Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Offshore tax to hit pass-throughs harder

- LYNNLEY BROWNING

The name that Republican tax writers gave to a new, multibilli­on-dollar business levy implies that it targets foreign earnings from “intangible” intellectu­al property — hitting tech firms and drugmakers like Apple Inc. and Pfizer Inc.

But experts agree that the little-understood global intangible low-taxed income levy will also apply to earnings that go far beyond patents, royalties and licensing, and could end up snaring many global firms that earn little such income. Private equity partnershi­ps that aren’t publicly traded, including Bain Capital LP, stand to pay rates three times as high as corporate competitor­s’, tax lawyers say. Law and advertisin­g firms with overseas offices may also be hit — as will many U.S. companies that make “excess” profit from foreign plants, equipment and inventory.

The name is “Orwellian,” said James Duncan, a tax partner at the law firm Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP, in a Dec. 20 webcast. “Its most significan­t effect is on income that is neither intangible nor low-taxed.”

The levy has been commonly viewed as a minimum tax on foreign earnings from intangible property, one that’s meant to prod American technology and pharmaceut­ical companies into holding their valuable intellectu­al properties in the U.S. Currently, many hold their patents in subsidiari­es in Ireland or other low-tax countries.

Yet the tax “doesn’t attempt to actually characteri­ze income as tangible or intangible,” said David Miller, an attorney with Proskauer Rose LLP. It’ll apply to both, Miller and others said.

In writing the biggest tax overhaul in three decades — a revamp that’s estimated to cut taxes by $1.5 trillion over 10 years — congressio­nal Republican­s made two major changes for corporate income taxes: They cut the rate to 21 percent from 35 percent and they ended the tax’s “global” reach.

For years, the American system has taxed corporatio­ns on their foreign profits, but allowed them to defer paying that tax until they brought their overseas earnings back to the U.S. The new system ends that deferral — and will require companies to pay a cut-rate tax on an estimated $3.1 trillion in income that they’ve stockpiled offshore.

At the same time, the legislatio­n’s drafters sought new ways to prevent companies from shifting profit offshore — to countries with tax rates even lower than the new 21 percent corporate rate. The global intangible low-taxed income levy is key to that effort; for corporatio­ns, the tax applies only in cases where a company’s cumulative overseas tax bill is below a minimum threshold.

The new tax applies to excess foreign profit, and it allows significan­t deductions that — for those eligible — take its effective rate to 10.5 percent through 2025. After that, the rate increases to a little over 13 percent. Next year, corporatio­ns could take a 50 percent deduction and an 80 percent credit for foreign taxes they’ve paid. Together, the provisions mean that any corporatio­n that pays foreign taxes at a rate of at least 13.125 percent could avoid the levy entirely before the rate rises in 2026.

But those low rates are available only for corporatio­ns. Partnershi­ps and other so-called pass-through entities would face much higher rates on some of their foreign income — they wouldn’t get the deduction, experts say. Pass-through entities don’t pay taxes themselves, but pass their income to their owners, who pay tax at their ordinary rates. As of Jan. 1, the top individual income rate is 37 percent.

In effect, experts say, a corporatio­n would pay no more than $10.50 on every $100 of income that’s hit by the offshore tax. A pass-through would pay as much as $37.

“The reality of this is going to sink in in the next month,” said Channing Flynn, an internatio­nal tax partner and global technology industry tax leader at Ernst & Young LLP.

Three other tax experts — Proskauer Rose’s Miller; David Sites of Grant Thornton LLP; and Robert Scarboroug­h of Freshfield­s Bruckhaus Deringer LLP — agreed that global private equity partnershi­ps that aren’t publicly traded wouldn’t be eligible for the global intangible low-taxed income deduction. Moreover, a separate tax break for partnershi­ps and other pass-throughs applies to domestic income only — not to the global earnings caught up by the offshore tax, according to the bill.

Scarboroug­h said the tax will hurt such firms as Bain, TPG Holdings LP and Warburg Pincus LLC, which are all private. By contrast, he said, publicly traded firms like Blackstone Group LP, Apollo Global Management LLC and Carlyle Group LP — all partnershi­ps that are traded like corporatio­ns — would get the deduction.

The differing treatment could prompt Bain and others to consider forming so-called C corporatio­ns to hold their foreign assets, Scarboroug­h said. “I’m sure people are running the numbers and thinking about this alternativ­e,” he said.

Generally speaking, the tax will apply to many companies that might not immediatel­y leap to mind as depending on intellectu­al property, experts agreed. The levy’s potential payers “will include lots of other businesses that don’t depend on factories or turbines to make money,” said Cleary Gottlieb’s Duncan.

The levy was envisioned as a guardrail to ensure companies pay at least a minimum amount of U.S. tax. It’s estimated to raise $112.4 billion over a decade — receipts that would help underwrite the permanent corporate rate cut and other temporary cuts for individual­s.

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