viernes, 26 de diciembre de 2008

PwC´s Report on Canada´s International Tax Advantage

The Advisory Panel on Canada's System of International Taxation released its long-awaited final report on December 10, 2008. The report offers seventeen main recommendations, which, together with ancillary recommendations and suggestions, are intended to be "pragmatic, balanced and actionable advice to the Minister of Finance toward improving Canada's international tax system for the benefit of our country."A PricewaterhouseCoopers Tax Memo discusses the Panel's recommendations under the following headings:A. Taxation of Outbound Direct InvestmentB. Taxation of Inbound Direct InvestmentC. Non-Resident Withholding TaxesD. Administration, Compliance and Legislative Process.

Access the full PwC report on the Advisory Panel's recommendations here (pdf)

lunes, 15 de diciembre de 2008

Nonresident real estate investors in the US

This is a very interesting post, named "Inbound (investments in the US), Nonresident real estate investors", from http://www.hodgen.com/phil/

"I got an inquiry today from my FIRPTA.com website that I figured would be worth answering here, because it is a topic of general application. The question is whether using a foreign corporation works to protect against U.S. estate tax.

Foreign corporations to hold U.S. real estate

Nonresident investors frequently hold U.S. real estate using foreign corporation structures. (A “foreign corporation” for our purposes is a corporation formed in a country other than the United States.) There are two common variations of this theme:
• Nonresident owns all the shares of stock of a foreign corporation. The foreign corporation owns the U.S. real estate.
• Nonresident owns all of the shares of stock of a foreign corporation. The foreign corporation owns all of the shares of stock of a U.S. corporation. The U.S. corporation owns the U.S. real estate.
This is done primarily for estate tax protection.

Why it works

The United States will impose an estate tax (for our purposes let’s say it is 45% of the fair market value of the property) on U.S. real estate owned directly by a nonresident. That is because estate tax is imposed only on a nonresident’s property that is “located” in the United States. And nothing screams “I am located in the United States” quite as much as real estate within the national boundaries of the USA. :-)
The United States will NOT impose an estate tax on shares of stock of a foreign corporation which are owned by a nonresident deceased individual.
That is because a foreign corporation is treated as being “located” in the country under whose laws the corporation was formed. Thus, because the corporation is “located” outside the United States under the estate tax definitions, there is nothing to be taxed because if you look at what the nonresident individual actually owns, which is stock, not real estate.
“But . . . .”
“Well,” you say. “The foreign corporation owns U.S. real estate. Shouldn’t you look through the foreign corporation at the assets owned by the corporation?” And the answer is . . . no, we don’t do that.
Yes, we (meaning the U.S. tax authorities) could do that. And maybe they will some day. But at the moment it doesn’t work that way.

Summary of where we are now

For now the conventional wisdom is that indirect ownership of U.S. real estate by a nonresident — using the foreign corporation as described — will isolate the nonresident individual from U.S. estate taxation when he or she dies. Well, it won’t isolate that individual, because after death he/she doesn’t really care all that much, right? It’s the heirs that care.

Storm clouds over the horizon–family limited partnership analogy

The Internal Revenue Service has been attacking family limited partnerships — as an estate tax planning device — for several years. I won’t go into the details of the technical and metaphysical arguments on this.

But many people feel that the same theories used by the IRS to attack family limited partnerships could be used to attack the foreign corporation ownership structures used by nonresidents to hold U.S. real estate.

Storm clouds over the horizon–personal use of corporate asset

There’s a second thing. Let’s say you are a U.S. resident and you own a business. The business buys a yacht as a corporate asset and you happily sail it up and down the coast and have fun on it. Will the Internal Revenue Service have a cow? You bet. Individual use of corporate assets by shareholders and officers triggers all sorts of imputed income attacks by the government.

So now take a look at this holding structure used by nonresidents. They buy a house or a ski condominium or a beach house, and hold title in the name of a foreign corporation. Then they proceed to use the house. Personal use. And they are the shareholders of the foreign corporation.

I can see this as a potential reason to either disregard the foreign corporation or to cause the shareholders to have some kind of imputed income from the trust. U.S. source imputed income. Probably FDAP. On which 30% withholding should be imposed, ‘n other bad stuff.

Fashion-forward Canada

A few years ago the Canadian tax authorities changed the tax rules for Canadian resident taxpayers, essentially saying that if a Canadian had a personal use residence inside a corporation like this, there would be an imputed dividend to the shareholder based on the fair market rental value of the house. So imagine having taxable income and paying tax just for the privilege of living in your own house.
Suddenly, corporate structures became much less appealing to Canadian residents.
I take that as an early warning sign. The Canadians had an exit tax far before we in the United States acquired the entirely execrable, useless, and utterly counter-productive Section 877A. (Ah, but I am a fairminded man. I do not judge.)
So I think it reasonable to assume that at some point the Internal Revenue Service will wake up and announce that they have an entirely original idea and while it won’t be an exact copy of the Canadian method, at least it will rhyme with what the Canadians suffer under.

Bottom line

Foreign corporations probably work for estate tax protection. For now. Might not later...."

viernes, 12 de diciembre de 2008

España: ventajas para la internacionalizacion, pese a Hacienda


"Golpe al deseo de Hacienda de exigir 2.000 millones a grandes exportadoras", articulo publicado el 11-12-08 , por C. Cuesta / E. S. Mazo en Expansion (www.expansion.com):

La Agencia Tributaria contaba ya con obtener cerca de 2.000 millones de euros adicionales. Debían proceder de una gran actuación inspectora: la que anulaba en la práctica la gran mayoría de las deducciones por exportación aplicadas por las grandes empresas españolas.


Pero se ha encontrado con un serio obstáculo. Una resolución del Tribunal Económico Administrativo Central (TEAC), a la que ha tenido acceso EXPANSIÓN, acaba de asegurar que la Inspección «niega el derecho a la deducción por considerar que la inversión realizada en la constitución de filiales en el extranjero y adquisición de participaciones en sociedades extranjeras no está directamente relacionada con la actividad exportadora [...].

La resolución del Tribunal abre una importante vía de defensa legal frente a Hacienda
Sin embargo, la Inspección [...] está manifestando una apreciación subjetiva, carente de sustento legal, pues la ley exige una relación causal entre inversión y exportación, pero no que la exportación constituya el fin principal de la misma».

Algunas de las mayores empresas con fuerte implantación en el exterior han recibido actas en 2008 por culpa de esta contienda . «Mientras el deterioro de las ventas al por menor, con caídas superiores al 7%, ha llevado a muchas de las compañías a confiar en el exterior como tabla de salvamento frente a la crisis, la Agencia Tributaria ha decidido apretar las tuercas», señala uno de los directivos de una de las compañías exportadoras.

La internacionalización de las compañías se ha convertido, de hecho, en uno de los mecanismos de diversificación de riesgos y beneficios de las mayores entidades nacionales (Telefónica, Repsol, Endesa o Fenosa entre otras).

El punto de pelea entre las empresas y el Fisco por las deducciones por actividades de exportación en el Impuesto sobre Sociedades (que llegaron a ser de un 25% de los gastos ocasionados) partió de una circular de la Agencia –ver EXPANSIÓN de 3 de julio de 2008–.

El organismo antifraude señalaba en ese documento que «la mera implantación de empresas españolas en el extranjero no supone necesariamente una actividad exportadora [...] la mera implantación de empresas españolas en el extranjero, sin que exista una vinculación a la actividad exportadora, no es merecedora de la deducción por actividades exportadoras».

La resolución actual del TEAC rechaza ese planteamiento. Fuentes jurídicas consultadas destacan que el criterio, aunque podría ser cambiado en posteriores resoluciones, abre una importante vía de defensa legal frente a Hacienda.

Pero, además, la resolución en favor de las empresas tiene otro punto de interés. Se trata de una de las últimas que se emitió estando aún en su cargo el anterior presidente del Tribunal Económico Administrativo Central, Eduardo Abril.

La fecha de debate («fecha de sala») de esta resolución es de abril de 2008, cuando el cese de Abril se publicó en el BOE del 23 de mayo. La salida de Abril, de hecho, fue acompañada de versiones que apuntaban a un incremento del poder de la Agencia en el Ministerio.

domingo, 7 de diciembre de 2008

España: La Agencia Tributaria entra 2 veces al dia en su vida


"La Agencia Tributaria entra en su vida dos veces al día", articulo muy interesante publicado el 06-12-08 , por J. J. Marcos en Expansion (www.expansion.com):

No descansa ningún día del año. No tiene ninguna hora libre. Todos los días procesa 80 millones de datos y transacciones económicos. Es el Gran Hermano , la red informática de la Agencia Tributaria (AEAT), un referente a nivel mundial en la lucha contra el fraude.


Dado que en España hay algo menos de 42 millones de contribuyentes (incluyendo grandes empresas y actividad aduanera), todos los días cualquiera de los pagadores a la Administración aparece dos veces en estos ingenios informáticos. No es de extrañar que a las máquinas y aplicaciones de Hacienda las bauticen con nombres de conquistadores.

Una de ellas, Orellana, aglutina en un solo punto todas las conexiones de Internet de la AEAT y hace que, hasta la fecha, sea una de las pocas administraciones que nunca ha sucumbido a un ataque hacker. No está muy claro lo que pensaría el aventurero extremeño de esta aplicación pero, gracias a su protección, Hacienda no descansa.

Es la primera administración del mundo que asume la información del IVA mensualmente
Durante la jornada laboral, las operaciones suelen ser las habituales: declaraciones de la renta, consultas, domiciliaciones ... Después, la máquina realiza cruces de información en busca del fraude. No para. Realiza unas 12.000 de estas investigaciones al día. Cada vez más ajustadas.

Y es que el Gobierno ha adquirido ordenadores que dan titubeantes pasos en la inteligencia artificial. El sistema aprende, busca pautas de comportamiento en las personas que no declaran correctamente y afila sus inspecciones. Para ello, cuenta con datos de tarjetas de créditos, compras de activos, amarres de barcos, matriculaciones de coches y un interminable etcétera.

La AEAT también se ha pertrechado con una serie de robots que aceleran el tiempo de respuesta a tiempos que fraccionan en mucho el segundo.

La sede central de todo este entramado está ubicada en la calle Santa Magdalena de Madrid. Los 3.000 metros cuadrados de la tercera planta actúan como un cerebro de dimensiones titánicas desde donde se controla a unos 26.000 funcionarios de 500 oficinas distribuidas por toda España.

El edificio cuenta con protecciones sorprendentes. Recibe suministro de dos compañías eléctricas diferentes, con dos conexiones telefónicas separadas. "Hay que evitar el efecto excavadora", señala el subdirector de Explotación de la Agencia, José Luis Arufe, en referencia a accidentes y averías externos.

Además, la instalación tiene conexiones constantes y seguras con todas las entidades financieras, las administraciones con relación con los tributos y las aduanas, entre otros. Más aún, a 20 kilómetros, hay una réplica exacta de los ordenadores de la Agencia para que no se pierda información alguna.

En total, Hacienda acumula 3.500 millones de datos de sus contribuyentes. La información almacenada es la de unos 1.000 terabytes, una unidad de medida que viene del griego tera (monstruo) y que equivale a 10 elevado a la duodécima potencia. "Es como 400 millones de volúmenes de biblias que caben en menos de una habitación", estima Arufe.

Esta cantidad se va a ver exponencialmente aumentada. La caída en la recaudación que ha traído consigo la casi recesión española ha hecho que la inspección del fraude recobre importancia. El Fisco tendrá que controlar, por ejemplo, todos los depósitos en efectivo de cualquier entidad financiera a partir de 3.000 euros. La cantidad de información generada es imponente. Sin embargo, en la AEAT la desdeñan. "Lo que nos preocupa es la devolución mensual del IVA", añade el responsable informático de la Agencia.

Esta nueva operación, que aseguran que ningún país del mundo se ha atrevido a realizar, requerirá que se analicen un máximo de 17.000 millones de facturas al mes. Hacienda afirma que está preparada. "Es como en El Principito, somos una boa que se puede tragar un elefante", teorizó. A fin de cuentas, según las estimaciones de su personal, cada año la cantidad de información aumenta a un ritmo del 30%.


Desde la AEAT consideran que el grado de eficiencia alcanzado no es cuestión de la inversión de un año puntual, sino del acumulado desde finales de los años 70 en este sentido. De momento, se grata de la Agencia con mayor presupuesto del Gobierno. Para 2009 tiene dotados 1.208,98 millones. Eso sí, un 3% menos que en el presente ejercicio.

También tiene previsto el traslado de la sede a un edificio exclusivo, diseñado ex profeso para albergar este tipo de maquinaria pesada. La idea era que el traslado fuera en 2012, aunque "ahora, con la crisis, no se sabe", añade Arufe.

Menos personal, más recaudación

Los esfuerzos de la Agencia Tributaria contra el fraude se centran cada vez más en las grandes tramas, según destaca la última memoria del organismo, donde se detecta una reducción de la plantilla en 82 personas. La memoria constata que las inspecciones de contribuyentes investigados por los mecanismos selectivos tradicionales han pasado de 33.150 a 25.670. De este modo, las grandes tramas distraen el Gobierno del control de los asalariados (ver EXPANSIÓN del 13 de septiembre).

Al mismo tiempo, al defraudador detectado se le impone mayor cantidad de multas, al menos según los datos de la cantidad económica recaudada. Para 2009, la previsión que tiene la AEAT es la de recaudar 5.900 millones, un 3% más, aunque estas cifras se dieron antes de que el Gobierno aprobara las nuevas medidas antifraude.

viernes, 5 de diciembre de 2008

International Bank Secrecy and Tax Evasion

Very interesting article appearing in November 26, 2008 in International Tax Blog (http://intltax.typepad.com/intltax_blog/2008/11/foreign-bank-secrecy-tax-evasion.html) :

"Foreign Bank Secrecy & Tax Evasion

On July 17, 2008, in conjunction with a hearing regarding Tax Haven Banks and U.S. Tax Compliance, the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the U.S. Senate released a report (the “Subcommittee Report”) that reads like a spy novel. The Subcommittee Report reviews the “global tax scandal” related to LGT Bank in Liechtenstein, and the “international tax scandal” related to UBS AG in Switzerland.

The LGT scandal erupted after a former employee of a Liechtenstein trust company provided tax authorities around the world with data on about 1,400 persons with accounts at LGT. The UBS AG scandal broke when the U.S. arrested a private banker formerly employed by UBS AG on charges of having conspired with a U.S. citizen and a business associate to defraud the IRS of $7.2 million in taxes owed on $200 million of assets hidden in offshore accounts in Switzerland and Liechtenstein.

LGT Bank in Liechtenstein
LGT Bank in Liechtenstein is owned and controlled by the royal family in Liechtenstein.

According to the Subcommittee Report:
LGT employed practices that could facilitate, and in some instances have resulted in, tax evasion by U.S. clients. These LGT practices have included maintaining U.S. client accounts which are not disclosed to U.S. tax authorities; advising U.S. clients to open accounts in the name of Liechtenstein foundations to hide their beneficial ownership of the account assets; advising clients on the use of complex offshore structures to hide ownership of assets outside of Liechtenstein; and establishing “transfer corporations” to disguise asset transfers to and from LGT accounts. It was also not unusual for LGT to assign its U.S. clients code words that they or LGT could invoke to confirm their respective identities. LGT also advised clients on how to structure their investments to avoid disclosure to the IRS . . . .

For many of its U.S. clients, LGT helped establish one or more Liechtenstein foundations. Under U.S. tax law, the IRS generally views Liechtenstein foundations as foreign trusts. U.S. persons with an interest in a foreign trust, including a Liechtenstein foundation, are required to disclose the existence of the trust to the IRS by filing Forms 3520 (Annual Return To Report Transactions With Foreign Trusts and Receipt of Certain Foreign Gifts) and 3520-A (Annual Information Return of Foreign Trust With a U.S. Owner). Financial penalties for failing to file these forms can be confiscatory.

The foundations provided strong secrecy protections and yet gave substantial control over the foundations to their beneficial owners. In one case, a U.S. citizen pretended to sell his home in New York to what appeared to be an unrelated party from Hong Kong. In fact, the buyer was a British Virgin Islands company with a Hong Kong address, and it was wholly owned by a Bahamian corporation which was, in turn, wholly owned by the U.S. citizen’s Liechtenstein foundation.

The foundations often would not name the grantor or his/her family members as beneficiaries. Instead, the foundation instruments would include a complex mechanism providing for the naming of beneficiaries. Despite these mechanisms, internal LGT documents were clear as to the the true beneficiaries of the foundation.

At times, LGT would set up for the foundation what LGT has sometimes referred to as a “transfer corporation” to help disguise asset flows into and out of a foundation’s accounts. This transfer corporation acts as a pass-through entity that breaks the direct link between the foundation and other persons with whom it is exchanging funds, making it harder to trace those funds.

A strategy employed by LGT to enhance secrecy and client anonymity was to limit the ability of outside parties to trace client communications back to Liechtenstein. To achieve this objective, LGT not only instituted a policy of retaining client mail at the bank in Liechtenstein, or sending mail to locations outside of a client’s home jurisdiction, but also undertook efforts to minimize the ability of outside parties to trace telephone calls back to the bank and even the country itself. One LGT document, for example, providing information on how to contact a client, instructed that calls should be made only from public phone booths outside of Liechtenstein.

The Subcommittee Report stated:
These LGT accounts together portray a bank whose personnel too often viewed LGT’s role as, not just a guardian of client assets or trusted financial advisor, but also a willing partner to clients wishing to hide their assets from tax authorities, creditors, and courts. In that context, bank secrecy laws have served as a cloak not only for client misconduct, but also for bank personnel colluding with clients to evade taxes, dodge creditors, and defy court orders.

UBS AG
UBS AG of Switzerland is one of the largest financial institutions in the world, and has one of the world’s largest private banks catering to wealthy individuals. From at least 2000 to 2007, UBS made a concerted effort to open accounts in Switzerland for wealthy U.S. clients, employing practices that could facilitate, and have resulted in, tax evasion by U.S. clients. These UBS practices included maintaining for an estimated 19,000 U.S. clients “undeclared” accounts in Switzerland with billions of dollars in assets that have not been disclosed to U.S. tax authorities, and assisting U.S. clients in structuring their accounts to avoid U.S. tax reporting requirements.
UBS assured its U.S. clients with undeclared accounts that U.S. authorities would not learn about them, because the bank is not required to disclose them; UBS procedures, practices and services protect against disclosure; and the account information is further shielded by Swiss bank secrecy laws. In November 2002, for example, senior officials in the UBS private banking operations in Switzerland sent a letter to U.S. clients about their Swiss accounts which states in part:
“[W]e should like to underscore that a Swiss bank which runs afoul of Swiss privacy laws will face sanctions by its Swiss regulator … [I]t must be clear that information relative to your Swiss banking relationship is as safe as ever and that the possibility of putting pressure on our U.S. units does not change anything. . . .

The Subcommittee Report indicated that UBS also provided training to its client advisors on how to detect -- and avoid – surveillance by U.S. customs agents and law enforcement officers. A UBS training document provides a series of scenarios designed to train its personnel. An excerpt from one of the scenarios is as follows:

After passing immigration desk during your trip to USA/Canada, you are intercepted by the authorities. By checking your Palm, they find all your client meetings. Fortunately you stored only very short remarks of the different meetings and no names.
As you spend around one week in the same hotel, the longer you stay there, the more you get the feeling of being observed. Sometimes you even doubt if all of the hotel employees are working for the hotel. A lot of client meetings are held in the suite of your hotel.
One morning you are intercepted by an FBI-agent. He looks for some information about one of your clients and explains to you, that your client is involved in illegal activities.

Question 1: What would you do in such a situation?

Question 2: What are the signs indicating that something is going on?

The document does not indicate UBS’ preferred responses to these questions.
The Subcommittee Report is 110 pages long and has many more details of the practices and procedures of LGT and UBS. UBS is currently under investigation by the SEC, IRS, and Department of Justice."