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Full-Text Articles in Law

Fiscal Federalism In The United States, Walter Hellerstein Nov 2011

Fiscal Federalism In The United States, Walter Hellerstein

Presentations and Speeches

This presentation explores the fiscal powers of U.S. Federal and State governments with respect to taxation and spending.


The U.S. Consumption Tax: Evolution, Not Revolution, Daniel Goldberg Apr 2011

The U.S. Consumption Tax: Evolution, Not Revolution, Daniel Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

The article expresses the view that the current Internal Revenue Code has evolved into a hybrid income tax and consumption tax. It begins by explaining the difference between an income tax and a consumption tax and provides the backgrounds of the alternative forms of consumption tax: (1) consumed income, (2) yield exemption, and (3) point-of-sale taxation. Under the consumed income tax model of consumption tax, the individual taxpayer includes all items of income, both from labor and from capital, in its tax base, and then subtracts or deducts the portion of that income that he saves or invests. The resulting …


Government Precommitment To Tax Incentive Subsidies: The Impact Of United States V. Winstar Corp. On Retroactive Tax Legislation, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

Government Precommitment To Tax Incentive Subsidies: The Impact Of United States V. Winstar Corp. On Retroactive Tax Legislation, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

No abstract provided.


Interest Elements In Tax Planning, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

Interest Elements In Tax Planning, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

This article discusses how interest has been and is being used in tax planning. The tax planning techniques using interest include charging too little interest or none at all, recalssifying interest as principal and allocating interest among time periods to optimize the tax consequences to the parties. The issues raised by these tax planning techniques go to the heart of the tax system. They suggest inadequacies in the development of the case law and in conventional tax thinking. The unifying principal is the divergence between the possible tax consequences and the clear economic consequences of each of the transactions. The …


E Tax: The Flat Tax As An Electronic Credit Vat, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

E Tax: The Flat Tax As An Electronic Credit Vat, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

The article builds on the Hall-Rabushka Flat Tax and proposes a consumption tax called the “E Tax,” which is an electronically collected credit invoice VAT. The Hall-Rabushka Flat Tax is a two-tier consumption tax that is based on a subtraction method VAT. The Hall-Rabushka nuance, however, allows a deduction for wages as if they were purchases of materials by the employer. Wage earners would be taxed on those wages at rates that could be set as graduated or flat, with or without a zero rate or bracket amount and with or without personal exemptions and deductions. Hall and Rabushka proposed …


Considering A Consumption Tax, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

Considering A Consumption Tax, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

A combination of electronic commerce and the "Flat Tax" could eliminate the IRS as we know it.


The Kingdom Of Pal: A Parable Of Tax Shelters And The Passive Activity Loss Rules, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

The Kingdom Of Pal: A Parable Of Tax Shelters And The Passive Activity Loss Rules, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

No abstract provided.


Nonrecourse Debt In Excess Of Fair Market Value: The Confluence Of Basis, Realization, Subchapter K And The Need For Consistency, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

Nonrecourse Debt In Excess Of Fair Market Value: The Confluence Of Basis, Realization, Subchapter K And The Need For Consistency, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

No abstract provided.


Open Transaction Treatment For Deferred Payment Sales After The Installment Sales Act Of 1980, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

Open Transaction Treatment For Deferred Payment Sales After The Installment Sales Act Of 1980, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

No abstract provided.


The Tax Treatment Of Limited Liability Companies: Law In Search Of Policy, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

The Tax Treatment Of Limited Liability Companies: Law In Search Of Policy, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

No abstract provided.


E-Vat: An Electronically Collected Progressive Consumption Tax, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

E-Vat: An Electronically Collected Progressive Consumption Tax, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

This report proposes replacing the income tax with an electronic, progressive consumption tax that couples a credit-method VAT (modified for wages) with a progressive wage tax. I have called this proposal e-VAT (a convenient contraction for an electronic value added tax), because it is based on a business-level-credit VAT and can be collected automatically and electronically at the point of sale. The essential advantage of e-VAT over the Hall-Rabushka flat tax is that e-VAT’s use of a credit VAT as its foundation facilitates automatic and electronic collection of the tax. A credit VAT lends itself to electronic monitoring and auditing …


The Aches And Pains Of Transition To A Consumption Tax: Can We Get There From Here?, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

The Aches And Pains Of Transition To A Consumption Tax: Can We Get There From Here?, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

This article discusses probably the most significant obstacle to the adoption of a consumption tax: the negative effects on existing wealth that the transition from the income tax to most forms of a consumption tax would have. The Congressional Budget Office in its 1997 study posed the question, “How to Get There from Here.” The difficulty with transition and the changes in the tax law since the CBO study, however, prompt the more basic question: “Can we get there from here?” This article deals with this question by examining the effects of transition on existing wealth under a variety of …


To Praise The Amt Or To Bury It, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

To Praise The Amt Or To Bury It, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

The alternative minimum tax (AMT) has recently become a cause célèbre because many more taxpayers are now subject to it than originally envisioned at the time of its enactment in 1969 (and, indeed, than after any of its several modifications over the years). As such, it has been discussed and criticized in the press and by tax professionals and academics, most recently in Tax Notes by four former Internal Revenue Service commissioners who advocated scrapping it entirely. The criticism has questioned the wisdom of the inadvertent expansion of the AMT in coverage, that is, the number of taxpayers who will …


Tax Subsidies: One-Time Vs. Periodic An Economic Analysis Of The Tax Policy Alternatives, Daniel Goldberg Apr 2011

Tax Subsidies: One-Time Vs. Periodic An Economic Analysis Of The Tax Policy Alternatives, Daniel Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

No abstract provided.


The Passive Activity Loss Rules: Planning Considerations, Techniques, And A Foray Into Never-Never Land, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

The Passive Activity Loss Rules: Planning Considerations, Techniques, And A Foray Into Never-Never Land, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

No abstract provided.


Choice Of Entity For A Venture Capital Start-Up: The Myth Of Incorporation, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

Choice Of Entity For A Venture Capital Start-Up: The Myth Of Incorporation, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

No abstract provided.


Lifetime Gifts - A Quantitative Approach, Roger A. Pies, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

Lifetime Gifts - A Quantitative Approach, Roger A. Pies, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

No abstract provided.


Tax Planning For Interest After Tra 1984: Unstated Interest And Original Issue Discount, Daniel Goldberg Apr 2011

Tax Planning For Interest After Tra 1984: Unstated Interest And Original Issue Discount, Daniel Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

No abstract provided.


Recent Approaches To The Trade Or Business Requirement Of Section 174: Unauthorized Snow Removal, Daniel S. Goldberg Apr 2011

Recent Approaches To The Trade Or Business Requirement Of Section 174: Unauthorized Snow Removal, Daniel S. Goldberg

Daniel S. Goldberg

No abstract provided.


Sit Down And Count The Cost: A Framework For Constitutionally Enforcing The 501(C)(3) Campaign Intervention Ban, Benjamin M. Leff Jan 2011

Sit Down And Count The Cost: A Framework For Constitutionally Enforcing The 501(C)(3) Campaign Intervention Ban, Benjamin M. Leff

Benjamin Leff

Abstract:

Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code prohibits charities from intervening in a political campaign for or against a candidate for public office. The IRS currently interprets the campaign-intervention ban to absolutely prevent charities from communicating their views on candidates, even if such communications are completely financed by non-501(c)(3) affiliates.

This article argues that the current IRS enforcement paradigm is unconstitutional because it exceeds the government interest in preventing tax-deductible donations to be used for campaign-intervention. A constitutional interpretation exists under the current statutory framework, but it would require the IRS to shift its focus exclusively to campaign-intervention-related expenditures. …


The Post-Tarp Movement To Regulate Banker Pay, Eric D. Chason Jan 2011

The Post-Tarp Movement To Regulate Banker Pay, Eric D. Chason

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


The Economics Of Section 170: A Case For The Charitable Deduction Of Parochial School Tuition, Meir Katz Jan 2011

The Economics Of Section 170: A Case For The Charitable Deduction Of Parochial School Tuition, Meir Katz

Meir Katz

That payments for parochial school tuition are not deductible under Section 170 of the Internal Revenue Code is a foregone conclusion in the eyes of many tax policy scholars. Tuition provides an easy case because the donor receives something of great value in return for his donation: the education of his children. This Article questions that conclusion. By taking a close look at the economics behind these tuition payments in the context of a discrete population, the religious Jewish community, I show that traditional economic assumptions are inappropriate for analysis of those payments. Rather than a traditional economic exchange for …


The Liability-Offset Theory Of Peracchi, Bradley T. Borden, Douglas L. Longhofer Jan 2011

The Liability-Offset Theory Of Peracchi, Bradley T. Borden, Douglas L. Longhofer

Bradley T. Borden

Peracchi v. Commissioner is a lightning rod for commentators and the bane of students of corporate income tax. In short, the decision makes no sense because it grants the maker of a note a section 1012 basis in the note, violating a fundamental principle of income taxation. Nonetheless, the decision helped preserve a fundamental aspect of corporate taxation—the tax-free formation of and contributions to controlled corporations. Because of its unorthodox application of the section1012 basis rules, the Peracchi decision is the subject of severe criticism. Unfortunately, commentators who criticize Peracchi generally fail to offer an alternative that recognizes general income …


The Allure And Illusion Of Partners' Interests In A Partnership, Bradley T. Borden Jan 2011

The Allure And Illusion Of Partners' Interests In A Partnership, Bradley T. Borden

Bradley T. Borden

Favorable tax treatment and management flexibility make tax partnerships very popular. For starters, tax partnerships, unlike tax corporations, are not subject to entity-level taxes. Partnership taxable income flows through to the partners, and the partners report their shares of partnership taxable income on their individual tax returns. Partnership tax allocation rules determine the partners’ shares of partnership taxable income. Those rules rely upon the alluring concept of partners’ interests in a partnership. It seems intuitive that partners would know their interests in a partnership and be able to allocate partnership taxable income accordingly. This Article illustrates, however, that the concept …


Using Payroll Deduction To Shelter Individual Health Insurance From Income Tax, David Orentlicher Jan 2011

Using Payroll Deduction To Shelter Individual Health Insurance From Income Tax, David Orentlicher

Scholarly Works

In this article, Professor Orentlicher and his colleagues assess the impact of state laws requiring or encouraging employers to establish ‘‘section 125’’ cafeteria plans that shelter employees’ premium contributions from tax.


The Loophole That Would Not Die: A Case Study In The Difficulty Of Greening The Internal Revenue Code, Lawrence A. Zelenak Jan 2011

The Loophole That Would Not Die: A Case Study In The Difficulty Of Greening The Internal Revenue Code, Lawrence A. Zelenak

Faculty Scholarship

Congress and the Treasury have commissioned the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) “to undertake a comprehensive review of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to identify the types of and specific tax provisions that have the largest effects on carbon and other greenhouse gas emissions and to estimate the magnitude of those effects.” The hope of the proponents of the NAS carbon audit is that Congress, once informed of the results of the audit, will respond by “greening” the Internal Revenue Code. This Essay cautions that a more environmentally friendly Code will not necessarily follow from the legislative consciousness-raising of …


Income Tax Discrimination: Still Stuck In The Labyrinth Of Impossibility, Michael J. Graetz, Alvin C. Warren Jr. Jan 2011

Income Tax Discrimination: Still Stuck In The Labyrinth Of Impossibility, Michael J. Graetz, Alvin C. Warren Jr.

Faculty Scholarship

In previous articles, we have argued that the European Court of Justice's reliance on nondiscrimination as the basis for its decisions did not (and could not) satisfy commonly accepted tax policy norms, such as fairness, administrability, economic efficiency, production of desired levels of revenues, avoidance of double taxation, fiscal policy goals, inter-nation equity, and so on. In addition, we argued that the court cannot achieve consistent and coherent results by requiring nondiscrimination in both origin and destination countries for transactions involving the tax systems of more than one member state. We demonstrated that – in the absence of harmonized income …


Rationalizing Tax Law By Breaking The Addiction To Economic Substance, Allen Madison Dec 2010

Rationalizing Tax Law By Breaking The Addiction To Economic Substance, Allen Madison

Allen Madison

This article presents a critique of the economic substance doctrine and suggests an alternative. The economic substance doctrine under certain circumstances overrides the technical provisions of the Internal Revenue Code. Congress recently incorporated into the Code a version similar to the court-developed doctrine. Whether authorized by the court or authorized by statute, however, the doctrine makes our tax laws vague, uncertain, and fallacious. Therefore, the doctrine should be abandoned. A more appropriate tool for curbing questionable tax planning is the use of statutory risk requirements. This article provides some suggestions for developing such requirements. The article concludes that statutory risk …