AICPA urges US Senate to ratify tax treaties
International Tax Review is part of the Delinian Group, Delinian Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 00954730
Copyright © Delinian Limited and its affiliated companies 2024

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

AICPA urges US Senate to ratify tax treaties

Accountants in the US are calling on the Senate to approve the tax treaties and protocols pending before it.

In a letter to Senator Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations and Senator Robert Menendez (D-NJ), the committee’s ranking member, the American Institute of CPAs (AICPA) noted that the full Senate has not approved any income tax treaty or protocol since 2010.

“Income tax treaties are vital to United States economic growth as well as U.S. trade and tax policy,” the letter said. “Tax treaties assist in harmonising the tax systems of treaty nations and in providing certainty on permanent establishment rules, a mechanism to relieve double taxation, and other key issues faced by businesses of all sizes that operate internationally.” The letter was signed by Troy Lewis, chairman of the AICPA’s Tax Executive Committee.

Lewis wrote that new treaties help the economy and boosted job creation in the US, as well as assist in the authorities in keeping up to date with international developments and enforcing the tax laws.

“The lack of action by the full Senate to ratify these treaties and protocols impedes the ability of the U.S. Department of the Treasury to keep US tax treaties in line with changes in policy and bilateral relationships,” he wrote. “Outdated tax treaties increase the potential for double taxation as well as hinder the ability of the Internal Revenue Service and foreign tax authorities to cooperate in the fair and efficient enforcement of tax laws.”

Referring to specific agreements that the committee approved in 2014, but which the full Senate has yet to vote on, the letter said the treaty with Chile would be the first with that country and the second US income tax treaty in South America. The treaty with Hungary, would bring the existing version, signed in 1979, up-to-date by closing an important loophole by inserting a limitation on benefits clause.

“This loophole currently allows nonresidents of the two treaty partners to obtain US tax benefits by inserting into their structures, Hungarian companies with no economic substance with the principle purpose of providing access to the treaty for those non-residents,” the letter pointed out.

The letter added the protocol to the treaty with Luxembourg would update how the US exchanges information with that jurisdiction and the protocol to the treaty with Switzerland “would specifically protect Americans against indiscriminate searches of information by either country by limiting the administrative assistance to individual cases. It would also bring the exchange of information article up-to-date to aid the US in combating tax evasion by US persons”.

In 2014, the committee also approved the new income tax treaty with Poland, and a protocol to the income tax treaty with Spain.

more across site & bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Mazars needs to do all it can to capitalise on TP as a growth area, ex-Deloitte TP director Jeremy Brown has told ITR
Sanjay Sanghvi and Raghav Bajaj of Khaitan & Co provide a practical guide for foreign investors looking to capitalise on Indian’s investment potential
The newly launched Tax Responsibility and Transparency Index will assess the ethicality of companies’ tax practices against global standards and regulations
The reported warning follows EY accumulating extra debt to deal with the costs of its failed Project Everest
Law firms that pay close attention to their client relationships are more likely to win repeat work, according to a survey of nearly 29,000 in-house counsel
Paul Griggs, the firm’s inbound US senior partner, will reverse a move by the incumbent leader; in other news, RSM has announced its new CEO
The EMEA research period is open until May 31
Luis Coronado suggests companies should embrace technology to assist with TP data reporting, as the ‘big four’ firm unveils a TP survey of over 1,000 professionals
The proposed matrix will help revenue officers track intra-company transactions from multinationals
The full list of finalists has been revealed and the winners will be presented on June 20 at the Metropolitan Club in New York
Gift this article