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Portuguese Taxation of Distributions from Trust Capital: A Critical Assessment

Portuguese Taxation of Distributions from Trust Capital: A Critical Assessment

How does a country adopt a law to tax the income of an entity that generally is not recognized under local law? In Portugal, there is room for improvement. The 2014 reform of the Portuguese Personal Income Tax ("P.I.T.") Code introduced certain taxing provisions that specifically address "fiduciary structures," the Portuguese term for trusts. Two separate categories of payments were established for purposes of imposing tax. Under the first category, all amounts paid or made available to a Portuguese tax resident are taxable. This includes capital distributions. Under the second category, gains realized by the taxpayer who formed the fiduciary structure are taxed at the time of a final distribution incident to the structure’s liquidation, unwinding, or termination. Other beneficiaries can receive liquidation distributions without suffering any tax. João Luís Araújo and Álvaro Silveira de Meneses of Telles Advogados, Porto and Lisbon, Portugal, suggest that solid arguments support the view that certain distributions should be seen as outside the scope of the P.I.T. Code, including (i) distributions of trust capital to the settlor during the ongoing existence of a trust and (ii) distributions to non-settlors that are akin to gifts.

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O.E.C.D. Unified Approach Garners Less Unified Comments from Europe’s Tech Producers and Users

O.E.C.D. Unified Approach Garners Less Unified Comments from Europe’s Tech Producers and Users

How does a group of experts comment on the indescribable in order to arrive at a consensus? Inconsistently is the answer. As the O.E.C.D. continues its work on the taxation of the digital economy, the O.E.C.D. Centre for Tax Policy and Administration received comments in advance of a public consultation in late November 2019. The public consultation heard input from interested parties on the policy development aspects of a "Unified Approach" to the determination of tax nexus and profit allocation rules relevant to customer-facing corporate participants in the digital economy. From the consultation, a "great divide" appears to exist on the Unified Approach. The policy interests are clearly inconsistent when looking at (i) tech haves v. have-nots and (ii) consumers v. producers. The broadly North-South partition that caused the demise of the E.U. Commission’s significant digital presence and D.S.T. directives continues to be argued in the larger forum of the O.E.C.D. Tech haves and producers appear to share a common view with U.S. tech firms. Michael Peggs explains the divide in quantitative terms and suggests that, with the exception of the U.K., the adage that looks to see "whose ox is being gored" is a useful tool in identifying those jurisdictions that support digital taxes and others that are opposed.

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Same Same, But Different: Taxing a Sale of Indian Stock by a U.S. Person

Same Same, But Different: Taxing a Sale of Indian Stock by a U.S. Person

While tax rules generally appear to be similar in India and the U.S., several divergent provisions in the domestic law of each country produce adverse consequences for those who are not well-advised. The prime example involves the taxation of gains from the sale of shares of an Indian company by a U.S. person: India sources the gain based on the residence of the target while the U.S. sources the gain based on the residence of the seller. No relief from double taxation is provided, notwithstanding the capital gains and relief from double taxation articles in the U.S.-India income tax treaty. The result is tax that can be as high as 43.8% of the gain. Rahul Jain and Sanjay Sanghvi of Khaitan & Co., Mumbai, India, along with Neha Rastogi and Stanley C. Ruchelman explain the problem and, more importantly, suggest a path forward for U.S. individuals realizing sizable gains.

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German Supreme Tax Court Rules in Favor of Taxpayer – U.S.-German Repatriation Non-taxable

German Supreme Tax Court Rules in Favor of Taxpayer – U.S.-German Repatriation Non-taxable

In a recent decision, the German Federal Tax Court (Bundesfinanzhof or "B.F.H.") held that repayment of capital by a U.S. subsidiary to its German parent company is not taxable in Germany. While this decision is in line with prior caselaw, it is significant because the B.F.H. held that domestic rules apply when determining the extent to which a distribution by a non-E.U. subsidiary to its German parent comes from profits and the extent to which it comes from capital. Because the participation exemption rules under German law exempts only 95% of the dividend through a disallowance of deemed expenses, tax is due on the 5% of the distribution that is attributable to earnings. Under the decision, two factors control the treatment of a distribution from a non-E.U. country: (i) the domestic accounting or corporate law treatment of the residence country and (ii) the ordering rules under German tax law. Beate Erwin and Nina Krauthamer explain the decision and how it interfaces with the ordering rules of U.S. domestic law under which distributions care treated as dividends, return of capital, and capital gains.

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IR35 – Why Are U.K. Businesses So Concerned?

IR35 – Why Are U.K. Businesses So Concerned?

New U.K. tax rules are being introduced from April 2020 to make businesses liable for determining the employment tax status of contractors who work through personal service companies (“P.S.C.’s”). These outsourcing arrangements have had a devastating effect on tax collections and funding for National Insurance, the U.K. version of Social Security. The goal of the new rules is to make customers of P.S.C.’s liable for collecting wage withholding tax and National Insurance contributions that are not collected by the P.S.C. when the worker of the P.S.C. would otherwise be properly characterized for U.K. tax purposes as an employee of the customer of the P.S.C. under tests published by H.M.R.C. Any company involved in the P.S.C. arrangement may have inchoate liability for payments of wage withholding tax and National Insurance. Penny Simmons, of Pinsent Masons LLP, London, explains the scope of the exposure and expounds on procedures that should be adopted in advance of the April 2020 effective date.

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Collecting Another Country’s Taxes – Recent Experience in the Canada-U.S. Context

Collecting Another Country’s Taxes – Recent Experience in the Canada-U.S. Context

In an age of multilateral agreements to exchange information and other agreements to cooperate in the collection of taxes of another country, many people are unaware of the “revenue rule.” This common law doctrine allows courts to decline entertaining suits to collect tax or enforce foreign tax judgments. In their article, Sunita Doobay of Blaney McMurtry L.L.P., Toronto, and Stanley C. Ruchelman explore (i) the general development of the revenue rule, (ii) its extension to North America, (iii) the applicable provisions of the Canada-U.S. Income Tax Treaty allowing for assistance in the collection of tax and exchange of information, (iv) one U.S. wire fraud case involving evasion of foreign import duties, and (v) several recent cases in the U.S. where taxpayers raised creative arguments to attack the validity of treaty provisions, but to no avail.

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How Soon Is Now? The O.E.C.D. Starts Work on a Substitute for Unilateral Digital Economy Fixes

How Soon Is Now? The O.E.C.D. Starts Work on a Substitute for Unilateral Digital Economy Fixes

As of November 2019, the arm’s length principle continues to operate among the O.E.C.D. Member States. In a little more than a year, this may be different. The O.E.C.D.’s workplan for urgent policy development will investigate a new nexus standard that departs from the arm’s length principle applied for decades. In his article, Michael Peggs explains the current debate between tax administrations concerning the attribution of profit to digital or non-physical P.E.’s and the three popular approaches that have been proposed. The mood in the O.E.C.D. is that markets matter most under each of the suggested approaches. Brainpower and manufacturing prowess are less important.

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Domestic Partnerships Treated as Entities and Aggregates: New Approach for G.I.L.T.I. and Subpart F

Domestic Partnerships Treated as Entities and Aggregates: New Approach for G.I.L.T.I. and Subpart F

The effects of the 2017 U.S. tax reform continue to be encountered in unexpected ways. Two prime examples are the final and proposed G.I.L.T.I. regulations issued by the I.R.S. earlier this year. These 2019 regulations attempt to bring order out of the chaos created by proposed G.I.L.T.I. regulations released in September 2018. In their article, Neha Rastogi and Stanley C. Ruchelman look at how the rules treat a domestic partnership and its partners when determining who is – and who is not – a U.S. shareholder of a controlled foreign corporation. The answer affects the application of the G.I.L.T.I., Subpart F, and P.F.I.C. rules. For those who follow the debate over whether a partnership is an aggregate of the partners or an entity that is separate from the partners, chalk up a victory for the proponents of the aggregate approach.

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Nonprofits: Creeping Commercialization and the Specter of Unrelated Business Income Tax

Nonprofits: Creeping Commercialization and the Specter of Unrelated Business Income Tax

In 2018, charitable giving in the U.S. totaled over $427 billion. Yet, charitable contributions are not the only source of revenue for nonprofit organizations. Commercial activities are an ever-growing source of revue in the sector – and one that is causing its own set of issues. Nonprofits face unrelated business income tax (“U.B.I.T.”) on business income derived from commercial activities not related to tax-exempt status, and in more extreme cases, they may even face the loss of tax-exempt status if not operated exclusively for tax-exempt purposes. Nina Krauthamer and Hannah Daniels, an extern at Ruchelman P.L.L.C. and student at New York Law School, explain.

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Saving Clementine: Improving the Code §163(j) Deduction

Saving Clementine: Improving the Code §163(j) Deduction

While the proposed regulations amending Code §163(j) are helpful in many instances, they do not help certain taxpayers. Those that borrow funds to make investments in real estate through partnerships will find themselves on the wrong side of the tax reform provision that limits a taxpayer’s deduction for business interest to 30% of adjusted taxable income arising from the business. Exempt from the cap are (i) taxpayers having gross receipts that do not exceed $25 million and (ii) taxpayers engaged in, inter alia, a qualifying real property trade or business, or “R.P.T.O.B.” The election for exemption is irrevocable for as long as a taxpayer conducts the R.P.T.O.B. In their article, Andreas A. Apostolides, Nina Krauthamer, and Stanley C. Ruchelman identify the fact patterns that are problematic, explain why they are not covered, and suggest that the I.R.S. may wish to revisit this matter.

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S.A.L.T. Cap Repeal Case Dismissed

S.A.L.T. Cap Repeal Case Dismissed

·       Several high-tax states – whose taxpayers are negatively affected by the T.C.J.A.’s $10,000 cap on the Federal deduction for state and local taxes ­– have instituted a legal challenge that is working its way through the courts.  On the last day of September, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled against the states under long standing authority that the Congress has broad power to eliminate tax benefits previously granted.  However, this may not be the end of dispute.  Nina Krauthamer and Lisa Singh, an extern at Ruchelman P.L.L.C. and a student at New York Law School, recap the ongoing saga and the latest results.

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I.R.S. Releases Relief Procedures for Certain Expats While Warning Bells Ring for Others

I.R.S. Releases Relief Procedures for Certain Expats While Warning Bells Ring for Others

The I.R.S. recently announced new procedures that will enable certain individuals who have or will relinquish their citizenship after March 18, 2010, to come into compliance with related U.S. tax and filing obligations. As a first step, U.S. citizenship must be relinquished. Once that is completed, specified identification documents, a complete dual-status tax return for the year of expatriation, and tax returns for the five tax years preceding the expatriation must be submitted. Comparable provisions will apply for long-term residents who relinquish that status. Galia Antebi and Hannah Daniels, an extern at Ruchelman P.L.L.C. and student at New York Law School, explain.

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I.R.S. Placing Watchdog Agents in International Financial Centers

I.R.S. Placing Watchdog Agents in International Financial Centers

In 2015, approximately 21 million people globally owned virtual currencies, but the I.R.S. estimates less than 900 people reported holding virtual currencies in U.S. tax returns. Now, the I.R.S. has adopted measures to ferret out crypto tax cheats. Whether modifying tax forms, cooperating with tax authorities through the J-5, or most recently stationing agents in international financial centers, the I.R.S. is serious in its attempts to track and tax cryptocurrency transactions. In their article, Stanley C. Ruchelman and Lisa Singh, an extern at Ruchelman P.L.L.C. and a student at New York Law School, look at recent global efforts.

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India Budget 2019-20

India Budget 2019-20

The first budget of the Modi 2.0 government was announced during the summer with a goal of bringing India to a growth trajectory. To that end, the Taxation Laws (Amendment) Ordinance, 2019, was introduced on September 20, 2019, to incorporate the proposed changes into law. Included are incentives for International Financial Services Centres, tax relief for start-ups, a boost for electric vehicles, and faceless tax examinations intended to ensure that tax examinations are carried out in a uniform way. Although anticipated by some, an inheritance tax was not introduced. Jairaj Purandare, the Founder and Chairman of JMP Advisors Pvt Ltd, Mumbai, explains the new provisions.

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Israeli C.F.C. Rules Apply to Foreign Real Estate Companies Controlled by Israeli Shareholders

Israeli C.F.C. Rules Apply to Foreign Real Estate Companies Controlled by Israeli Shareholders

Controlled foreign corporation (“C.F.C.”) laws are all the rage with parliaments around the world. Israel is no exception. Israeli shareholders controlling offshore companies that derive low-tax passive income and gains can be taxed in Israel even though no dividend is received. A recent decision by the Israeli Supreme Court addresses a fundamental question in this area. Is passive income determined on a groupwide basis or on a company-by-company basis? The answer affects Israeli residents owning a chain of C.F.C.’s when an intermediary company in the chain sells shares of an operating subsidiary. Daniel Paserman, who leads the tax group at Gornitzky & Co., Tel-Aviv, explains the holding in Tax Assessor for Large Enterprises v. Rosebud. Israeli residents may not like the answer.

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Do You Have to Withhold 30% on Payments to a Non-U.S. Independent Contractor?

Do You Have to Withhold 30% on Payments to a Non-U.S. Independent Contractor?

A common theme when a business engages the services of an individual is whether the individual is an independent contractor or an employee. The stakes become higher when the individual and the business are not resident in the same country. Galia Antebi address the applicable rules and special I.R.S. procedures for businesses located in the U.S. engaging service providers based in other countries to work in whole or in part in the U.S. Even when a tax treaty exempts the payment from income tax, businesses should be prepared to collect potentially refundable 30% withholding tax in the absence of an advance notice to the I.R.S.

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Preferred Yet Neglected — A Plea for Guidance on Redemptions of C.F.C. Preferred Stock in the Wake of U.S. Tax Reform

Preferred Yet Neglected — A Plea for Guidance on Redemptions of C.F.C. Preferred Stock in the Wake of U.S. Tax Reform

Most tax advisers in the U.S. view Code §1248 as a supporting part of U.S. C.F.C. rules. Under the provision, capital gain derived by a 10% shareholder of a C.F.C. from the sale or disposition of shares of the C.F.C. may be converted into dividend income to the extent of some or all of the accumulated earnings of the C.F.C. Prior to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, Code §1248 applied to all 10% U.S. Shareholders of a C.F.C. However, that is no longer the case. Whether the delinking was intentional is not clear. What is clear is that some U.S. Shareholders are not subject to Code §1248, and the tax consequences may be sub-optimal for the U.S. Shareholder. Neha Rastogi, Andreas A. Apostolides, and Stanley C. Ruchelman explain the pitfalls that may occur.

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U.S. Tax Litigation Update — The President’s Tax Returns and the New S.A.L.T. Cap

U.S. Tax Litigation Update — The President’s Tax Returns and the New S.A.L.T. Cap

·      Politics on the national and local levels in the U.S. have become a form of blood sport with no holds barred and no code of conduct that is equivalent to the Marquess of Queensberry rules that controlled the sport of boxing in England from 1867 onward.  This is evidenced by various political battles between President Trump and the Democrats in the House of Representatives and in state government.  Those battles have moved to Federal court.  Issues involve the disclosure by government of the president’s tax returns, the $10,000 cap imposed on deductions claimed for state and local income and real property taxes, and state proposed workarounds to ignore the cap.  Nina Krauthamer looks at all the head-spinning activity currently taking place.  Yes, bare-knuckle boxing as practiced by politicians in the U.S. is alive and well.

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Corporate Matters: F.I.R.R.M.A. Proposed Regulations Expand C.F.I.U.S. Oversite on Foreign Investment

Corporate Matters: F.I.R.R.M.A. Proposed Regulations Expand C.F.I.U.S. Oversite on Foreign Investment

C.F.I.U.S. is an interagency committee authorized to review certain transactions involving foreign investment in the U.S. Its mandate is to determine the effect of such transactions on the national security of the U.S. and, where appropriate, to deny approval to the transaction. F.I.R.R.M.A. was enacted in 2018 to expand the scope of transactions that are subject to C.F.I.U.S. review. Recently, the Treasury Department proposed regulations to implement the changes under F.I.R.R.M.A. Simon H. Prisk discusses the way in which the jurisdiction of C.F.I.U.S. has been expanded.

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U.S. Taxation of Cloud Transactions and Digital Content Transfers: 20-Year-Old Regulations Finally Move with the Times

U.S. Taxation of Cloud Transactions and Digital Content Transfers: 20-Year-Old Regulations Finally Move with the Times

The I.R.S. recently proposed revisions to the regulations applicable to the classification of cloud computing transactions. The existing regulations were adopted in 1998 and have not kept pace with computer-based transactions, which are an ever-growing and evolving area. To put things in perspective, when the current regulations were adopted, a typical internet connection could download 1GB in approximately 48 hours. Now, it takes less than 15 minutes. Hannah Daniels and Galia Antebi explain the three broad proposals intended to bring the regulations up to date. Oh, how times have changed!

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