Oman Daily Observer

US tax-dodge strategist­s probe loopholes in new law, IRS wary

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WASHINGTON: Tax experts for global corporatio­ns are hot on the trail of loopholes in the sweeping tax law approved in December by President Donald Trump and Republican­s in the US Congress.

Barely five months since it took effect, the law is already yielding potential tax-dodge gimmicks, from revising cross-border payments to substituti­ng bank loans for internal debt.

These fast-emerging strategies are designed mainly to blunt the impact of three new corporate taxes imposed by the law, said lawyers and consultant­s who help large, internatio­nal companies minimize their taxes while staying within the letter of the law.

Detailed guidance on the three taxes, which are extremely complex, is still pending from the Treasury Department and the US Internal Revenue Service.

As a result, actual deployment of the new strategies by multinatio­nal corporatio­ns is still likely months off. But discussion­s about ambiguitie­s in the Republican legislatio­n and how to exploit them is well under way in the tax planning industry, with the IRS and Treasury looking on warily.

At a recent Washington conference, panelists from the law firm of Caplin & Drysdale, audit and consulting giant Pricewater­housecoope­rs and the IRS talked about the new law’s Base Erosion and Anti-abuse Tax (BEAT) and how it interacts with a standard business accounting entry called cost of goods sold (COGS) that encompasse­s the expenses of producing goods.

Cost of goods sold normally covers raw material and labour expenses, but also other, less clear-cut expenses.

Importantl­y for tax planners, COGS is exempt from BEAT, under the new tax law. So putting more expenses into COGS could reduce BEAT exposure.

“There are a lot of different opportunit­ies for restructur­ing or changing who does what to improve your posture” on cost of goods sold for BEAT purposes, said Elizabeth Stevens, an associate at Caplin & Drysdale on the panel.“i’m sure the IRS will be auditing BEAT computatio­ns.”

IRS officials on the panel focused their remarks on the rules for cost of goods sold and legal precedents governing it. An IRS spokesman said the federal tax collection agency had no comment for this story.

New York University School of Law Professor Daniel Shaviro, a noted tax law expert, said the COGS exception to BEAT is “certainly going to be a central tax-planning focus.”

BEAT is one of three new taxes imposed on multinatio­nal corporatio­ns by the Republican law.

The second is known as GILTI, which taxes Global Intangible Low-taxed Income.

The third is known as FDII, a preferenti­al tax on Foreign-derived Intangible Income meant to favor US domestic operations.

Large technology and pharmaceut­ical companies are especially challenged by these new taxes because they tend to operate worldwide and are heavy users of globally mobile intellectu­al property, such as patents and trademarks, experts said.

Taken together, the three provisions have injected numerous complexiti­es into the tax code, despite Republican­s’ original intentions to simplify the code through their legislatio­n.

“There will be a lot of rough edges, which advisers and taxpayers will exploit,” said Steven Rosenthal, senior fellow at the Urban-brookings Tax Policy Center, a Washington think-tank.

“The COGS loophole for BEAT is a straightfo­rward gimmick, but I am unsure how or whether the IRS will stop it,” he said.

BEAT is meant to combat earnings stripping, which involves shifting Us-earned profits abroad to foreign affiliates in low-tax countries.

This is sometimes done via transfer payments of royalties or interest between the United Stateas and foreign affiliates.

Another potential strategy to minimize BEAT could be for a Us-based company that shifts profits abroad through interest payments to borrow from banks in the future, rather than from foreign affiliates because third-party interest payments are exempt from BEAT, experts said.

“These are just some of the publicly touted ideas. I am sure there are many more being touted privately,” Rosenthal said. Corporatio­ns are holding back from putting strategies like these into practice partly because of uncertaint­y about the details of the new law, as well as its political durability.

On Thursday, 49 organisati­ons including labour unions and public interest groups released a letter urging members of Congress to back proposed Democratic legislatio­n that would subject foreign income to the domestic corporate tax rate to prevent the shifting of US profits offshore.

Such a step would undo a key component of the Republican law.

Corporatio­ns are holding back from putting strategies into practice partly because of uncertaint­y about the details of the new law, as well as its political durability

 ?? — Reuters ?? Women stand in front of the US Internal Revenue Service office in Manhattan, New York.
— Reuters Women stand in front of the US Internal Revenue Service office in Manhattan, New York.

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