Extraterritorial exclusion and the FTC.More taxpayers that export goods are reaping the tax benefits from the extraterritorial ex·tra·ter·ri·to·ri·al adj. 1. Located outside territorial boundaries: fishing in extraterritorial waters. 2. income exclusion (EIE EIE Eniseysk (Russia) EIE Erie Insurance Exchange EIE Eisendrath International Exchange (high school exchange program in Israel) EIE Enterprise Information Environment EIE Enterprise Integration Engine ). The EIE allows a corporation to exclude qualifying foreign-trade income (FTI FTI Free thyroxine index, see there ) from income. The EIE'S overall result is a tax rate of 29.75% (or less) on income realized from the sale of qualified export property. However, for companies with excess foreign tax credits (FTCs), the EIE regime may have an adverse effect on a U.S. exporter's FTC FTC See Federal Trade Commission (FTC). . The primary culprit is the interplay between the EIE rules and Sec. 863(b) foreign-sourcing rules. EIE Re-Sourcing Rule Taxpayers look for ways to generate foreign-source income Foreign-source income Income earned from international operations. to use excess FTCs. A crucial component of foreign-source income is Sec. 863(b) sales; if a U.S. person manufactures goods in the U.S. and completes the sale overseas (i.e., title passes overseas), it would treat 50% of the income on such sale as foreign-source income. Similar to rules under the former foreign-sales-corporation regime, Congress sought to limit the foreign-source income on a transaction from which the taxpayer also reaps an EIE benefit. Under Sec. 943(c), when a taxpayer uses the FTI method, only 25% of a transaction's profit is foreign source for Sec. 863(b) purposes. Under the foreign trading gross receipts (FTGR FTGR Foreign Trade Gross Receipts ) rules, the limit on the foreign-source income is half the difference between the FTI and 4% of FTGR. Example 1: A transaction results in FTGR of $1,250 and FTI of $100. Under the FTI method, taxpayer A excludes $15 (15% of $100), leaving only $25 (25% of $100) as foreign-source income. Under the FTGR method, A excludes $15 (1.2% of $1,250), and only $25 (50% X [$100 - (4% X $1,250)]) is foreign-source income. Comparison of FTCs to the EIE Benefit The true effect of the re-sourcing rule must be examined after determining the FTCs. Example 2: The facts are the same as in Example 1, except A applies the EIE method to an excess FTC with Sec. 863 sales. This can cost A 20% of the tax benefits that it may have otherwise obtained without the limit; see the exhibit. The EIE rules offer taxpayers a great deal of flexibility--from group to group, or even year to year. Therefore, a taxpayer should determine the optimum amount of overseas sales needed to use excess FTCs when claiming EIE benefits.
Exhibit: Comparison of FTC to EIE Benefit
Sec. 863(b) sales Sec. 863(b)
with no EIE sales with EIE
FTI $100 $100
50% FTI n/a (50)
Foreign source % $100 $ 50
x 50% x 50%
Foreign-source income $ 50 $ 25
Excluded FTI 0 15 *
Total "excluded" income $ 50 $ 40
Tax savings (at 35%) $17.50 $14.00
Tax cost of ETI $3.50
* ($100 x 15% FTI)
FROM BILL KINGSLEY, CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000. , MST See micro systems technology. , AND BILL ROTH Roth , Philip Milton Born 1933. American writer whose witty and ironic fiction, including the novel Portnoy's Complaint (1969), concerns middle-class Jewish life. Noun 1. , III, CPA, GRAND RAPIDS, MI Pamela Packard, CPA Vice Chairman Tax Services BDO Seidman LLP New York, NY |
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