Foundryman testifies on global competitiveness. (Washington Alert).Doug Parsons, president of Excel Foundry and Machine, Pekin, Illinois, testified on the importance of tax incentives in increasing export activity for small businesses before a House of Representatives subcommittee in June. He reported on his firm's utilization of a foreign sales corporation Foreign Sales Corporation (FSC) A special type of corporation created by the Tax Reform Act of 1984 that is designed to provide a tax incentive for exporting U.S.-produced goods. (FSC FSC See: Foreign Sales Corporation ) in the past and its current use of an extraterritorial ex·tra·ter·ri·to·ri·al adj. 1. Located outside territorial boundaries: fishing in extraterritorial waters. 2. income regime (ETI (Embed The Internet) An earlier consortium that was devoted to putting Web servers into microcontrollers used in embedded systems. Using a Web server enables access to the device via any Web browser. See Web server and microcontroller. ) to compete in overseas markets. These types of tax incentives, created over the past 20 yr, are designed to neutralize some of the tax advantages enjoyed by foreign competitors located in countries with territorial tax systems. According to Parsons, international sales account for 33% of Excel's revenue. He said FSC/ETI FSC/ETI Foreign Sales Corporation and Extraterritorial Income Exclusion benefits are critical to his export efforts and "justify the additional efforts needed to go into overseas markets and compete." In recent years, the FSC/ETI benefits have been under attack. The European Union (EU) agreed to hold off on sanctions on the U.S. this year over the FSC/ETI dispute. Congress is considering a FSC-related tax-law change by year-end that would respond to the EU challenge. |
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