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Paul L. Caron
Dean
Pepperdine Caruso
School of Law

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  • Polsky & Befort on Employment Discrimination Remedies

    Thursday, May 6, 2004

    Gregg Polsky (Minnesota) & Stephen Befort (Minnesota) have posted Employment Discrimination Remedies and Tax Gross Ups on SSRN. Here is part of the abstract:

    This article considers whether a successful employment discrimination plaintiff may be entitled, under current law, to receive an augmented award (a gross up) to neutralize certain adverse federal income tax consequences. The question of whether such a gross up is allowed, the resolution of which can have drastic effects on litigants, has received almost no attention from practitioners, judges, and academics. Because of the potentially enormous impact of the alternative minimum tax (AMT) on discrimination lawsuit recoveries, however, the gross up issue is now beginning to appear in reported cases.

    The three principal federal anti-discrimination statutes – Title VII, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) – generally confer broad equitable powers on the courts to devise remedies that will make the victims of discrimination whole in economic terms. The Internal Revenue Code (Code), however, sometimes operates to frustrate this make-whole objective by taxing a discrimination award more heavily than the components of the award would have been taxed had the components been earned in due course by the plaintiff. This excess taxation gives rise to what this article calls adverse tax consequences.

    A discrimination plaintiff may suffer adverse tax consequences in two distinct ways. First, amounts recovered to compensate for back pay and front pay losses may be subjected to higher income tax rates than if such amounts had been earned as wages in due course. This increase in tax rates is typically due to the fact that the plaintiff’s recovery is in a lump sum; as a result, a portion of the recovery may be subject to marginal rates higher than the plaintiff’s typical marginal rate.

    Second, an employment discrimination recovery could implicate the AMT. If so, the AMT may cause the recovery to be effectively taxed at rates significantly higher than the top marginal rate of 35 percent. In fact, in certain cases, the AMT may cause the tax on the recovery to exceed 100 percent – meaning that a victorious plaintiff would owe more in taxes than her recovery. This AMT trap is notoriously absurd as a matter of tax policy and undermines the national policy of encouraging the pursuit of meritorious civil rights claims. Yet, the trap persists, at least in most areas of the country.

    The resolution of the gross up issue depends ultimately on whether the federal anti-discrimination remedial provisions permit judges to shift the liability for these adverse tax consequences from the plaintiff – on whom the Internal Revenue Code specifically imposes the liability – to the defendant – whose unlawful conduct necessitated the lawsuit that caused the adverse tax consequences. The potential vehicle for this shift is the broad equitable powers conferred upon courts to fashion relief in order to make victims of discrimination whole. . . .

  • IRS Offers Amnesty for Investors in “Son of Boss” Tax Shelter

    Wednesday, May 5, 2004

    The IRS announced today that taxpayers who invested in the infamous “Son of Boss” tax shelter can avoid certain penalties if they come forward by June 21. The IRS estimates that over 5,000 taxpayers used the shelter to create a large, artificial loss to offset an unusual, one-time gain like the sale of a business or stock options. The typical investor evaded $10-$50 million in taxes, for total tax avoidance of more than $6 billion, not including interest and penalties.

    For the Son of Boss Settlement Initiative, Announcement 2004-46, see here.

  • Geier Named to Endowed Professorship

    Wednesday, May 5, 2004

    Deborah Geier (Cleveland State) has been selected to fill a newly-endowed professorship. Beginning in the fall, she will be the Leon M. & Gloria Plevin Professor of Law at Cleveland State. Congratulations to Professor Geier, who is one of the leading tax scholars of her generation. She is the co-author of a major tax casebook, Federal Income Tax: Doctrine, Structure and Policy (LexisNexis, 2d ed. 1999), and the author of several major tax articles (for a list of Professor Geier’s articles on SSRN, see here.)

  • Mills & Newberry on Effect of Foreign Tax Rates on Multinationals’ U.S. Tax Reporting

    Wednesday, May 5, 2004

    Lillian Mills (University of Arizona – Keller College of Business & Public Admnistration) & Kaye Newberry (University of Arizona – Department of Accounting) have posted Do Foreign Multinationals’ Tax Incentives Influence Their U.S. Income Reporting and Debt Policy? on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

    Using a matched sample of financial data on foreign multinationals and confidential income tax return data on U.S. foreign-controlled corporations (FCCs) during 1987-1996, we examine whether the tax incentives of foreign multinationals influence their U.S. tax reporting. We find that foreign multinationals with relatively low average foreign tax rates report less taxable income and use more debt in their FCCs than those with relatively high average foreign tax rates. Our findings provide insights regarding the complex reporting behavior of FCCs and have implications for U.S. tax policy.

  • Pressure Building on Sen. Kerry to Release Wife’s Tax Returns

    Wednesday, May 5, 2004

    Pressure is building on Sen. Kerry to release his wife’s tax returns. The Weekly Standard notes, in a story titled Sugar Mommy, that Sen. Kerry is turning himself into Geraldine Ferraro, Walter Mondale’s running mate who ran aground amidst questions about her husband John Zaccaro’s finances. With the New York Times (here and here) calling for the release of Teresa Heinz Kerry’s tax returns, and Sen. Kerry’s continued dissembling on the issue (e.g., telling Tim Russert on Meet the Press that presidential candidates are required by law to release their tax returns (not true) and that his wife’s refusal to release her tax returns was no big deal because the information is contained in Senate ethcis forms, which are “far more intrusive” than at the time of the Ferraro-Zaccaro flap 28 years ago (also not true), the pressure to release the returns is likely to build in the coming days.

    The Weekly Standard speculates that Sen. Kerry is reluctant to release his wife’s tax returns to avoid embarassing revelations on several fronts:

    • He is a “kept man,” whose campaigns in the past have been indirectly funded by his wife (e.g., by borrowing on sweatheart terms against his 1/2 share of a Beacon Hill townhouse given to him by his wife).

    • Contrary to his populist rhetoric, his wife’s $550 million fortune funds his lavish lifetsyle, complete with palatial homes in Nantucket, Idaho, and Georgetown (as well as Boston and Pittsburgh), along with a Gulfstream jet.

    • His wife’s contributions to various left-wing organizations.

    Thanks to TaxGuru for the tip.

  • Holmes, Smyth & Hutton on Monetary Effects of a Consumption Tax

    Wednesday, May 5, 2004

    James Holmes (SUNY-Buffalo, Dep’t of Economics), David Smyth (Middlesex University Business School) & Patricia Hutton (Canisius College, Dep’t of Economics and Finance) have posted Monetary Effects of a Consumption Tax on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

    This paper analyzes the short-run effects of a consumption tax increase (VAT or national sale tax) on aggregate demand. Because it increases the prices paid by consumers relative to the prices received by suppliers, a consumption tax affects the supply of real money balances, in addition to reducing expenditures. Hence, when a consumption tax replaces an income tax so as to maintain a balanced government budget, the net effect can plausibly be contractionary.

  • CBO Releases Report on the AMT

    Wednesday, May 5, 2004

    The Congressional Budget Office has released a report on the Alternative Minimum Tax, available in both html and pdf. Here is the Introduction:

    For more than three decades, the individual income tax has consisted of two parallel tax systems: the regular tax and an alternative tax that was originally intended to impose taxes on high-income individuals who have no liability under the regular income tax. The stated purpose of the alternative minimum tax (AMT) is to keep taxpayers with high incomes from paying little or no income tax by taking advantage of various preferences in the tax code. The AMT does so by requiring people to recalculate their taxes under alternative rules that include certain forms of income exempt from regular tax and that do not allow specific exemptions, deductions, and other preferences. For most of its existence, the AMT has affected few taxpayers, less than 1 percent in any year before 2000, but its impact is expected to grow rapidly in coming years and affect about one-fifth of all taxpayers in 2010. In her 2003 report to the Congress, the Internal Revenue Service’s National Taxpayer Advocate, Nina Olson, labeled the AMT “the most serious problem faced by taxpayers.”

    Unlike the regular income tax, the AMT is not indexed for inflation. The accumulating effect of inflation is a key source of growing AMT coverage.

    The expanding reach of the AMT imposes costs beyond higher tax liability. Not only must taxpayers complete the regular income tax returns, but more of them will need to complete the AMT forms, whose definitions of taxable income, deductible expenses, and exemptions differ from those of the regular income tax. The required calculations increase both the complexity and time required to comply with tax laws, although computer software may mitigate those costs. Taxpayers’ potential liability for the AMT complicates many of their decisions beyond the tax forms themselves, including when to earn income and when to pay for potentially deductible activities.

    A range of options could address the growth of the AMT. At one extreme, extending the exemption level in effect for 2004 would postpone the expansion of AMT coverage. The revenue consequences of doing so would depend on the duration of the extension: extending it just for 2005 would cut revenues by about $18 billion. Another option–indexing the AMT parameters for inflation–would prevent the alternative tax from growing simply because incomes keep pace with inflation and would lower receipts by $370 billion over the 2005-2014 period. At the other extreme, eliminating the AMT altogether would reduce revenues by nearly $600 billion over the next 10 years under current law.

    The report was prepared by Roberton Williams of CBO’s Tax Analysis Division with the assistance of Kurt Seibert and David Weiner.

  • SOI Releases Report on Aviation-Related Excise Taxes

    Wednesday, May 5, 2004

    The just-released Statistics of Income Bulletin (Winter 2003-04) includes Excise Taxes and the Airport and Airway Trusts Fund, 1970-2002 by Eric Henry. Here is the abstract:

    The Airport and Airway Trust Fund instituted on July 1, 1970 has been affected by legislative changes over the years. These include terminating the Aviation Trust Fund in 1980, then recreating it in the Airport Improvement Act of 1982. Further changes were made in 1990, and excise tax transfers into the Aviation Trust Fund were terminated in 1996, but resumed under the Taxpayers Relief Act of 1997. The Aviation Investment and Reform Act for the 21st Century again revised the Fund in 2000. The events of September, 11, 2001, resulted in passage of the Air Transportation Safety and System Stabilization Act of 2001, under which airlines were able to postpone excise tax payments due between September 10, 2001, and January 15, 2002, until the latter of the two dates.

    The net effect of these changes was to increase receipts from aviation-related excise taxes from $564 million in FY 1971 to $9,090 million in FY 2002, with a peak of $10,395 million in FY 1999. The FY 2002 receipts represented 13.1 percent of all excise taxes as compared to 3.3 percent for FY 1971. The Airport and Airway Trust Fund excise taxes were a reliable source of revenue for the Nation’s aviation systems during the latter part of the 20th century. Receipts from these taxes continue to be the major source of revenue for the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).

    For related excise tax statistics, see here.

  • DOJ Goes After Tax Protester in Cincinnati

    Tuesday, May 4, 2004

    I know I promised to stay off the tax protester beat, but the Department of Justice today announced it had filed an injunction against alleged local tax scammer Dana Ewell. Ewell is charged with peddling sham trusts to custsomers to conceal income through The Liberty Pure Trust and The Liberty Product Series sold via his !Solutions! Group web site. For a copy of the complaint, see here.

  • NTA Symposium: Tax Policy in Transition

    Tuesday, May 4, 2004

    The National Tax Association will hold its 34th Spring Symposium on Tax Policy in Transition on Thursday, May 20 – Friday, May 21 at the Holiday Inn Capitol in Washington, D.C. Here are the panel programs and speakers:

    Thursday, May 20

    8:45am
    Welcome
    John McClelland (Office of Tax Analysis, Department of the Treasury), Program Chair

    9:00-10:30am
    Revenue and Rules: Effects on the Federal Budget
    Moderator: Eric Engen (American Enterprise Institute)
    Presenters:
    • Where Did Revenues Go? (David Weiner, Congressional Budget Office)
    • The Persistence of Individual and Corporate Capital Gains and Losses (Nicholas Bull, James Cilke & Christopher Giosa, Joint Committee on Taxation)
    • Budget Rules for 2005 and Beyond (Rudolph Penner & C. Eugene Steuerle, The Urban Institute)

    10:45am-12:15pm
    Exploring Selected State and Local Issues
    Moderator: Dennis Zimmerman (Congressional Budget Office)
    Presenters:
    • State Structural Deficits (Bruce Baker, Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Commerce Department; Daniel Besendorfer, University of Freiburg; & Laurence J. Kotlikoff, Boston University)
    • History and Evaluation of the Unfunded Mandates Law (Theresa Gullo, Congressional Budget Office)
    •Is “No Child Left Behind” an Un (or under) funded Federal Mandate? Evidence from Texas
    (Jennifer Imazeki, San Diego State; & Andrew Reschovsky, Wisconsin)

    12:30-2:00pm Luncheon
    Presiding: Thomas S. Neubig (President, National Tax Association)
    Speaker: Harvey S. Rosen (Member, Council of Economic Advisers)

    2:00-3:30pm
    The Role of a Public Policy Economist: Lessons from Bruce Davie’s Career
    Moderator: Allen H. Lerman (Office of Tax Analysis, U.S. Treasury Department)
    Presenters:
    Jousting with Rent Seekers: Bruce Davie and Tax-Exempt Bonds (Dennis Zimmerman, Congressional Budget Office)
    The Costs of State-Sponsored Terrorism: The Case of the Barbary Pirates (J. Thomas Woodward, Congressional Budget Office)
    A Tax Expenditure Budget for Excise Taxes (Lindsay Oldenski, Office of Tax Analysis, U.S. Treasury Department)

    3:45-5:15pm
    Effects of a Changing Pension Landscape on Saving
    Moderator: Karen M. Pence (Federal Reserve Board of Governors)
    Presenters:
    How Will the Changing Pension Landscape Affect Retiree Benefits? (Amy Rehder Harris, Kevin Perese & John Sabelhaus, Congressional Budget Office)
    • Distributional Effects of Tax-Preferred Saving Options (Leonard E. Burman, The Urban Institute; & William Gale & Peter Orszag, The Brookings Institution)
    Pension Reform and Saving (Barry Bosworth & Gary Burtless, The Brookings Institution)

    Friday May 21

    9:00-10:30am
    Corporate Tax Reporting and Compliance
    Moderator: George Plesko (MIT)
    Presenters:
    Corporate Tax Avoidance and the Properties of Corporate Earnings (George Plesko, MIT)
    Lost in Translation: Detecting Tax Shelter Activity in Financial Statements (Gary McGill , Florida; & Edmund Outslay, Michigan State)
    The Evolving Schedule M-3: A New Era of Corporate Show and Tell? (Charles Boynton, Office of Tax Analysis, U.S. Treasury Department; & Lillian Mills, Arizona)

    10:45am-12:15pm
    International Tax Roundtable
    Moderator: Peter Orszag (The Brookings Institution)
    Presenters:
    • Jane Gravelle (Congressional Research Service)
    • Gary Hufbauer (Institute of International Economics)
    • Jonathan Talisman (Capitol Tax Partners)

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