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New Subpart F and P.F.I.C. Regulations – Ex Uno Plures

New Subpart F and P.F.I.C. Regulations – Ex Uno Plures

Is a partnership an entity for certain tax purposes or is it an aggregate of the partners? U.S. tax law was never consistent on this point. In 2017, a foreign taxpayer won a major victory when the U.S. Tax Court held that a partnership is an entity when determining the tax exposure of a foreign partner selling its partnership interest or having its interest redeemed. Almost immediately, Congress changed the law. From that moment, the I.R.S. reviewed the way partnerships and their partners are treated for purposes of the Subpart F, G.I.L.T.I., and P.F.I.C. provisions of U.S. tax law. Regulations were revised, the Schedule K-1 reporting form was modified with the addition of Schedule K-2 and Schedule K-3, and elections once made by domestic partnerships and binding on all members were now to be made by individual partners. Stanley C. Ruchelman and Wooyoung Lee explain these and other changes in the treatment of partnerships for the international provisions of U.S. tax law.

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New Partnership International Information Return Schedules

New Partnership International Information Return Schedules

· The I.R.S. recently released drafts of two new partnership return schedules and accompanying instructions to address the reporting of income from international transactions. The new forms are required because of tax law changes enacted as part of the Tax Cuts & Jobs Act in 2017 and recent changes in I.R.S. policy regarding partnerships as aggregates rather than entities. Schedule K-2 and Schedule K-3 each contain nine parts, generally covering the information required with respect to the most common international tax provisions of U.S. tax law. Schedule K-3 contains a tenth part applicable only to the distributive share of a partner in relation to a sale of a partnership interest. Galia Antebi and Nina Krauthamer explain all.

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Domestic Partnerships Treated as Entities and Aggregates: New Approach for G.I.L.T.I. and Subpart F

Domestic Partnerships Treated as Entities and Aggregates: New Approach for G.I.L.T.I. and Subpart F

The effects of the 2017 U.S. tax reform continue to be encountered in unexpected ways. Two prime examples are the final and proposed G.I.L.T.I. regulations issued by the I.R.S. earlier this year. These 2019 regulations attempt to bring order out of the chaos created by proposed G.I.L.T.I. regulations released in September 2018. In their article, Neha Rastogi and Stanley C. Ruchelman look at how the rules treat a domestic partnership and its partners when determining who is – and who is not – a U.S. shareholder of a controlled foreign corporation. The answer affects the application of the G.I.L.T.I., Subpart F, and P.F.I.C. rules. For those who follow the debate over whether a partnership is an aggregate of the partners or an entity that is separate from the partners, chalk up a victory for the proponents of the aggregate approach.

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