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January 2014

“International Taxation – Recent Developments in USA”

By Mayur Nayak
Tarunkumar G. Singhal
Anil D. Doshi Chartered Accountants
Reading Time 42 mins
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In this Article, we have given information about the recent significant developments in USA in the sphere of international taxation. Since many Indian Corporates have substantial business interests in and dealings with USA, we hope the readers would find this information useful. This will help to create awareness about impending important changes in law and practices in USA.

1. IRS releases update on FATCA registration for financial institutions

The US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has released IRS Announcement 2014-1 to provide an update on the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) registration for financial institutions (FIs).

FIs can use the IRS FATCA registration website, which was launched on 19th August 2013, to register with the IRS under FATCA and to renew their status as a qualified intermediary (QI), withholding foreign partnership (WP), and withholding foreign trust (WT).

Announcement 2014-1 states that every FI that has made an online registration prior to January 2014 must revisit its account on or after 1st January 2014 to edit, sign its FFI agreement if registering as a participating FFI, and submit its registration information as final.

Announcement 2014-1 also states that the final FFI (Foreign Financial Institutions) agreement is expected to be published prior to 1st January 2014, that the final QI, WP, and WT agreements will be published in early 2014, and that the first IRS FFI list will be posted by 2nd June 2014. Announcement 2014-1 further states that Model 1 FIs will not need to register or obtain Global Intermediary Identification Numbers (GIINs) until on or about 22nd December 2014 to ensure inclusion on the IRS FFI list by 1st January 2015.

Announcement 2014-1 notes that the guidance in Announcement 2014-1 is consistent with the previous guidance in IRS Notice 2013-43 .

2. IRS issues Memorandum on creditable foreign taxes from inter-branch dealings

The Office of the Associate Chief Counsel (International) of the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has issued a Memorandum that discusses the determination of creditable foreign taxes for a US corporation, or a controlled foreign corporation (CFC), that engages in transactions with its foreign branch or foreign disregarded entity (DE), or with the foreign branch or DE of its affiliated corporation.

The Memorandum states that, because a foreign branch or DE and its US owner are treated as a single entity with the result that transactions between them do not give rise to income or expense for US tax purposes, an application of the arm’s length standard of the US transfer pricing rules to such disregarded transactions would not affect the amount of taxable income that the US owner recognizes for US tax purposes, and thus generally is not meaningful.

The Memorandum further states that, if the US tax owner reports too much income to the foreign country by means of non-arm’s length transfer prices and claims a foreign tax credit (FTC) for the overpaid foreign income taxes, the FTC may be disallowed under the non-compulsory payment rule of Treasury Regulation section 1.901-2(e)(5), which provides that a foreign tax is not considered paid for FTC purposes to the extent that the amount paid exceeds the amount of liability under foreign tax law.

The Memorandum concludes that the US transfer pricing principles may be relevant in determining whether non-arm’s length transfer prices result in non-compulsory payments of foreign tax to the extent foreign tax law, as modified by tax treaties, includes similar arm’s length principles, as most do, and further that taxpayers have the burden to establish to the satisfaction of the IRS that they have properly minimised their creditable foreign tax liability by exhausting all effective and practical remedies, including resort to competent authority proceedings.

The Memorandum also states that similar issues involving non-compulsory payments of foreign tax may arise in cases involving a CFC where a foreign branch or DE that is a part of a CFC engages in transactions with the CFC, a related but separately regarded CFC, a US shareholder of the CFC, or a US shareholder of a related but separately regarded CFC.

In addition, the Memorandum states that, under US tax treaties that adopt the authorized OECD approach (AOA) and thus apply the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines, by analogy, in determining the profits of a permanent establishment (PE), profits of a US PE may be determined based on all of the PE’s dealings, including transactions between the US PE and the foreign corporation of which it is a part (or another branch of such foreign corporation), even though such interbranch dealings would not give rise to income, gain, profits, or loss of the foreign corporation under the US Internal Revenue Code (IRC).

3. IRS released revised user guide for FATCA registration website

The US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has released revised Publication 5118 (Rev. 12-2013), Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) User Guide.

The user guide provides instructions for using the FATCA Registration System to complete the FATCA registration process online, including what information is required, how registration will vary depending on the type of financial institution (FI), and step-by-step instructions for each question.

The FATCA Registration System is a web-based system that FIs may use to register completely online as a participating foreign financial institution (PFFI), a registered deemed-compliant FFI (RDCFFI), a limited FFI (Limited FFI), or a sponsoring entity (see United States-2, News 20 August 2013).

The IRS has also released the FATCA Registration Update Summary to provide a summary of the updates made to the FATCA Registration System. The summary indicates a last reviewed or updated date of 11th December 2013.

4 IRS issues updated Publication 54 – Tax Guide for US Citizens and Resident Aliens Abroad

The US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has released the 2013 revision of Publication 54 (Tax Guide for US Citizens and Resident Aliens Abroad). The publication is dated 3rd December 2013.

Publication 54 explains the special rules used to determine the US federal income tax for US citizens and resident aliens who work abroad or who have income earned in foreign countries.

Revised Publication 54 is intended for use in preparing 2013 tax returns. It includes the 2013 amount for the foreign earned income exclusion ( $ 97,600) and the housing expense base amount ( $ 15,616) for the housing cost exclusion u/s. 911 of the US Internal Revenue Code (IRC). The limits for the maximum amounts that can be excluded and/or deducted under IRC section 911 are also discussed.

Publication 54 discusses the following items:
– US tax return filing requirements (Chapter 1);
– Withholding of US income, social security and Medicare taxes (Chapter 2);
– US self-employment tax (Chapter 3);
– IRC section 911 foreign earned income exclusion and foreign housing exclusion or deduction (Chapter 4);
– Other applicable exemptions, deductions, and credits (Chapter 5);
– Tax treaty benefits (Chapter 6); and
– How to obtain tax information and assistance from the IRS (Chapter 7).

Publication 54 also includes a list of tax treaties, which is updated through 31st October 2013.

5.    Public comments requested on IRS Form for withholding on foreign partners

The  US  Internal  Revenue  Service  (IRS)  and the  US  Treasury  Department  have  issued  a notice  requesting  comments  on  IRS  Form 8804  (Annual  Return  for  Partnership  With- holding  Tax  (Section  1446));  IRS  Form  8804 (Schedule  A)  (Penalty  for  Underpayment  of Estimated Section 1446 Tax by Partnerships); Form  8805  (Foreign  Partner’s  Information Statement of Section 1446 Withholding Tax); and Form 8813 (Partnership Withholding Tax Payment Voucher (Section 1446)).

U/s.  1446  of  the  US  Internal  Revenue  Code (IRC),  foreign  partners  are  subject  to  US withholding  tax  on  their  allocable  share  of the US effectively connected taxable income (ECTI)  of  a  partnership  that  is  engaged  in  a trade  or  business  in  the  United  States.  The withholding  tax  is  imposed  at  the  highest income  tax  rates  applicable  to  the  foreign partner,  currently  35%  for  corporations  and 39.6%  for  individuals.  The  withholding  tax  is collected by the partnership.

IRS Forms 8804, 8805, and 8813 are used to pay and report IRC section 1446 withholding tax  based  on  ECTI  allocable  to  foreign  part- ners.

IRS Form 8804 is used to report the total liability under IRC section 1446 for the partnership’s tax year. IRS Form 8804 is also a transmittal form for IRS Form 8805. IRS Form 8804 has been modified for use in tax year 2013 to reflect the increase in the maximum tax rates for individuals to 39.6% with regard to ordinary income and to 20% with regard to capital gains.

IRS  Form  8805  is  used  to  show  the  amount of  ECTI  and  the  total  tax  credit  allocable  to the foreign partner for the partnership’s tax year. IRS Form 8813 is used to pay the with holding tax under IRC section 1446 to the United States Treasury. Form 8813 must accompany each payment of IRC section 1446 tax made during the partnership’s tax year.

The IRS requested that written comments be submitted no later than 27 January 2014. The mailing address and other contact information are listed in the notice.

6.    Public comments requested on IRS Form for claiming FTC for corporations

The US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the Treasury Department have issued a notice to announce the intention to submit an information collection request to the US Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for its review and clearance with regard to IRS Form 1118 (Foreign Tax Credit-Corporations). The Treasury Department has also requested public comments on the form.

IRS Form 1118 and separate Schedules I, J, K are used by US domestic and foreign cor- porations to claim a credit for taxes paid or accrued to foreign countries or US posses- sions under section 901 of the US Internal Revenue Code (IRC). The IRS uses Form 1118 and related schedules to determine whether the corporation has computed the foreign tax credit (FTC) correctly.

To claim a FTC, it is generally required to file IRS Form 1118 with the US income tax return. A separate Form 1118 is required for foreign taxes paid on each designated category of income (i.e. passive category income, general category income, IRC section 901(j) income, certain income re-sourced by treaty, and lump- sum distributions).

7.    Public comments requested on IRS Form for reporting transfer of property to foreign corporation

The US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the Treasury Department have issued a notice to announce the intention to submit an information collection request to the US Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for its review and  clearance  with  regard  to  IRS  Form  926 (Return by a US Transferor of Property to a Foreign  Corporation).  The  Treasury  Department has also requested public comments on the form.

IRS Form 926 is used by US persons to report exchanges or transfers of property to foreign corporations as required by section 6038B(a) (1)(A) of the US Internal Revenue Code (IRC).

Section 6038B of the IRC imposes such reporting requirements with regard to transactions involving  subsidiary  liquidations,  corporate organizations, and corporate reorganizations, as  described  in  sections  332,  351,  354,  355, 356,  and 361 of the IRC.

The US transferor must file IRS Form 926 with its  income  tax  return  for  the  tax  year  that includes the date of the transfer.

A penalty may be imposed in the amount of 10% of the fair market value of the property at  the  time  of  the  exchange  or  transfer  if the  US  transferor  fails  to  file  IRS  Form  926. The penalty is limited to USD 100,000 unless the  failure  to  file  IRS  Form  926  was  due  to intentional  disregard.  The  penalty  does  not apply if the failure is due to reasonable cause and not wilful neglect.

Moreover, under section 6501(c)(8) of the IRC, the period of limitations for assessment of tax on the exchange or transfer of the property is extended to the date that is 3 years after the  information  required  to  be  reported  is provided to the IRS.

8.    Public comments requested on tax-free merg- ers and consolidations involving foreign corporations

The US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the US Treasury Department have issued a notice requesting comments on final regulations (TD 9243, Revision of Income Tax Regulations u/s. 358, 367, 884, and 6038B Dealing with Statutory Mergers or Consolidations u/s. 368(a)(1)(A) Involving One or More Foreign Corporations).

TD  9243  was  issued  on  26TH  January  2006 to  provide  amendments  to  regulations  that were  affected  by  the  revised  merger  and consolidation rules of concurrently-issued final regulations (TD 9242,  Statutory Mergers and Consolidations) including amendments to the regulations  u/s.  367  of  the  US  Internal  Rev- enue Code (IRC), dealing with US-inbound and outbound reorganisations, amendments to IRC section  884,  dealing  with  the  branch  profits tax,  and  amendments  to  IRC  section  6038B, dealing with the tax reporting obligations for US outbound transfers.

The notice states that the collection of information under TD 9243 is necessary to preserve US income taxation on gain of certain stock.

9.    IRS proposes revised procedures for request- ing competent authority assistance

The  US  Internal  Revenue  Service  (IRS)  has issued  Notice  2013-78  to  propose  a  revised revenue procedure for requesting competent authority assistance under US tax treaties. The proposed  revenue  procedures  would  update and  supersede  the  current  procedures  in Revenue Procedure 2006-54.

The US competent authority procedures permit taxpayers to request IRS assistance when they believe that the actions of the United States, the treaty country, or both, have resulted or will result in taxation that is contrary to the provisions  of  the  treaty,  for  example,  economic  double  taxation  arising  from  transfer pricing adjustments u/s. 482 of the US Internal Revenue Code (IRC).

The proposed revenue procedure would pro- vide guidance on:

–    requesting assistance from the US competent authority under the provisions of the US tax treaties; and

–    determinations that the US competent author- ity may make on competent authority issues.

The  proposed  revenue  procedure  would include  provisions  that  reflect  the  IRS’s structural  changes  relating  to  the  US  com- petent  authority  since  2006,  including  the establishment of the IRS Large Business and International Division (LB&I) that includes the office  of  the  US  competent  authority,  and provisions  that  effect  a  limited  number  of significant substantive changes, as summarised in a table contained in Notice 2013-78.

10.    IRS proposes revised procedures for advance pricing agreements

The  US  Internal  Revenue  Service  (IRS)  has issued  Notice  2013-79  to  propose  a  revised revenue  procedure  with  guidance  on  filing advance  pricing  agreement  (APA)  requests and on the administration of APAs. The pro- posed revenue procedures would update and supersede the current procedures in Revenue Procedure  2006-9,  as  modified  by  Revenue Procedure 2008-31.

The proposed revenue procedure would pro- vide the following:

–    guidance and instructions on APAs; and

–    guidance and information on the IRS’s administration of APAs.

The  proposed  revenue  procedure  would  include  provisions  that  reflect  the  IRS’s  struc- tural changes relating to the APAs, including the  establishment  of  the  IRS  Large  Business and  International  Division  (LB&I)  and  the creation  of  the  Advance  Pricing  and  Mutual Agreement  Program  (APMA)  and  provisions that  effect  a  limited  number  of  significant substantive changes, as summarised in a table contained in Notice 2013-79.

11.    US Senate Finance Committee releases proposals for tax administration reform

The  US  Senate  Committee  on  Finance  has announced the issuance of a staff discussion draft on proposed reforms to the administration  of  the  US  tax  laws.  The  announcement was  made  in  a  Press  Release  dated  20TH November 2013.

The issued discussion draft is the second in a series of discussion drafts to overhaul the US tax code. The discussion draft proposes a number of reforms to modernise the tax administration, minimise compliance burdens, combat tax-related identity theft and fraud, and reduce the tax gap.

The significant proposals in the discussion draft
include, among others:

–    deadlines for filing certain information returns are accelerated to 21ST February (either on paper or electronically) so that taxpayers will receive the information needed to file their income tax returns on a more timely and orderly basis;

–    taxpayers are no longer required to file cor- rected information returns if the error is less than $ 25;

–    tax returns generated by a computer but filed on paper must contain a scannable code in order to enable the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to upload the return information more efficiently;

–    the number of returns that trigger an elec- tronic filing requirement reduces over 3 years from 250 returns per year to 25;

–    IRS Form W-2 (Wage and Tax Statement) no longer includes the taxpayer’s full social security number (SSN);

–    access to databases containing SSNs of re- cently deceased individuals is restricted for 3 years;

–    filing a  tax  return using  another person’s
identity is a felony subject to a fine of up to
$ 250,000 and/or up to 5 years in prison; and

–    banks must report the existence of bank accounts.

The discussion draft also includes a list of unaddressed issues on which public comments are requested.

The documents released by the Committee on Finance include the following:

–    Tax Administration Reform Staff Discussion Draft Legislative Language;

–    Tax Administration Reform Draft Summary;

–    Tax Administration Reform One-Pager;

–    JCT Technical Explanation of the Chairman’s Staff Discussion Draft of Tax Administration Reform;

–    Tax Administration Reform Technical Correc- tions Legislative Language;

–    JCT Explanation of Tax Administration Draft Technical Corrections; and

–    List of Provisions Identified by the Staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation as Potential Deadwood.

12.    US Senate Finance Committee releases pro- posals for international business tax reform

The  US  Senate  Committee  on  Finance  has announced the issuance of a staff discussion draft on international business tax reform. The announcement was made in a Press Release dated 19th November 2013.

The issued discussion draft is the first in a series of discussion drafts to overhaul the US tax code. It proposes a modern, competitive, simpler, and fairer international tax system by means of:

–    reducing incentives for US and foreign multina- tionals to invest in, or shift profits to, low-tax foreign countries rather than the United States;

–    reducing incentives for US-based businesses to move abroad, whether by re-incorporating abroad or merging with a foreign business;

–    increasing the ability of US businesses to compete against foreign businesses in foreign markets;

–    ending the lock-out effect (i.e. keeping the earnings of foreign subsidiaries offshore in- stead of repatriating such earnings to the United States); and
–    simplifying the international tax rules so that firms with the most sophisticated tax advisors are not advantaged.

The significant proposals in the discussion draft
include, among others:

–    all foreign income of US corporations is taxed immediately or permanently exempt, depend- ing on the type of the income;

–    earnings of foreign subsidiaries from periods before the effective date of the proposal that have not been subject to US tax are subject to a one-time tax at a reduced rate payable over 8 years;

–    international aspects of the “check-the-box” rules are eliminated; and

–    base erosion arrangements are addressed to prevent foreign multinationals from making such arrangements to avoid US tax.

The discussion draft also includes a list of un- addressed issues on which public comments are requested.

The documents released by the Committee on Finance include the following:

–    International Tax One Pager;
–    International Tax Summary;
–    International Tax Discussion Draft Common;
–    International Tax Discussion Draft Option Y;
–    International Tax Discussion Draft Option Z; and
–    International Tax Discussion Draft Request for Comments.

In addition, the US Joint Committee on Taxa- tion (JCT) has issued a report with a technical explanation of the provisions in the discussion draft.

13.    Joint Committee on Taxation issues report on international business tax reform proposals

The Joint Committee on Taxation of the US Congress (JCT) has released a report to provide a technical explanation of the staff discussion draft on international business tax reform issued by the US Senate Committee on Finance.

The report is entitled Technical Explanation of the Senate Committee on Finance Chairman’s Staff Discussion Draft of Provisions to Reform International Business Taxation. The report is dated 19th November 2013, and is designated JCX-15-13.

14.    US Treasury Department updates FATCA model agreements

The  US  Treasury  Department  has  released updated model Intergovernmental Agreements (IGAs) for the implementation of the Foreign Account  Tax  Compliance  Act  (FATCA).  The updated model IGAs are dated 4th November 2013.

For the purpose of defining the term “financial account” under article 1, the updated model IGAs include new provisions that explain:

–    the condition for interests to be treated as “regularly traded”;

–    the meaning of an “established securities market”; and

–    the circumstance in which an interest in a financial institution is not “regularly traded” and thus treated as a financial account.

The updated model IGAs expands the list of persons that are excluded from the definition of the term, “specified US person”. The up- dated model IGAs also modify, inter alia, the rules regarding related entities and branches that are non-participating financial institutions.

The updated model IGAs, which are available on the FATCA page of the Treasury Depart- ment website, are as follows:

–    Reciprocal Model 1A Agreement, Preexisting TIEA or DTC (Updated 11-4-2013);

–    Nonreciprocal Model 1B Agreement, Preexisting TIEA or DTC (Updated 11-4-2013);

–    Nonreciprocal Model 1B Agreement, No TIEA or DTC (Updated 11-4-2013);

–    Model 2 Agreement, Pre existing TIEA or DTC (Updated 11-4-2013);

–    Model 2 Agreement, No TIEA or DTC (Updated 11-4-2013);

–    Annex I to Model 1 Agreement (Updated 11- 4-2013);

–    Annex I to Model 2 Agreement (Updated 11- 4-2013);

–    Annex II to Model 1 Agreement (Updated 11- 4-2013); and

–    Annex II to Model 2 Agreement (Updated 11- 4-2013).

15.    Draft instructions for annual withholding form for foreign person’s US-source income issued to implement FATCA

The  US  Internal  Revenue  Service  (IRS)  has released a draft of revised Instructions for IRS Form 1042 (Annual Withholding Tax Return for US  Source  Income  of  Foreign  Persons).  The draft  instructions  are  dated  6th  November 2013.  The  IRS  previously  issued  the  revised Form 1042  in draft form.

When  adopted  as  final,  the  draft  Form  1402
and instructions will be used to report:

–    the tax withheld under chapter 3 of the US Internal Revenue Code (IRC) (dealing with the normal withholding for foreign persons) on certain US-source income of foreign persons, including non-resident aliens, foreign partnerships, foreign corporations, foreign estates, and foreign trusts;

–    the tax withheld under IRC chapter 4 (i.e. the FATCA provisions);

–    the 2% excise tax due on specified foreign procurement payments under IRC section 5000C; and

–    payments that are reported on IRS Form 1042- S under IRC chapter 3 or 4. The draft Form 1042 modifies the current Form
1042  by:

–    revising the current form for withholding agents to report payments and amounts withheld under IRC chapter 4 in addition to under IRC chapter 3;

–    requiring a reconciliation of US source fixed or determinable annual or periodical (FDAP) income payments for chapter 4 purposes;

–    including separate chapter 3 and 4 status codes for withholding agents; and

–    adding lines for reporting the tax liability under chapters 3 and 4.

The  current  Form  1042  and  the  Instructions for  the  current  Form  1042  are  available  on the IRS website (www.irs.gov).

16.    IRS issues memorandum on US tax conse- quences of payments to foreign distributors

The Office of Associate Chief Counsel (International) of the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has issued a memorandum that discusses the character and source of certain payments made to foreign distributors by a multi-level marketing company and the related withholding responsibilities.

The facts reviewed in the Memorandum in- volve payments made by a US corporation to reward its foreign distributor for recruit- ing, training, and supporting the distributor’s lower-tier distributors to cultivate a multi-level chain of distributors (the “sponsorship chain”) for the sale of the US corporation’s products.

The Memorandum discusses the tax conse- quences of the payments (the “earnings”) that the foreign distributor received from the US corporation based on purchases of products from the US corporation by lowertier distributors in the distributor’s sponsorship chain.

The Memorandum reaches the following conclusions:

– the earnings constitute income from performance of personal services;

–    the source of the earnings is based on where the services of the foreign distributor are performed with the result that income at- tributable to services performed in the United States is US source income and that income attributable to services performed outside the United States is foreign source income;

–    the US corporation is required to withhold tax on the earnings of a distributor who is a non- resident foreign individual for the performance of services within the United States;

–    the US corporation is not required to withhold tax on the earnings of a distributor that is a foreign corporation for the performance of services within the United States if the distributor provides the US corporation with IRS Form W-8ECI (Certificate of Foreign Person’s Claim That Income Is Effectively Connected With the Conduct of a Trade or Business in the United States); and

–    the earnings are not subject to US tax if the distributor is a resident of a foreign country that has an income tax treaty with the United States; does not have a fixed base or permanent establishment in the United States to which the earnings are attributable; and provides the US corporation with IRS Form 8233 (Exemption From Withholding on Compensation for Independent (and Certain Dependent) Personal Services of a Nonresident Alien Individual) (in the case of an individual distributor) or IRS Form W-8BEN (Certificate of Foreign Status of Beneficial Owner for United States Tax Withholding) (in the case of a corporate distributor).

17.    Public comments requested on IRS form for extending statute of limitations on cross- border transfers of stock and securities

The US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the US Treasury Department have issued a notice requesting comments on IRS Form 8838 (Con- sent To Extend the Time To Assess Tax Under Section 367—Gain Recognition Agreement).

IRS form 8838 is used to extend the statute of limitations for US persons who transfer stock or securities to a foreign corporation and enter into gain recognition agreements (GRAs) with the IRS. A GRA allows the trans- feror to defer the payment of US tax on the transfer.

IRS Form 8838 must be filed by a US transferor for a GRA that is entered into under section 367(a) of the US Internal Revenue Code (IRC) with regard to transfers of stock and securities to a foreign corporation in cross-border corporate transactions, i.e. incor- porations, liquidations, mergers, acquisitions and other reorganisations, as described in IRC section 367(a).

IRS  Form  8838  must  also  be  filed  by  a 80%-owned US subsidiary and its foreign parent  corporation  for  a  GRA  that  is  entered into under IRC section 367(E)(2)  with regard to a liquidation of the US subsidiary into the foreign  parent  corporation,  as  described  in IRC section 332.

The IRS uses IRS Form 8838 so that it may assess tax against the transferor after the expiration of the original statute of limitation.

18.    Public comments requested on withholding
certificates for foreign persons

The US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the US Treasury Department have issued a notice requesting comments on various IRS forms that are used as withholding certificates for foreign persons (i.e. certificates to claim reduced or zero withholding on US-source payments) and on the EW-8 MOU Program.

The following IRS forms are currently used as
withholding certificates for foreign persons:

–    Form W–8BEN (Certificate of Foreign Status of Beneficial Owner for United States Tax Withholding);

–    IRS Form W–8ECI (Certificate of Foreign Per- son’s Claim for Exemption From Withholding on Income Effectively Connected With the Conduct of a Trade or Business in the United States); –    IRS Form W–8EXP (Certificate of Foreign Gov- ernment or Other Foreign Organization for United States Tax Withholding); and

–    IRS Form W–8IMY (Certificate of Foreign In- termediary, Foreign Flow-Through Entity, or Certain US Branches for United States Tax Withholding).

The IRS is revising those forms to reflect the new withholding, due diligence, and reporting requirements under the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). The IRS has issued the following drafts of the revised forms:

–    a draft of IRS Form W–8BEN (for foreign individuals);

–    a draft of IRS Form W–8BEN–E (for foreign entities);

–    a draft of IRS Form W–8ECI;

–    a draft of IRS Form W–8EXP; and

–    a draft of IRS Form W–8IMY.

The EW-8 MOU (Memorandum of Understand- ing) Program is a voluntary collaborative programme between the IRS and withholding agents that have systems collecting IRS Forms W-8 electronically.

5.    IRS issues Memorandum on cross-border re-organization transactions

The Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate) of the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has issued a Memorandum that discusses the US tax consequences of cross-border restructuring transactions undertaken by a taxpayer’s affiliated group.

The restructuring occurred in two stages a few months apart. The first stage (the “F Reorganization”) included a series of transac- tions that the taxpayer treated as a tax-free reorganisation described in section 368(a)(1)
(F) of the US Internal Revenue Code (IRC).

The second stage (the “Transaction”) in- volved a triangular reorganisation where a foreign  subsidiary  (F  Sub  5)  acquired  stock of  its  foreign  parent  company  (F  Sub  4)  by, in  part,  issuing  notes  (i.e.  debts)  to  F  Sub 4, and used the stock of F Sub 4 to acquire another  foreign  subsidiary  (F  Sub  6)  from  a US  subsidiary.  Subsequently,  F  Sub  5  repaid the notes to F Sub 4 (the “Payment”).

The Memorandum concludes that, based on the particular facts and circumstances of this case, the F Reorganisation and the Transac- tion should not be stepped together, or with the subsequent Payment, and should each be respected as qualifying for non-recognition treatment, respectively, under IRC sections 368(a)(1)(F) (dealing with the reorganisation of a single operating company as to the form or place of incorporation) and 368(a)(1)(C) (dealing with the acquisition of a target’s assets in exchange for an acquiring corporation’s stock). The Memorandum notes that both the F Reorganisation and the Transaction were supported by business considerations that satisfied the business purpose threshold applicable to IRC section 368 reorganisations.

The  Memorandum  next  states  that  the  fact that  the  Transaction  involved  a  leveraged buyout  (i.e.  F  Sub  5  WAS  capitalised  with lesser  capital  than  the  F  Sub  4  Stock  that  it acquired)  does  not  negate  the  fact  that  the Transaction was a value-for-value exchange.

The Memorandum also concludes that F Sub 5 is not required to recognise gain on the F Sub  4  stock  when  such  stock  was  used  to acquire  F  Sub  6  because  the  F  Sub  4  stock had  not  appreciated  while  F  Sub  5  held  the stock.  Gain  would  otherwise  be  required  to be  recognised  under  IRC  section  1032  and the  regulations  thereunder  dealing  with  the use  of  the  stock  of  a  parent  corporation  in a triangular reorganisation.

The Memorandum further concludes that, because the notes should be respected as debt, the Payment should constitute repayment of debts, not dividends or other amounts that would generate subpart F income.

The Memorandum notes that the restructuring transactions  occurred  prior  to  22ND  September 2006, and thus are not governed by IRS Notice 2006-85, which announced regulations that  were  later  adopted  under  IRC  section 367  as  final  regulations  (TD  9526).  Under the regulations, in a triangular reorganisation where a subsidiary (S) or its parent company
(P) (or both) is foreign, the property trans- ferred from S to P in exchange for P stock is treated as a distribution from S to P under IRC section 301(c) with the result that an inclusion in P’s gross income as a dividend, a reduction in P’s basis in its S or T (target) stock, and the recognition of gain by P from the sale or exchange of property may occur, as appropriate.

20.    Draft instructions for form to report foreign person’s US-source income issued for FATCA

The  US  Internal  Revenue  Service  (IRS)  has released  a  draft  of  revised  Instructions  for IRS Form 1042-S (Foreign Person’s US Source Income  Subject  to  Withholding).  The  draft instructions  are  dated  1st  November  2013. The  IRS  previously  issued  the  revised  Form 1042-S  in draft form.

The current Form 1042-S and the Instructions for the current Form 1042-S are available on the  IRS  website.  The  current  Form  1042-S is  used  to  report  amounts  paid  to  foreign persons  (including  persons  presumed  to  be foreign)  that  are  subject  to  US  withholding under chapter 3 of the US Internal Revenue Code  (IRC),  including  fixed  or  determinable annual or periodical (FDAP) income from US sources  (e.g.  US-source  interest,  dividends rent, royalties, pension, annuities).

The draft Form 1042-S revises the current form to accommodate new requirements under the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). The  revised form contains new  boxes to re- quest withholding agents to indicate whether the withholding is made under IRC chapter 3 (i.e. the normal withholding for non-residents and foreign corporations) or under IRC chap- ter 4 (i.e. the FATCA provisions).

In addition, the draft form includes boxes requesting, among other information, the withholding agent’s Global Intermediary I dentification Number (GIIN) and additional in- formation about the recipient of the payment, including the recipient’s account number, date of birth, and foreign tax identification number, if any. GIIN indicates the identification number that is assigned to a participating foreign financial institution (FFI) or registered deemed-compliant FFI (including a reporting Model 1 FFI).

For  withholding  agents,  intermediaries,  flow- through entities, and recipients, the draft Form 1042-S  requires that the chapter 3 status (or classification) and chapter 4 status be reported on  the  form  according  to  codes  provided  in the draft instructions.

21.    IRS issues memorandum on indirect FTC rules in connection with stock redemptions

The  Associate  Chief  Counsel  (International) of the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has issued  a  memorandum  that  discusses  the interconnection  of  the  indirect  foreign  tax credit  (FTC)  rules  of  section  902  of  the  US Internal  Revenue  Code  (IRC)  and  the  stock redemption rules of IRC sections 302 and 312.

IRC  section  902  allows  a  US  corporation  to claim  an  indirect  or  deemed-paid  FTC  for foreign  income  taxes  paid  by  its  foreign subsidiary  (referred  to  as  the  “section  902 corporation”)  if  the  US  corporation  receives a dividend from the section 902  Corporation and certain conditions are met.

The amount of the foreign income taxes for which  the  indirect  FTC  may  be  claimed  is equal to the same proportion of the section 902  Corporation’s  “post-1986 foreign  income taxes” (the FT pool) that the amount of the dividend  bears  to  the  section  902  Corpora- tion’s  post-1986  undistributed  earnings  (the E&P pool) (i.e. indirect FTC = FT pool × (divi- dend received/E&P pool)).

The FT pool is defined by IRC section 902(C) as the foreign income taxes paid with respect to the taxable year in which the dividend is paid, as well as with respect to prior taxable years beginning after 31st December 1986. IRC sec- tion 902 reduces the amount of the FT pool to take into account dividends distributed by the  section  902  CORPORATION  in  prior  taxable years.

In the case reviewed in the Memorandum, a section  902  Corporation  was  60%  owned  by a  US  parent  company  (USP)  and  was  40% owned by an unrelated foreign party (FP). The section 902 CORPORATIOn redeemed all of the stock owned by FP by way of a distribution of cash. IRC section 312(A) and (n)(7) reduces the  section  902  CORPOration’s  E&P  pool  to take  into  account  the  redemption.  In  the following  year,  the  section  902  Corporation paid its entire remaining E&P to the USP as a dividend.

The  issue  of  the  Memorandum  is  whether the  section  902  Corporation’s  FT  pool  must be reduced for the purpose of calculating the USP’s indirect FTC although IRC section 302(A) treats the redemption as a sale or exchange transaction, rather than a dividend.

The  Memorandum  refers  to  Treasury  Regulation  section  1.902-1(a)(8),  which  provides that  foreign  taxes  paid  or  deemed  paid  by a  foreign  corporation  on  or  with  respect  to earnings  that  were  distributed  or  otherwise removed from E&P in prior post-1986 taxable years  must  be  removed  from  the  FT  pool. The  Memorandum  states  that  the  language “otherwise  removed”  is  broad  enough  to cover  reductions  of  earnings  under  section 312(A)-Related  redemptions  that  are  treated as a sale or exchange transaction.

The Memorandum accordingly concludes that the  section  902  Corporations’  FT  pool  must be reduced as a result of the redemption of the stock held by FP.

The Memorandum is designated AM2013-006. The  Memorandum  is  dated  30th  September 2013,  and  indicates  that  it  was  released  on 25TH  October 2013.

22.    US Senate Finance Committee releases proposals for cost recovery and tax accounting rules

The US Senate Committee on Finance has  announced  the  issuance  of  a  staff discussion draft on proposed reforms to the cost recovery and tax accounting rules. These are the rules that are used to determine when a business can deduct the cost of investments and how businesses account for their income. The announcement was made in a Press Release dated 21ST  November 2013.

The issued discussion draft is the third in a series of discussion drafts to overhaul US Internal Revenue Code (IRC). The significant proposals in the discussion draft include, among others:

–    a single set of depreciation rules apply to all business taxpayers;

–    the number of major depreciation rates is reduced from more than 40 to 5;

–    the need for businesses to depreciate each of their assets separately is eliminated, except for real property;

–    real property is depreciated on a straight-line basis over 43 years;

–    research and experimental expenditures, as well as natural resource extraction expenditures, are capitalised and amortised over 5 years;

–    the cash method of accounting and immedi- ate expensing of the cost of inventory are allowed for all businesses (other than tax shelters) with annual gross receipts under $ 10 million;

–    the IRC section 179 expensing allowance (i.e. current year deduction in lieu of capitalisation and depreciation) is permanently increased to
$ 1 million with the phase-out threshold of $ 2 million, together with an expansion of the types of qualifying property; and

–    the following rules would be repealed:

–    the LIFO (last in, first out) method of account- ing for inventory;

–    the lower of cost or market (LCM) rule for inventory;

–    the like-kind exchange rules that permit tax- free roll-over transactions; and

–    the completed contract method of accounting, except for small construction contracts.

The discussion draft also includes a list of un- addressed issues on which public comments are requested.

The documents released by the Committee on Finance include the following:

–    Cost Recovery and Accounting Staff Discussion
Legislative Language;

–    Cost Recovery and Accounting Summary;

–    Cost Recovery and Accounting One Pager; and

–    JCT Technical Explanation of Cost Recovery and Accounting Draft.

23.    Regulations issued regarding withholding on payment of dividend equivalents from US sources

The US Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) have issued final regu- lations (TD 9648) u/s. 871(m) of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) to provide guidance to non-resident individuals and foreign corporations that hold specified notional principal contracts (“specified NPCs”) providing for payments that are contingent upon or determined by reference to US source dividend payments and to withholding agents.

IRC section 871(m) treats a “dividend equiva- lent” as a dividend from sources within the United States for purposes of the US gross basis income tax and subjects such dividend equivalent, if paid to a non-resident person, to the 30% withholding tax that applies to fixed or determinable annual or periodical income (FDAP income) from US sources.

The  term  dividend  equivalent  is  defined  by IRC section 871(M)(2)  as:
–    any substitute dividend made pursuant to a securities lending or a sale-repurchase transaction (repo) that is contingent upon or determined by reference to a US source dividend payment;

–    any payment made pursuant to a specified NPC that is contingent upon or determined by reference to a US source dividend payment; and

–    any payment determined by the Treasury Department to be similar to the foregoing.

IRC  section  871(m)(3)(A)  defines  a  specified NPC  as  a  NPC  that  contains  terms  or  condi- tions  that  are  specified  in  the  statute,  and applies  this  definition  with  regard  to  pay- ments  made  between  14th  September  2010 and  18th  March  2012.  IRC  section  871(m)(3)

(B)  then  provides  that,  with  respect  to  pay- ments made after 18th March 2012, any NPC will  be  a  specified  NPC  unless  the  Treasury Department determines that such contract is of  a  type  that  does  not  have  the  potential for tax avoidance.

Temporary  regulations  (RIN  1545-BK53,  TD 9572), issued on 23RD January 2012, extended the  section  871(m)(3)(A)  statutory  definition of  a  specified  NPC  through  31st  December 2012 (see United States-1, News 25TH January 2012). The final regulations, inter alia, further extend  the  applicability  of  the  definition  to payments made before 1st January 2016.

The above definitions also apply for purposes of FATCA withholding under chapter 4 of the IRC. The Treasury Department and IRS state in the preamble to the final regulations that they will closely scrutinise other transactions that are not covered by IRC section 871(m) and that may be used to avoid US taxation and US withholding taxes.

The final regulations are designated Treasury Regulation  sections  1.863-7,  1.871-15,  1.881-2, 1.892-3,  1.894-1,  1.1441-2  through  -4,  -6,  and -7, and 1.1461-1.

The  final  regulations  are  effective  on  5Th December  2013  and  generally  apply  to  payments  made  on  or  after  23rd  January  2012 with exceptions.

In  addition,  the  Treasury  Department  and the  IRS  contemporaneously  issued  proposed regulations (REG–120282–10) to provide, inter alia,  a  new  definition  of  a  specified  NPC  for payments made on or after 1st January 2016.

24.        US Treasury Department reissues list of boy- cott countries that result in restriction of US tax benefits

The US Treasury Department has reissued its list of the countries that require cooperation with or participation in an international boy- cott as a condition of doing business.

The countries listed are Iraq, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, the United Arab Emirates, and the Republic of Yemen.

The  list  is  dated  20th  November  2013  and was published in the Federal Register on 27TH September  2013.  The  new  list  is  unchanged from the list dated 26TH  August 2013.

The listed countries are identified pursuant to section 999 of the US Internal Revenue Code (IRC), which requires US taxpayers to file reports with the Treasury Department concerning operations in the boycotting countries. Such taxpayers incur adverse consequences under the IRC, including denial of US foreign tax credits for taxes paid to those countries and income inclusion under subpart F of the IRC in the case of US shareholders of controlled foreign corporations (CFCs) that conduct operations in those countries.

[Acknowledgement/ Source: We have compiled the  above  information  from  the  Tax  News Service  of  IBFD  for  the  period  01-10-2013  to 18-12-2013.]

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