Month: June 2024

Is the “Mark to Market” Expatriation Tax Unconstitutional? – through the Prism of Moore

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No Court in the land has explicitly ruled on whether the “mark to market” tax under Section 877A is unconstitutional. However, many international tax minds (myself included) have doubted the ability of Congress to levy a tax on unrealized wealth in light of Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U.S. 189 (1920) and the language of the amendment ratified in 1913 to the Constitution.

The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration.

16th Amendment of the Constitution [emphasis added]:

One of the exceptional international tax minds, Professor Reuven S. Avi-Yonah has been writing a lot about this issue after submitting an amicus brief along with Professor Bret Wells to the U.S. Supreme Court (SCOTUS) in the Moore case which was decided last week. Moore v. United States, No. 22-800 (06/20/2024). Moore was not about “expatriation taxes” but rather a “mandatory repatriation tax” (“MRT”) under Section 965.

Moore argued some of the fundamental issues that lie at the core, in my view, of whether Congress has the legal authority to impose taxation (as an income tax) based upon the increased value of assets as of the date, the individual becomes a “covered expatriate”. How does the individual have any income (see, Eisner v. Macomber) by merely holding and having the same assets on the day prior to “expatriation” as the day after? No sales, no exchanges, no dispositions, no transfers, no gifting, etc. – and yet 26 U. S. C. § 877A imposes taxation on “income.”

Understanding State Income Taxes and Global Tax Planning for Expatriates (Part I of II)

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Assets and income earned in high tax states such as California and New York, are taxed very differently compared to low-tax states such as Texas, Nevada, Florida or Tennessee. Focusing on “expatriation” (e.g., renouncing USC or abandoning LPR status) of the individual might be misplaced if the person wants to live mostly in the United States. See earlier post, Form 8854 Filing: TIGTA Report Reveals Compliance Gap

To better understand how state income tax rates effect behavior, see the Tax Foundation report: Americans Moved to Low-Tax States in 2023.

Form 8854 Filing: TIGTA Report Reveals Compliance Gap

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See the “TIGTA Report”. Read it here: More Enforcement and a Centralized Compliance Effort Are Required for Expatriation Provisions 

Does TIGTA have the Answer: to the Question – How many former U.S. citizens and long-term lawful permanent residents have filed and should have filed IRS Form 8854?

The short answer to the question above – is NO!

The government does not know how many IRS Forms 8854 should have been filed.

Note the total numbers of 8854 returns filed as reported in Figure 2 of the TIGTA Report were less than 25,000 during a ten year period. This report focuses really only on former U.S. citizens (“USC”) who have renounced their citizenship. Not on lawful permanent residents (“LPRs), which during that same ten year period there were around 200,000 who filed USCIS Form I-407.

* How Many Individuals Should have Filed Form 8854?

“Covered Bequests” and “Covered Gifts”: Treasury Regulations 2801 Around the Corner?

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Tax professionals advising on tax expatriation cases in the United States have been anxiously awaiting final regulations for more than a decade. See previous post in 2014 –  Proposal to US Treasury and IRS: Await Final Regulations on “Covered Gifts” and “Covered Bequests”

See also a 2014 post,   The “Hidden Tax” of Expatriation – Section 2801 and Its “Eternal Stain.”

Now the rumor is out: Treasury and the IRS are actively working to finalize these long-awaited regulations. Coming soon . . . ?

These proposed regulations were published almost 10 years ago in 2015. Please see  Guidance under Section 2801 on the Imposition of Taxes on Certain Covered Expatriate Gifts and Bequests.

The Treasury and the IRS recently published proposed regulations related to foreign trusts. See  Transactions with Foreign Trusts and Reporting of Information on Transactions with Foreign Trusts and Large Foreign Gifts  : Rule proposed by the   Internal Revenue Service   on   05/08/2024  .

See, proposed rules –

  • § 1.6039F-1
  • § 1.6048-1
  • § 1.6048-2
  • § 1.6048-3
  • § 1.6048-4
  • § 1.6048-5
  • § 1.6048-6
  • § 1.6048-7
  • § 1.6677-1
  • § 1.643(i)-1
  • With several
  • reviews to –
  • § 1.679-1
  • § 1.679-2
  • § 1.679-3
  • § 1.679-4
  • § 1.679-5
  • § 1.679-6, and
  • § 1.679-7

These regulations are extensive and provide an explanation of the purpose of these rules.

II. Purpose of Foreign Gift and Trust Provisions

During the mid- to late-1990s, abusive tax schemes, including offshore schemes involving foreign trusts, reemerged in the United States after reaching their last peak in the 1980s. GAO, Efforts to Identify and Combat Abusive Tax Schemes Have increased, but challenges remain, GAO–02–733 (Washington, DC: May 22, 2002). In these schemes, foreign trusts were used to transfer large amounts of assets abroad, where it was much more difficult for the IRS to identify whether U.S. persons owned a trust.

interest in such trusts, and whether such persons were reporting and paying the required taxes on their income from such trusts. Many of the foreign trusts were established in tax haven jurisdictions with bank secrecy laws. Before the 1996 Act amended sections 6048 and 6677, there was no Form 3520-A), which was limited to five percent of the transfer or corpus of the trust, as applicable, not to exceed $1,000. In light of this, it was difficult for the IRS to obtain information about income earned by U.S.-owned foreign trusts and distributions to U.S. beneficiaries from foreign trusts, and Sections 6048 and 6677 were generally ineffective in ensuring that U.S. persons provided this information. information. The result was “rampant tax evasion.” 141 Cong. Rec. S13859 (daily edition of September 19, 1995) (comments by Senator Moynihan). Requirement for U.S. Persons to Report Distributions from Foreign Trusts and the Penalty for Failure to Report Transfers to a Foreign Trust or an Annual Foreign Trust Information Statement (in Federal Register/Vol. 89, No. 90/Wednesday, May 8 of 2024/Proposed Rules and 141 Cong. Rec. S13859 (daily edition of September 19, 1995) (comments by Senator Moynihan).