Transfer Pricing Where Subpart F rules do not apply, firms can engage in some income shifting between entities through transfer prices. Examples: Pay royalties from high-tax entities to low-tax entities Charge higher prices to high-tax entities for goods and services Pay management fees from high-tax entities to low-tax entities IRS has broad powers under IRC Section 482 to reallocate income to correct unrealistic transfer prices
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