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Washington and Lee Law Review

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Full-Text Articles in Tax Law

Tax Reporting As Regulation Of Digital Financial Markets, Young Ran (Christine) Kim Jul 2023

Tax Reporting As Regulation Of Digital Financial Markets, Young Ran (Christine) Kim

Washington and Lee Law Review

FTX’s recent collapse highlights the overall instability that blockchain assets and digital financial markets face. While the use of blockchain technology and crypto assets is widely prevalent, the associated market is still largely unregulated, and the future of digital asset regulation is also unclear. The lack of clarity and regulation has led to public distrust and has called for more dedicated regulation of digital assets. Among those regulatory efforts, tax policy plays an important role. This Essay introduces comprehensive regulatory frameworks for blockchain-based assets that have been introduced globally and domestically, and it shows that tax reporting is the key …


Fake News And The Tax Law, Kathleen Delaney Thomas, Erin Scharff Apr 2023

Fake News And The Tax Law, Kathleen Delaney Thomas, Erin Scharff

Washington and Lee Law Review

The public misunderstands many aspects of the tax system. For example, people frequently misunderstand how marginal tax rates work, misperceive their own average tax rates, and believe they benefit from tax deductions for which they are ineligible. Such confusion is understandable given the complexity of our tax laws. Unfortunately, research suggests these misconceptions shape voter preferences about tax policy which, in turn, impact the policies themselves.

That people are easily confused by taxes is nothing new. With the rise of social media platforms, however, the speed at which misinformation campaigns can now move to shape public opinion is far faster. …


The Surprising Significance Of De Minimis Tax Rules, Leigh Osofsky, Kathleen Delaney Thomas Apr 2021

The Surprising Significance Of De Minimis Tax Rules, Leigh Osofsky, Kathleen Delaney Thomas

Washington and Lee Law Review

De minimis tax rules—rules that eliminate tax burdens for low-income taxpayers or low-dollar transactions—abound in the tax law. Despite the prevalence of such rules, legal scholarship has treated them as—well—de minimis, or as mere rounding errors that do not merit sustained attention. This perspective is understandable. If de minimis rules address insignificant taxpayers or tax liabilities, aren’t the rules themselves likely to be insignificant?

Recent tax law developments have revealed that this conception of de minimis tax rules is deeply misguided. Major allocations of tax law liability, as well as accompanying questions about the fairness, efficiency, and administrability of the …


Taxation Of Electronic Gaming, Bryan T. Camp Apr 2020

Taxation Of Electronic Gaming, Bryan T. Camp

Washington and Lee Law Review

At a doctrinal level, the subject of this Article is timely. During this time of the coronavirus pandemic, casinos have been closed and large populations have been subject to stay-home orders from local and state authorities. One can reasonably expect a large increase in electronic gaming and thus an increased need for proper consideration of its taxation. This Article argues for a cash-out rule of taxation.

At a deeper level, the subject of this Article is timeless. Tax law is wickedly complex for a reason. This Article explores that complexity using the example of electronic gaming. It grapples with the …


Collaboration Theory And Corporate Tax Avoidance, Eric C. Chaffee May 2019

Collaboration Theory And Corporate Tax Avoidance, Eric C. Chaffee

Washington and Lee Law Review

This Article argues that aggressive corporate tax avoidance is legally impermissible based upon the essential nature of the corporate form. The history of the debate over the essential nature of the corporation is substantial. This debate has been reinvigorated by the Supreme Court’s recent opinions, Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission and Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., which explore the scope of corporate rights.


The Practice And Tax Consequences Of Nonqualified Deferred Compensation, David I. Walker Feb 2019

The Practice And Tax Consequences Of Nonqualified Deferred Compensation, David I. Walker

Washington and Lee Law Review

Although nonqualified deferred compensation plans lack explicit tax preferences afforded to qualified plans, it is well understood that nonqualified deferred compensation results in a joint tax advantage when employers earn a higher after-tax return on deferred sums than employees could achieve on their own. But the joint tax advantage depends critically on how plans are operated; chiefly how plan sponsors use or invest deferred compensation dollars. This is the first Article to systematically investigate nonqualified deferred compensation practices. It shows that joint tax minimization historically has taken a backseat to accounting priorities and participant diversification concerns. In recent years, the …


In Or Out: How To Treat Foreign Taxes Under The Economic Substance Doctrine, Roland Hartung Apr 2018

In Or Out: How To Treat Foreign Taxes Under The Economic Substance Doctrine, Roland Hartung

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Federal Law Of Property: The Case Of Inheritance Disclaimers And Tenancy By The Entireties, David Gray Carlson Jan 2018

The Federal Law Of Property: The Case Of Inheritance Disclaimers And Tenancy By The Entireties, David Gray Carlson

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


Super - Liens To The Rescue? A Case Against Special Districts In Real Estate Finance, Christopher K. Odinet Mar 2015

Super - Liens To The Rescue? A Case Against Special Districts In Real Estate Finance, Christopher K. Odinet

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


Five-Star Exclusion: Modern Silicon Valley Companies Are Pushing The Limits Of Section 119 By Providing Tax-Free Meals To Employees , Austin L. Lomax Jun 2014

Five-Star Exclusion: Modern Silicon Valley Companies Are Pushing The Limits Of Section 119 By Providing Tax-Free Meals To Employees , Austin L. Lomax

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


Enforcement As Substance In Tax Compliance , Leandra Lederman, Ted Sichelman Jun 2013

Enforcement As Substance In Tax Compliance , Leandra Lederman, Ted Sichelman

Washington and Lee Law Review

It is well known that the government’s complete failure to enforce a law can nullify that law. But what are the effects of partial enforcement? This Article shows that imperfect enforcement can alter the de facto content of the written law in predictable and beneficial ways. Specifically, in the tax compliance context, even if perfect enforcement were costless, it would not always be socially optimal. When improving the substantive law is infeasible, th e enforcement agency can effect beneficial changes in the law by adopting a probabilistic enforcement scheme that varies according to the category of taxpayer and type of …


Fatca: Toward A Multilateral Automatic Information Reporting Regime, Joanna Heiberg Jun 2012

Fatca: Toward A Multilateral Automatic Information Reporting Regime, Joanna Heiberg

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


What Are We-Laborers, Factories, Or Spare Parts? The Tax Treatment Of Transfers Of Human Body Materials, Lisa Milot Jun 2010

What Are We-Laborers, Factories, Or Spare Parts? The Tax Treatment Of Transfers Of Human Body Materials, Lisa Milot

Washington and Lee Law Review

Transfers of human body materials are ubiquitous. From surrogacy arrangements, to sales of eggs, sperm and plasma to clinics, to black markets for kidneys, to pleas for donations of body materials, these transfers are covered and debated daily in popular and academic discourse. The associated philosophical and legal issues have been explored by a wide range of commentators. The appropriate tax treatment of these transactions, however, is mostly unexamined. Current Law is unclear about what the tax consequences of these transfers are. There are no statutory provisions directly on point, Internal Revenue Service guidance is outdated and conflicting, and the …


Sticky Copyrights: Discriminatory Tax Restraints On The Transfer Of Intellectual Property, Bridget J. Crawford, Mitchell M. Gans Jan 2010

Sticky Copyrights: Discriminatory Tax Restraints On The Transfer Of Intellectual Property, Bridget J. Crawford, Mitchell M. Gans

Washington and Lee Law Review

This Article focuses on the federal estate and gift tax treatment of copyright termination rights. The ability of a creative individual to terminate prior copyright transfers serves to protect against economic exploitation. Once a copyright's value has been established in the marketplace, the author (or the author's heirs) enjoys a "second look" at the gi, sale, license or other transfer of a copyright. But copyright termination rights-intended to enhance the economic well-being of authors and artists-undermine estate planning strategies available to owners of other types of property. There is no policy justification for such discrimination, and so this Article proposes …


The Impossible Student Exception To Fica Taxation And Its Applicability To Medical Residents, Patrick Timothy Rowe Jun 2009

The Impossible Student Exception To Fica Taxation And Its Applicability To Medical Residents, Patrick Timothy Rowe

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


Tax Fairness, Brian Galle Sep 2008

Tax Fairness, Brian Galle

Washington and Lee Law Review

This Article argues that, contrary to the consensus of economists and many legal scholars, the norm of "horizontal equity" in taxation has independent meaning as a default rule in favor of existing arrangements. Although it has long been said, and widely thought, that tax should be fair in its dealings with individuals who are situated similarly to one another, no one has been able to say convincingly just what that fairness comprises. As a result, the learned referees in the last major dispute over the significance of horizontal equity judged that fairness's critic had decidedly won the day. Since then, …


Taxing Nonprofits Out Of Business, Diane L. Fahey Mar 2005

Taxing Nonprofits Out Of Business, Diane L. Fahey

Washington and Lee Law Review

In the last twenty years, the number of nonprofit organizations has exploded; there are more than 1.2 million organizations registered with the Internal Revenue Service. Donations and government grants have decreased, while at the same time, nonprofits are facing increasing demands on their services. As a result, nonprofit organizations have been forced to devise new strategies for acquiring funds. Some nonprofit organizations have resorted to renting their mailing lists to businesses and other nonprofit organizations and have licensed their names and logos to be displayed on affinity credit cards offered by banks to consumers. Nonprofit organizations have argued that these …


Tax, Corporate Governance, And Norms, Steven A. Bank Jun 2004

Tax, Corporate Governance, And Norms, Steven A. Bank

Washington and Lee Law Review

This Article examines the use of federal tax provisions to effect changes in state law corporate governance. There is a growing academic controversy over these provisions, fueled in part by their popularity among legislators as a method of addressing the recent spate of corporate scandals. As a case study on the use of tax to regulate corporate governance, this paper compares and contrasts two measures enacted during the New Deal-the enactment of the undistributed profits tax in 1936 and the overhaul of the tax-free reorganization provisions in 1934-and considers why the former was so much more controversial and less sustainable …


Retirement Security Through Asset Protection: The Evolution Of Wealth, Privilege, And Policy, John K. Eason Jan 2004

Retirement Security Through Asset Protection: The Evolution Of Wealth, Privilege, And Policy, John K. Eason

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


Life After Death? The Role Of Postmortem Events In Valuing Deductions For Claims Against Estates, Benjamin Clark Brown Mar 2003

Life After Death? The Role Of Postmortem Events In Valuing Deductions For Claims Against Estates, Benjamin Clark Brown

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


A Requiem For The Rollover Rule: Capital Gains, Farmland Loss, And The Law Of Unintended Consequences, Christine A. Klein Mar 1998

A Requiem For The Rollover Rule: Capital Gains, Farmland Loss, And The Law Of Unintended Consequences, Christine A. Klein

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


Race, Class, And Gender Essentialism In Tax Literature: The Joint Return, Dorothy A. Brown Sep 1997

Race, Class, And Gender Essentialism In Tax Literature: The Joint Return, Dorothy A. Brown

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


Checkmate, The Treasury Finally Surrenders: The Check-The-Box Treasury Regulations And Their Effect On Entity Classification, Thomas M. Hayes Jun 1997

Checkmate, The Treasury Finally Surrenders: The Check-The-Box Treasury Regulations And Their Effect On Entity Classification, Thomas M. Hayes

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


A Webb Of Confusion: Equitable Tolling In Tax Refund Suits, Matthew L. Weidner Sep 1996

A Webb Of Confusion: Equitable Tolling In Tax Refund Suits, Matthew L. Weidner

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Clinton Tax Plan: The Tax Policy Pendulum Swings Back , John E. Chapoton Mar 1993

The Clinton Tax Plan: The Tax Policy Pendulum Swings Back , John E. Chapoton

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


Individual Tax Reform For Fairness And Simplicity: Let Economic Growth Fend For Itself , Martin J. Mcmahon, Jr. Mar 1993

Individual Tax Reform For Fairness And Simplicity: Let Economic Growth Fend For Itself , Martin J. Mcmahon, Jr.

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


Tax Policy As The Twenty-First Century Approaches Mar 1993

Tax Policy As The Twenty-First Century Approaches

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


Presidential Politics And Deficit Reduction: The Landscape Of Tax Policy In The 1980s And 1990s , Bernard M. Shapiro Mar 1993

Presidential Politics And Deficit Reduction: The Landscape Of Tax Policy In The 1980s And 1990s , Bernard M. Shapiro

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


Corporate Tax Policy For The Twenty-First Century: Integration And Redeeming Social Value , Glenn E. Coven Mar 1993

Corporate Tax Policy For The Twenty-First Century: Integration And Redeeming Social Value , Glenn E. Coven

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Future Of Partnership Taxation, Edward J. Schnee Mar 1993

The Future Of Partnership Taxation, Edward J. Schnee

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.