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- W76648051 abstract "I. INTRODUCTION Politicians devote a sometimes surprising amount of attention to the arcane rules of international taxation. In his 1992 presidential campaign, President Clinton made an issue of whether foreign investors in the United States pay their fair share of U.S. income taxes. The President promised to raise as much as $45 billion each year in revenue simply by enforcing existing law.(1) In 1995, Senator Brian Dorgan became incensed about what he perceived as the failure of foreign investors to pay their fair share of U.S. income tax.(2) The Department of the Treasury went so far as to call a conference to discuss Senator Dorgan's proposed solution.(3) When it comes to U.S.-based multinational corporations, members of Congress have been equally attentive, questioning whether U.S.-based multinationals pay their fair share of taxes on the income they earn through foreign subsidiaries.(4) President Clinton's first use of the line-item veto struck down three provisions of the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997,(5) including one that dealt with income earned through the foreign subsidiaries of U.S.-based multinationals.(6) Regarding individual taxpayers, President Clinton and members of Congress have taken steps to prevent wealthy U.S. taxpayers from escaping federal income tax by the simple expedient of giving up their U.S. citizenship.(7) When U.S. politicians talk about foreign investors paying their fair shares of U.S. income taxes, they allude to the imposition of tax on the basis of source. Source taxation applies to income arising within the geographic borders of the country levying the tax. Virtually every country imposing an income tax today does so on the basis of source.(8) The United States asserts its source jurisdiction to tax the income earned in the United States by residents(9) of other countries,(10) Other countries assert their source jurisdiction to tax the income arising within their borders that belongs to nonresidents, including residents of the United States.(11) An issue closely related to source is that of the division of the profits of a multinational group of enterprises among the countries in which the group does business. Most countries follow the general rule of treating each member of a multinational group of enterprises as a separate entity for income tax purposes.(12) This separate entity approach generally requires the individual members of a multinational group to determine their incomes as if transactions within the group occurred under normal market conditions.(13) Under this length principle, the price paid in a transaction between members of a multinational group should be the amount that would have been paid in a transaction between unrelated enterprises dealing at arm's length.(14) The arm's length principle has the dual function of allocating the profits of the group among the various jurisdictions in which the group does business and avoiding the taxation of the same income by more than one jurisdiction.(15) When politicians talk about whether U.S.-based multinational corporations pay their fair share of U.S. income tax, they refer to taxation on the basis of residence. Residence taxation applies to the income of a resident of the country imposing the tax.(16) Many countries imposing an income tax today do so on the basis of residence as well as source.(17) The United States asserts its residence jurisdiction to tax all of the income earned by a U.S. resident, including income arising outside of the United States.(18) Likewise, other countries may assert their residence jurisdiction to tax their residents on the basis of worldwide income,(19) including income arising in the United States. Finally, when public officials discuss tax-motivated expatriation, they refer to an unusual U.S. rule that imposes federal income tax on the worldwide incomes of U.S. citizens, regardless of where they may reside.(20) The United States is the only economically developed country to impose income tax on the worldwide incomes of nonresident citizens. …" @default.
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- W76648051 date "1998-01-01" @default.
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- W76648051 title "Fairness and the Taxation of International Income" @default.
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