This coming Monday, Tax Notes will be publishing my short article on the EU state aid case, which is entitled "Friends Without Benefits?: The Treasury and EU State Aid." But here is a kind of teaser as it's on the same subject, addressing a development that came out too recently (i.e., today) for me to discuss it in the article.
The IRS has just issued Notice 2016-52,
entitled “Foreign Tax Credit Guidance Under Section 909 Related to
Foreign-Initiated Adjustments.”
While I don’t have time right now to
parse through it technically (I’m teaching a class in about an hour), it’s
pretty clear what they are doing and why. I’m personally sympathetic to their
aim here, although I’ll leave it to others to assess whether, how, and how well the approach that they announce here works technically.
Section 909 addresses foreign tax credit "splitter" transactions like that in the Guardian Industries case, in which taxpayers created what were called super-charged
or turbo-charged foreign tax credits, by finding workarounds to avoid the basic
requirement or assumption of US law that you can only claim credits by
repatriating the associated income. The basic trick, using transparent
entities and the like, was to place the profits in Entity A and the tax
liability in related Entity B, so one could bring home just Entity B’s foreign
tax credits, without Entity A’s earnings and profits also being included in the repatriation, and use the credits to offset
the U.S. tax on other foreign source income.
It’s easy to see why Apple, in the EU
state aid setting, would no doubt love to do a version of that trick this time
around, if it can. Say it owes $14.5B of Irish taxes under the state aid
adjustment that the European Commission has proposed. Since Ireland has a
12.5% tax rate, that would imply that the EC required a $116B increase in Irish
taxable income. Suppose Apple responded by repatriating $116B from
Ireland (i.e., via a $101.5B dividend, grossed up for the tax liability) in
order to be able to claim the credits. That wouldn’t be so great for Apple, since
the US pre-credit tax liability on this amount, at 35% (and assuming no other
foreign taxes, for simplicity) would be $40.6B, reduced by the credits to
$26.1B.
Now suppose instead that Apple could gin
up a way to claim the $14.5B in FTCs without actually repatriating any Irish
profits. Then it would have built-in shelter for other repatriations in
the amount of $41.4B that had no associated foreign taxes (and thus that would
yield $14.5B in pre-credit US tax liability). Voila, although Apple is
still unhappy about the EU state ruling, at least it got to bring home lots of
money for US tax purposes without paying any US repatriation tax.
Would this actually cost the Treasury
$14.5B? In a way no, since Apple wouldn’t have done the repatriation but
for having the credits hypothetically made fully available. But it might
cost Treasury money in the future – e.g., if we went to a territorial system
but had a deemed repatriation on pre-enactment foreign profits. Apple would
have gotten to reduce by $40B the foreign earnings to which such a hypothetical
tax on deemed repatriations would have applied.
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