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Published byAnabel McLaughlin Modified over 9 years ago
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LEGAL FRAMEWORKS: DO TAX INCENTIVES AFFECT PRIVATE CONTRIBUTIONS TO NON-PROFIT SECTOR? Ukrainian Citizen Action Network/European Law Advancement Network (Ukraine), June 2008 Acknowledgements to International Center for Not- for-Profit Law and European Foundation Center
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Key question: mind average donors Which taxpayers make charitable contributions to endowments and other foundations? To what extent will the deduction increase their giving? To what extent will the deduction complicate tax filing, and will tax evasion increase?
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Major options for tax incentives Unlimited deductions Deductions up to maximum percentage of taxable income/turnover Deductions more than a minimum amount Deductions up to a maximum amount Percentage laws on giving some of paid tax contributions to certain foundations
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Individual donors Individual charitable giving shows some insensitivity to its tax price, and differ rather in culture and social context terms Individual donors rarely think the direct government grants to be equal or socially superior option Percentage laws on giving some of paid tax contributions to certain foundations, however, may be felt as a tax incentive
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Individual donors Whatever are tax rates, income distribution and charitable giving purposes, the top income quintile (20%) use two third, at least, of tax deductions for individual donors Sensitivity of tax payers with lower income to tax incentives and itemization tend to be uncertain or differ in cultural contexts
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Corporate donors In general, corporate donors are far more sensitive to tax incentives due to their liabilities and reporting to shareholders Corporate donors tend to use long-term instruments and allowed business expenses in charitable giving, too Short-term tax incentives tend to have less elasticity than carrying forward deductions
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Conclusions on donors While individual donors make majority of donations, tax price is not a decisive consideration Individual donors with lower income tend to use tax incentives on case-to-case basis and to avoid long-term instruments Corporate donors, if no tax incentives, tend to consider their giving as investment
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Major options’ implementation Actually, national tax legal frameworks usually combine two or more of the abovementioned four options of tax incentives for donors in order to decrease budget revenue loss 27 European Union members do show diversity in approaches to tax incentives for donors, while only five countries have no tax incentives for individual donors
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Unlimited deductions In EU, Great Britain and Cyprus grant unlimited deductions for all donors, and Ireland and Portugal for corporate donors Unlimited deductions cause maximum budget revenue loss, while only small groups of taxpayers do take advantage However, unlimited deductions are crucial for donations of real estate, land etc., if they may not be carried forward
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Deductions up to a maximum amount (cap) The only type of tax incentive when charitable giving declines more than revenue loss; in EU, they are used in Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Italy and Malta; special cap up to 307,000 euro for donations to endowments in Germany There are no incentives to give beyond the ceiling under this option Verifying many small amounts is difficult for tax authorities and increase tax evasion, while keeping records does not encourage smaller contributors to use this deduction
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Deductions more than a minimum amount In EU, seven countries use this deduction, virtually all in combination with maximum percentage of taxable income Such deductions do not encourage those who could not afford contributions or do not contribute currently Donors having the lowest and highest income, which have to contribute more than they wish in order to get tax deduction, are strongly critical
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Deductions up to a maximum percentage of taxable income This deduction is most common in EU, though only nine countries do not combine it with other tax limitation Seven countries allow deductions of 19- 66% of donations value up to a maximum percentage of individual income, while for companies it can amount to 100-120% At least, four countries allow alternative tax base (turnover, salaries, investments)
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Maximum percentage, EU
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Conclusions on impacts Deductions up to a maximum amount are the least effective for private giving; filing is the easiest, but tax evasion is the highest Deductions more than a minimum amount are usually used for special purposes or beneficiaries; filing is easy, tax evasion is low or medium
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Conclusions on impacts Unlimited deductions tend to increase giving by a smaller group of donors; filing is easy, but high tax evasion and budget revenue loss makes bad public image Multiple maximum percentage deductions are the most common in EU, filing problems and tax evasion are medium; however, these deductions are usually effective, if combined with carrying forward deductions in future years
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