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Taxation-Federal

2007

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Articles 31 - 60 of 68

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Theory And Practice Of Tax Reform, Lawrence Zelenak Apr 2007

The Theory And Practice Of Tax Reform, Lawrence Zelenak

Michigan Law Review

On January 7, 2005, President Bush-flush with recent electoral victory- issued an Executive Order creating the President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform. The Order instructed the bipartisan Panel to recommend one or more plans for major reform of the federal income tax. The president did not, however, permit the Panel to begin its work on a blank slate. Instead, the Order required (among other things) that the Panel's proposals be revenue-neutral, simpler than current law, "appropriately progressive," and supportive of homeownership and charity. Although the Order contemplated that the Panel might offer more than one tax reform plan, it …


Ethics And Standards Of Tax Practice In The New Age Of Transparency: From Self-Assessment To Self-Audit, Emily A. Parker, Robert D. Probasco Mar 2007

Ethics And Standards Of Tax Practice In The New Age Of Transparency: From Self-Assessment To Self-Audit, Emily A. Parker, Robert D. Probasco

Robert Probasco

No abstract provided.


Taxing The Disabled: The Irs, The Insurance Industry, And The Disability Waiver Of Premium Rider, Andrew Strelka Mar 2007

Taxing The Disabled: The Irs, The Insurance Industry, And The Disability Waiver Of Premium Rider, Andrew Strelka

Richmond Public Interest Law Review

The disability waiver of premium rider is an optional addition to life insurance policies that waives subsequent annual premiums in the event the policyholder becomes disabled. Wong Wing Non v. Commissioner, the leading opinion on the taxation of the disability waiver, has been misconstrued to create scenarios where disabled policy holders are subjected to taxes they would not have otherwise incurred without the disability waiver. This comment argues for a different interpretation of Wong Wing Non and proposes legislation as an alternative challenge to current taxation policies.


Lecture, 21st Century Challenges For Tax Policy Makers And Tax Administrators, Hugh Ault Feb 2007

Lecture, 21st Century Challenges For Tax Policy Makers And Tax Administrators, Hugh Ault

Hugh J. Ault

No abstract provided.


Time To Step Up: Modeling The African American Ethnivestor For Self Help Entrepreneurship In Urban America, Roger M. Groves Feb 2007

Time To Step Up: Modeling The African American Ethnivestor For Self Help Entrepreneurship In Urban America, Roger M. Groves

ExpressO

Almost $6 billion in taxes paid by the American people have been rather ubiquitously placed in the hands of a federal subsidy program for investors in low income communities. The subsidy is in the form of a tax credit. The program is entitled the New Markets Tax Credit (“NMTC”) initiative. Under the program, the tax credit is used to lure investors to provide equity capital into low income areas, urban and/or rural (i.e. a new market for equity funding). According to my companion law review article (Florida Tax Review, Spring, 2007; The Florida Tax Review was ranked 1st among tax …


Comments On Proposed Regulations On Reportable Transactions, Robert D. Probasco, M. Todd Welty, Brandy N. Williams, Stephen A. Beck Jan 2007

Comments On Proposed Regulations On Reportable Transactions, Robert D. Probasco, M. Todd Welty, Brandy N. Williams, Stephen A. Beck

Robert Probasco

These comments are presented on behalf of the Section of Taxation of the State Bar of Texas. The principal drafters of these comments were M. Todd Welty, Robert D Probasco. Brandy N .. Williams, and Stephen A.. Beck.. The Committee on Government Submissions ("COGS") of the Section of Taxation of the State Bar of Texas has approved these comments. Patrick O'Daniel is the Chair of COGS and the other members of COGS include Paul Asofky, Stanley Blend, Vester Hughes, Emily Parker and Steve Salch.

Although many of the people who participated in preparing, reviewing and approving these comments have clients …


Imagining A Progressive And Comprehensive Consumption Tax, Sean K. Raft Jan 2007

Imagining A Progressive And Comprehensive Consumption Tax, Sean K. Raft

ExpressO

The income tax system has become quite a mess. Unfortunately, the brunt of that mess falls primarily on the backs of the individual taxpayer, who is required to sift through the tens of thousands of pages of instructions and tax rules just to calculate, file, and pay what they owe. The filing burden and costs of compliance are already exorbitant, but they are only increasing.

In response to the complaints over the increasing complication, economists and tax scholars have imagined ways to improve or replace the income tax. Yet, the alternatives are either regressive or fail to generate enough revenue …


Fiction, Form, And Substance In Subchapter K: Taxing Partnership Mergers, Divisions, And Incorporations, Heather M. Field Jan 2007

Fiction, Form, And Substance In Subchapter K: Taxing Partnership Mergers, Divisions, And Incorporations, Heather M. Field

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Sunset Provisions In The Tax Code: A Critical Evaluation And Prescriptions For The Future, Manoj Viswanathan Jan 2007

Sunset Provisions In The Tax Code: A Critical Evaluation And Prescriptions For The Future, Manoj Viswanathan

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Taxing Emotional Distress Recoveries: Does Murphy Show The Way?, Kaushal P. Mahaseth Jan 2007

Taxing Emotional Distress Recoveries: Does Murphy Show The Way?, Kaushal P. Mahaseth

LLM Theses and Essays

The taxability of recoveries of damages on account of emotional distress remains a complicated issue under the American federal income tax law. Recent developments due to a controversial decision by the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals have further added fuel to this debate. Even if one were to argue the justifications of exempting such recoveries from income taxation, courts do not appear to be the very appropriate kind of forum. Congress can, and in fact does tax such recoveries and the constitutional basis of such power can hardly be doubted. As a result, appropriate changes in the statute only can …


A Consumption Tax Versus A Federal Income Tax In The United States, Shelly-Ann R. Tomlinson Jan 2007

A Consumption Tax Versus A Federal Income Tax In The United States, Shelly-Ann R. Tomlinson

LLM Theses and Essays

This thesis makes a comparison between a consumption tax and the current Federal Income Tax in order to establish which would be fairer, simpler, more efficient and feasible for the United States. Issues such as which of the two tax systems would be easier to apply, and which would yield enough revenue for the fiscal budget are addressed. The thesis argues that a consumption tax would be more suitable for the United States and in particular makes reference to the Fair Tax plan which is a proposal to replace the current federal income tax with a national retail sales tax. …


Tax Evasion Confusion In The Ninth Circuit, Kimberly Stanley Jan 2007

Tax Evasion Confusion In The Ninth Circuit, Kimberly Stanley

Publications

It is well settled that the crime of tax evasion under IRC §7201 has three fundamental elements. The statute requires the government to prove (1) the existence of a tax deficiency, (2) willfulness in the attempted evasion of taxes, and (3) an affirmative act constituting an evasion or attempted evasion. However, two recent Ninth Circuit tax evasion cases have muddied the waters – resulting in opposite outcomes – and have tax practitioners questioning the court’s reasoning.


Taxing Risk: An Approach To Variable Insurance Reform, Charlene Luke Jan 2007

Taxing Risk: An Approach To Variable Insurance Reform, Charlene Luke

UF Law Faculty Publications

Variable life insurance and annuity contracts are susceptible to being marketed and sold to taxpayers for whom such contracts are unsuitable and to being used in wraparound insurance shelters. As a method of addressing these problems, I propose current taxation for the risky returns on these contracts but continued deferral for a deemed, risk-free return amount. The increased transparency resulting from the forced separate tax accounting of contract components should improve consumers' ability to receive adequate suitability evaluations and may also lead to lower fees. Current taxation of risk-related returns removes an apparently key shelter incentive and should make it …


Taxing The Disabled: The Irs, The Insurance Industry, And The Disability Waiver Of Premium Rider, Andrew Strelka Jan 2007

Taxing The Disabled: The Irs, The Insurance Industry, And The Disability Waiver Of Premium Rider, Andrew Strelka

Richmond Journal of Law and the Public Interest

This Comment discusses the current tax methods being applied to the disability waiver of premium rider, an optional addition to life insurance policies' that waives subsequent annual premiums in the event the policyholder becomes disabled. This Comment will show that the seminal case regarding the taxation of disability waiver of premium riders, Estate of Wong Wing Non v. Commissioner, has been misconstrued by both the IRS and the insurance industry. This has allowed for the existence of two scenarios where a disabled policyholder is subjected to an unexpected tax liability he would have avoided but for the onset of disability. …


Compaq Redux: Implicit Taxes And The Question Of Pre-Tax Profit, Michael S. Knoll Jan 2007

Compaq Redux: Implicit Taxes And The Question Of Pre-Tax Profit, Michael S. Knoll

All Faculty Scholarship

This paper takes a new look at the cross-border dividend-stripping transactions that gave rise to the Fifth Circuit’s opinion in Compaq v. Commissioner and the Eighth Circuit’s opinion in IES Industries v. Commissioner. In both cases, the circuit courts held for the taxpayers and rejected the Commissioner’s claim that the transactions lacked economic substance because the taxpayers were sure to lose money on the transactions before taxes. These cases generated extensive commentary that was split into two diametrically opposed camps. One group argued that the decisions were correct because the transactions were economically profitable business transactions. The other group argued …


Why Pension Funding Matters, Eric D. Chason Jan 2007

Why Pension Funding Matters, Eric D. Chason

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Recent Developments In Federal Income Taxation: The Year 2006, Ira B. Shepard, Martin J. Mcmahon Jr. Jan 2007

Recent Developments In Federal Income Taxation: The Year 2006, Ira B. Shepard, Martin J. Mcmahon Jr.

UF Law Faculty Publications

This recent developments outline discusses, and provides context to understand the significance of, the most important judicial decisions and administrative rulings and regulations promulgated by the Internal Revenue Service and Treasury Department during 2006 - and sometimes a little farther back in time if we find the item particularly humorous or outrageous. Most Treasury Regulations, however, are so complex that they cannot be discussed in detail and, anyway, only a devout masochist would read them all the way through; just the basic topic and fundamental principles are highlighted. Amendments to the Internal Revenue Code generally are not discussed except to …


Can The Irs Silence Religious Organizations, Meghan J. Ryan Jan 2007

Can The Irs Silence Religious Organizations, Meghan J. Ryan

Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters

In the years following the 2004 presidential election, the Los Angeles Times reported that the Internal Revenue Service threatened revoking the tax-exempt status of the All Saints Episcopal Church in Pasadena because during a 2004 sermon, a church rector stated that he opposed the Vietnam and Gulf wars and that Jesus would have disapproved of the Bush Administration's preemptive war doctrine. The rector did not tell his parishioners who to support in the 2004 election, however. This threat of revoking an organization's tax-exempt status is just one example of the IRS's recent and unprecedented aggressiveness in seeking out violations of …


Financial Accounting And Corporate Behavior, David I. Walker Jan 2007

Financial Accounting And Corporate Behavior, David I. Walker

Faculty Scholarship

The power of financial accounting to shape corporate behavior is underappreciated. Positive accounting theory teaches that even cosmetic changes in reported earnings can affect share value, not because market participants are unable to see through such changes to the underlying fundamentals, but because of implicit or explicit contracts that are based on reported earnings and transaction costs. However, agency theory suggests that accounting choices and corporate responses to accounting standard changes will not necessarily be those that maximize share value. For a number of reasons, including the fact that executive compensation often is tied to reported earnings, managerial preferences for …


The Patent Office Is Promoting Shocking New Tax Loopholes—Should The Empire Strike Back?, William A. Drennan Jan 2007

The Patent Office Is Promoting Shocking New Tax Loopholes—Should The Empire Strike Back?, William A. Drennan

Oklahoma Law Review

No abstract provided.


Hand-Holding, Brow-Beating, And Shaming Into Compliance, Craig A. Max Iv Jan 2007

Hand-Holding, Brow-Beating, And Shaming Into Compliance, Craig A. Max Iv

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

Tax authorities and policy planners have a variety of tools at their disposal to create mechanisms to encourage and enforce compliance with revenue collection systems. Traditionally, these mechanisms include the possibility of criminal prosecution as well as civil pecuniary sanctions. Despite the dominate role that prosecution and pecuniary sanctions hold internationally, there exists a range of alternative enforcement mechanisms utilized. The United States has recently started to implement nonpecuniary enforcement devices to achieve policy goals, namely the encouragement of participating with the federal taxing system. This Note attempts to take an initial step into exploring the range of international enforcement …


Tax Consequences When A New Employer Bears The Cost Of The Employee's Terminating A Prior Employment Relationship, Douglas A. Kahn, Jeffrey H. Kahn Jan 2007

Tax Consequences When A New Employer Bears The Cost Of The Employee's Terminating A Prior Employment Relationship, Douglas A. Kahn, Jeffrey H. Kahn

Articles

The next few months will be busy ones for moving companies that have NCAA basketball coaches as customers. In the past few months, several men's college basketball coaches have accepted jobs at different schools. Several of those coaches, who were still under contract at their former institution, had buy out provisions that allowed them to terminate their relationship for a set price. John Beilein is a prominent example of this since his buy out price was so high. Last season, Beilein was the head basketball coach at West Virginia University where he was under contract with the school until 2012. …


The Theory And Practice Of Tax Reform, Lawrence A. Zelenak Jan 2007

The Theory And Practice Of Tax Reform, Lawrence A. Zelenak

Faculty Scholarship

Reviewing, President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform, Simple, Fair, and Pro-Growth: Proposals to Fix America's Tax System (2005).By The President’s Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform. 2005. Available at: http://www.taxreformpanel.gov/final-report/


Justice Holmes, Ralph Kramden, And The Civic Virtues Of A Tax Return Filing Requirement, Lawrence A. Zelenak Jan 2007

Justice Holmes, Ralph Kramden, And The Civic Virtues Of A Tax Return Filing Requirement, Lawrence A. Zelenak

Faculty Scholarship

A major goal of some tax reform proponents is the elimination of the return filing requirement for many or all Americans. Although the President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform heard several hours of testimony concerning the possibility of a "return-free" income tax system, the Report of the Panel failed even to discuss the issue. This Article contends that the Panel was right to recommend (by implication) the retention of a return-based tax system, given the Panel's recommendations for major tax simplification. As long as the return filing obligation is not unduly burdensome which it would not be under the …


Charitable Ira Gifts In 2007, Christopher R. Hoyt Jan 2007

Charitable Ira Gifts In 2007, Christopher R. Hoyt

Faculty Works

No abstract provided.


Fifth Circuit Survey: Taxation, Michael Hatfield Jan 2007

Fifth Circuit Survey: Taxation, Michael Hatfield

Articles

During the survey period, the Fifth Circuit decided nine federal tax cases. Four of the nine cases were appealed from district courts. The remaining five were appealed from the Tax Court. Three of the Tax Court's five decisions (60%) were affirmed, and three of the four district court decisions (75%) were affirmed. Thus, the Fifth Circuit affirmed most of the lower court decisions (66%). Interestingly, only three of the decisions (33%) favored the taxpayer—EC Term of Years Trust v. United States; Garber Industries, Inc. v. Commissioner; and Estate of Baird v. Commissioner—even though the Fifth Circuit …


A Republic Of The Mind: Cognitive Biases, Fiscal Federalism, And Section 164 Of The Tax Code, Brian Galle Jan 2007

A Republic Of The Mind: Cognitive Biases, Fiscal Federalism, And Section 164 Of The Tax Code, Brian Galle

Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works

In its efforts to guide money to the states, our federal government annually passes up more than $75 billion in potential revenue under a single provision of the Tax Code. That provision, section 164 of the Code, allows itemizing taxpayers to deduct the cost of the state and local income, property, and (to a limited extent) sales taxes they paid during the tax year. The eye-popping size of that number makes section 164 a perennial issue in tax policy circles, and as one of the deductions omitted from the Alternative Minimum Tax's (AMT) parallel tax universe, the section is also …


Corporate Taxation And International Competition, James R. Hines Jr. Jan 2007

Corporate Taxation And International Competition, James R. Hines Jr.

Book Chapters

Many countries tax corporate income heavily despite the incentives that they face to reduce tax rates in order to attract greater investment, particularly investment from foreign sources. The volume of world foreign direct investment (FDI) has grown enormously since 1980, thereby increasing a country's ability to attract significant levels of new investment by reducing corporate taxation. The evidence indicates, however, that corporate tax collections are remarkably persistent relative to gross domestic product ( GDP), government revenues, or other indicators of underlying economic activity or government need. If this were not true- if corporate income taxation were rapidly disappearing around the …


Commentary, Reuven S. Avi-Yonah Jan 2007

Commentary, Reuven S. Avi-Yonah

Book Chapters

David Rosenbloom has delivered an important lecture on an important topic: whether exploiting differences between the tax system of two different jurisdictions to minimize the taxes paid to either or both ("international tax arbitrage") is a problem, and if so, whether anything can be done about it in a world without a "world tax organization." As Rosenbloom states, international tax arbitrage is "the planning focus of the future," and recently has been the focus of considerable discussion and debate (for example, upon the promulgation and subsequent withdrawal under fire of Notice 98-11). Rosenbloom's lecture is one of the first attempts …


Why Was The U.S. Corporate Tax Enacted In 1909?, Reuven S. Avi-Yonah Jan 2007

Why Was The U.S. Corporate Tax Enacted In 1909?, Reuven S. Avi-Yonah

Book Chapters

This chapter argues that the principal reason the US adopted the corporate tax in 1909 was to regulate corporate managerial power, and that in this regard the 1909 tax differed both from the 1894 corporate tax and from current conceptions of the tax as an indirect tax on corporation’s shareholders.

The United States has had a corporate income tax since 1909. Currently, this tax is under significant criticism, with several academics and practitioners calling for its abolition. It therefore seems appropriate in this context to try to determine what led to the enactment of this tax, and whether the original …