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When an Exchange of Vows is Followed by Separate Ownership of Shares Should Either Spouse Feel G.I.L.T.I.?

When an Exchange of Vows is Followed by Separate Ownership of Shares Should Either Spouse Feel G.I.L.T.I.?

Cross border tax planners are expected to know all there is about various provisions of Subchapter N of the Internal Revenue Code. An example might be the G.I.L.T.I. provisions adopted in the Tax Cuts & Jobs Act of 2017. They are not expected to know more mundane provisions of tax law such as rules that apply to married persons filing a joint tax return. In their article, Andreas Apostolides and Stanley C. Ruchelman examine a recent hiccup in G.I.L.T.I. provisions that focus computations in a top-down way. What happens when the marital property regime adopted by the married couple is that of separate property (or they are domiciled in a common law jurisdictions), one spouse separately owns C.F.C.’s with losses, the other spouse separately owns C.F.C.’s with positive earnings, and none of the C.F.C.’s generates Subpart F income? Is the married couple treated as one unit or simply an aggregate of two separate taxpayers? The answer may be troubling.

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Anti-Abuse Rules of Temp. Reg. §1.245A-5T – A New Cerberus for the U.S. Tax System

Anti-Abuse Rules of Temp. Reg. §1.245A-5T – A New Cerberus for the U.S. Tax System

In a companion piece to the preceding article, Andreas A. Apostolides and Stanley C. Ruchelman explore many of the anti-abuse rules attached to the foreign D.R.D. provisions. These rules are designed to close the door on financial products that undermine the I.R.S. view of the global biosphere comprised of the D.R.D., Subpart F, P.T.I., and G.I.L.T.I. The goal is to ensure that the benefit of the foreign D.R.D. is not expanded beyond boundaries viewed proper by the writers of the regulations. The D.R.D. is not a tool to shift profits abroad and to bring those profits back to the U.S. tax-free.

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