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Statement of Richard M. Lipton on the Subject of Tax
Simplification
April 26, 2001
3. Business Tax Provisions
- Simplify the Consolidated Return Rules
Affiliated groups of
corporations can elect to file a single consolidated income tax return. The dominant
theory governing the development of the consolidated return regulations is that the
consolidated group should be treated as a single entity. As evidenced by the hundreds of
pages of regulations and excruciating detail, this seemingly simple concept has evolved
into one of the most complex and burdensome areas of the tax law. The consolidated return
rules, are laced with numerous traps for the unwary and are virtually incomprehensible to
experienced tax practitioners unless they spend an entire career practicing in the
consolidated return area. With the advent of single-member limited liability companies
("LLCs") and the check-the-box regulations, many taxpayers may be able to avoid
or ameliorate the complexity of the consolidated return rules. For taxpayers that desire
or are required to use a C corporation, however, the consolidated return rules still
present a major source of complexity. Accordingly, simplification of the consolidated
return rules would be a major step towards the ultimate goal of simplifying the tax laws.
For example, in the small business context, all wholly owned subsidiaries could be treated
as flow-through entities.
- Simplify the PFIC Rules
In 1997, the passive
foreign investment company ("PFIC") rules were greatly simplified by the
elimination of the controlled foreign corporation-PFIC overlap and by allowing for a
mark-to-market election for marketable stock. A great deal of complication remains,
however, and further simplification is necessary. We recommend, for example, that Congress
eliminate the application of the PFIC rules to smaller investments in foreign companies
whose stock is not marketable.
- Simplify the Foreign Tax Credit Rules
The core
purpose of the foreign tax credit ("FTC"), which has been part of the Code for
more than eighty years, is to prevent double taxation of income by both the United States
and a foreign country. The FTC rules are complex in large measure, but not exclusively,
because the global economy is complex. The section 904(d)(1) basket regime, which includes
nine separate baskets for allocating income and credits and is intended to prevent
inappropriate averaging of high-and-low-tax earnings, is especially complicated to apply.
The FTC rules may never be truly simple, but actions can be taken to
temper the extraordinary complexity of the current regime. At a minimum, Congress should
(i) consolidate the separate baskets for businesses that are either starting up
abroad or that have only small investments abroad; and (ii) eliminate the alternative
minimum tax credit limitations on the use of the FTC.
In addition, Congress should consider accelerating the effective date
of the "look-through" rules for dividends from so-called 10/50 companies. The
Tax Reform Act of 1986 created a separate FTC limitation for foreign affiliates that are
owned between ten and fifty percent by a U.S. shareholder. The requirement for separate
baskets for dividends from each 10/50 company was among the most complicated provisions of
the 1986 Act, and in 1998, Congress acted to afford taxpayers an election to use a
"look-through" rule for dividends (similar to the one provided for controlled
foreign corporations under section 904(d)(3)). The implementation of the rule was delayed,
however, until 2002. In addition taxpayers must maintain a separate "super" FTC
basket for dividends received after 2002 that are attributable to pre-2003 earnings and
profits. The current application of both a single basket approach for pre-2003 earnings
and a look-through approach for post-2002 earnings results in unnecessary complexity.
Congress should eliminate the "super" basket and accelerate the effective date
of the look-through rule.
- Simplify Application of Subpart F
In general,
ten percent or greater U.S. shareholders of a controlled foreign corporation
("CFC") are required to include in current income certain income of the CFC
(referred to as "Subpart F" income). The Subpart F rules are an exception to the
Codes general rule of deferral and were initially enacted in 1962 to tax passive
income or income that is readily moveable from one taxing jurisdiction to another to, for
example, take advantage of low rates of tax. Congress subsequently expanded the Subpart F
rules to capture more and more categories of active operating income. Nevertheless,
taxation of CFC income may be deferred under various "same-country" exceptions
to the Subpart F provisions. U.S.-based companies incur substantial administrative and
transaction costs in navigating the maze of the Subpart F rules to minimize their tax
liability.
The Subpart F rules sorely need to be updated to deal with today's
global environment in which companies are centralizing their services, distribution, and
invoicing (and often manufacturing operations). We recognize that the Treasury Department
is preparing a study on the policy goals and administration of the Subpart F regime, which
we eagerly await. Whatever effect this study may eventually have, substantial
simplification could be achieved now through the following basic measures:
- Except smaller taxpayers or smaller foreign investments from the Subpart F rules;
- Exclude foreign base company sales and services income from current taxation; and
- Treat countries of the European Union as a single country for purposes of the
same-country exception.
- Repeal Section 514(c)(9)(E)
In general, income of
a tax exempt organization from debt financed property is treated as unrelated business
taxable income. Debt financed property is defined in section 514 as income producing
property subject to "acquisition indebtedness," which generally does not include
debt incurred to acquire or improve real property. Section 514(c)(9)(E) (the
"fractions rule") provides, in general, that debt of a partnership will not be
treated as acquisition indebtedness if the allocation of income and loss items to a tax
exempt partner cannot result in the share of the overall taxable income of that
organization for any year exceeding the smallest share of loss that will ever be allocated
to that organization. This provision was enacted to prevent disproportionate allocations
of income to tax exempt partners and disproportionate allocations of loss items to taxable
partners. The provision has become a trap for the unwary as well as a tremendous source of
planning complexity even for those familiar with it. Anecdotal evidence suggests that few
practitioners understand the provision completely, and almost no IRS agents or auditors
raise it as an issue on audits. Instead, because of its daunting complexity, it has become
a barrier to legitimate investment in real estate by exempt organizations. At the same
time, other provisions in the tax law (such as the requirement of substantial economic
effect under section 704(b)) substantially limit the ability to shift tax benefits among
partners. Therefore, section 514(c)(9)(E) could be repealed without substantial risk of
abuse.
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