The Center for Freedom and Prosperity has issued a commentary on the dilemma facing the US after the World Trade Organisation (WTO) struck down its 'foreign sales corporation' tax break legislation.
Last week, says the CFP, the World Trade Organization sided with the European Union and ruled that a section of U.S. tax law is an unfair trade subsidy. According to the Geneva-based institution, America's treatment of corporate income from exports (as governed by ETI - the Extraterritorial Income Exclusion Act) violates trade rules.
In many ways, this is a troubling decision. Most importantly, a dangerous precedent has been established. What happens, for instance, when the French argue that America's low tax rates are an export subsidy? As the Wall Street Journal stated on January 17, "Once tax policy is on the table, there's no end to what the WTO might meddle in. Which may be exactly what some Europeans want. Saddled with their own anti-competitive, high-tax regimes, they'd love to use the global trade bureaucracy to force Britain, the U.S. and other lower-tax countries to become just as uncompetitive. This is an offer the U.S. can refuse."
The decision also reeks of hypocrisy and double standards. The WTO has decided that America cannot choose how to tax certain types of income, but European governments are allowed to rebate the value-added tax (which can reach 25 percent) on exported goods.
In the final analysis, however, the WTO decision is good news. Why? Because
the WTO has given U.S. policy makers a reason to junk worldwide taxation of
corporate income and instead implement a territorial tax system. A territorial
system is based on the common-sense notion that a government should impose tax
only on income earned inside its borders, which is in stark contrast to a worldwide
system that imposes tax on income earned in other jurisdictions. Territorial
taxation is good tax policy for several reasons:
The Bush Administration already has issued some very positive statements about territorial taxation, as have important lawmakers such as Ways & Means Chairman Bill Thomas. These officials should not hesitate to turn these good words into concrete action. Territorial taxation is pro-tax reform and pro-competitive. It also is the only reasonable response to the WTO. The only other two options - repealing ETI, which would impose a big tax increase on U.S. export-oriented companies, and doing nothing, which would allow the European Union to slap steep tariffs on a wide range of American exports - are clearly not very attractive.
Shifting to a territorial system is the only good response to the most recent WTO decision. Best of all, it will be a fitting revenge against the tax-harmonizing bureaucrats at the European Union. The EU began this attack on our tax code in hopes of forcing America to raise corporate taxes and become less competitive. But if U.S. lawmakers shift to territorial taxation, the Brussels-based paper-pushers will have given us lemons and we will have turned them into lemonade.
.
|
Archive | Resources | Partners | Site Map | Links | Newsletter Archive | Contact | RSS Feeds | About | Syndication | Advertising & Marketing | Recruitment | Terms & Conditions | Privacy & Cookies
Copyright © 2012 - All Rights Reserved - Tax-News.com
IMPORTANT NOTICE: Tax-News.com has taken reasonable care in sourcing and presenting the information contained on this site, but accepts no responsibility for any financial or other loss or damage that may result from its use. In particular, users of the site are advised to take appropriate professional advice before committing themselves to involvement in offshore jurisdictions, offshore trusts or offshore investments.
Write a comment