From Senator Carl Levin's office:
Levin Unveils Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act
Bill to Close Offshore Tax Loopholes, Raise Revenue, and Keep Profits and Jobs in U.S.
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
WASHINGTON – Stating that “Uncle Sam can’t afford offshore tax abuses that are robbing the Treasury of $100 billion in lost revenue yearly and increasing the tax burden on honest, hardworking Americans,” Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., together with cosponsors Senator Bill Nelson, Sanders, Shaheen, and Whitehouse, today introduced legislation to close offshore tax loopholes and strengthen offshore tax enforcement.
Read a summary of the bill here. Read Levin's floor statement on the introduction of the bill here.
“Offshore tax abuses are not only undermining public confidence in our tax system, but increasing the tax burden on middle America,” said Levin. “People are sick and tired of tax dodgers using offshore trickery and abusive tax shelters to avoid paying their fair share. This bill offers powerful new tools to combat offshore and tax shelter abuses, raise revenues, and eliminate incentives to send U.S. profits and jobs offshore. Its provisions, which can help stop the $100 billion per year drain on the Treasury, will hopefully be part of any deficit reduction package this year, but should be passed in any event.”
The bill, entitled the Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act, is supported by a wide array of small business, labor, and public interest groups, including the Financial Accountability and Corporate Transparency (FACT) Coalition, American Sustainable Business Council, Business for Shared Prosperity, Main Street Alliance, AFL-CIO, SEIU, Citizens for Tax Justice, Tax Justice Network-USA, U.S. Public Interest Research Group, Global Financial Integrity, Global Witness, Jubilee USA, and Public Citizen.
The bill is a product of the investigative work of the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations which Levin chairs. Over the years, the Subcommittee has conducted multiple inquiries into offshore abuses, including the use of offshore corporations and trusts to hide assets, the use of tax haven banks to set up secret accounts, and the use of U.S. bankers, lawyers, accountants and other professionals to devise and conduct abusive tax shelters.
The 112th Congress is the fifth Congress in which Levin has introduced a comprehensive bill to combat offshore and tax shelter abuses. A number of provisions from past bills have made it into law, such as measures to curb abusive foreign trusts, close offshore dividend tax loopholes, and strengthen penalties on tax shelter promoters. Levin’s efforts also helped spur enactment of the Baucus-Rangel Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) to increase detection of hidden offshore accounts. President Obama, when he was a member of the Senate, cosponsored Levin offshore tax bills in 2005 and 2007. Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas), joined by multiple cosponsors, has introduced House companion bills in the past and will do so again.
“It is long past time to take effective action to stop offshore tax dodging.” said Doggett, senior member of the House Ways and Means and Budget Committees. “Revenue lost to these tax avoidance schemes contributes to the soaring budget deficit and increases the burden on small businesses, families, and others who play by the rules.”
The 61-page Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act contains a host of measures to combat offshore and tax shelter abuses. The first section would authorize the Treasury Secretary to take special measures against foreign jurisdictions or financial institutions that impede U.S. tax enforcement. The next section would create rebuttable presumptions to help the IRS establish ownership and control of offshore entities. The third section would stop corporations whose management and control are located primarily in the United States from claiming status as foreign corporations, instead treating them as domestic corporations for tax purposes.
Another provision would close an existing tax loophole that allows credit default swap (CDS) payments to escape taxation if sent from the United States to persons offshore, such as an offshore hedge fund or foreign bank. The bill would close this CDS loophole by treating CDS payments sent offshore from the United States as taxable U.S. source income.
Another provision would address U.S. dollars and other assets that are supposedly kept offshore by foreign subsidiaries of U.S. corporations but, in reality, are deposited into accounts physically located in the United States. The bill would deem the funds deposited into U.S. accounts as taxable distributions by the foreign subsidiaries to their U.S. parents.
Still another provision would increase publicly available information about multinational corporations by requiring them to include basic information on a country-by-country basis in their filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission to increase transparency and facilitate IRS inquiries into transfer pricing, foreign tax credits, and abusive offshore tax shelters.
In addition, the bill would strengthen penalties on tax shelter promoters and aider and abettors of tax evasion by increasing the maximum fine to 150% of any ill-gotten gains. A more detailed bill summary is available here.
The full Act is
here (hat tip: Clark Gascoigne). See also coverage of Levin's releases by
Business for Shared Prosperity, which also has a petition; see Senator Kent Conrad's
floor speech, and see also this, below, from
Tax Justice Network USA:
Bill Introduced to Close Tax Loopholes, Raise Revenue and
Keep Profits and Jobs in U.S.
Washington – Given the heated debate surrounding the budget and deficit reduction, the introduction of a comprehensive bill to permanently close tax loopholes puts specific proposals to raise revenues on the table.
The Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act, introduced by Senator Carl Levin (D-MI) today, would put new restrictions on the use of offshore tax havens to avoid and evade federal taxes. Some of the key provisions include taxing foreign corporations that primarily do business in the U.S. as domestic corporations and requiring annual country-by-country reporting by SEC-registered corporations related to their employees, sales, purchases, financing arrangements, and taxes.
For a summary of the bill, click here.
This bill is supported by the Financial Accountability and Corporate Transparency (FACT) coalition, which includes a broad range of organizations with an interest in seeing the loopholes closed due to their impact on jobs, critical programs, small businesses, human rights, corruption and national security.
“At a time when Congress and the Administration are wringing their hands to come up with ways to address the deficit, this bill offers specific ways to not only raise revenue, but also level the playing field for small businesses and fix a broken tax system that facilitates job loss, crime and economic devastation,” said Nicole Tichon, a founding member of the FACT coalition and Executive Director of Tax Justice Network USA. “Any discussion of fiscal responsibility cannot stop at our shores and should include both sides of the ledger. This is a proposal that all taxpayers can get behind.”
See also
this, from Global Witness. See what
US Uncut had to say. Doubtless there'll be many others.
2 Comments:
What is the likelihood of the Levin bill actually becoming law?
Would be good (and less hypocritic) if they would also propose a Bill to stop tax evasion through US LLCs. But maybe there not aiming to improve the world but just the US budget.
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