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Insights Volume 10 Number 6: Updates & Other Tidbits

Insights Volume 10 Number 6: Updates & Other Tidbits

This month, Wooyoung Lee looks at several interesting items, including (i) Aroeste v. U.S, an F.B.A.R. case that will bring joy to many expat green card holders living abroad and claiming U.S. tax benefits as a resident of a treaty partner country, (ii) continued movement towards passage of the Taiwan tax-treaty bill, reflecting bipartisan support in the Senate and House of Representatives, and (iii) the issuance by FinCEN of final regulations allowing a 90-day period for filing beneficial owner statements for companies formed in 2024. 

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U.S. Income Tax Treaty Update

U.S. Income Tax Treaty Update

The past 12 months or so have seen an uptick in matters related to the network of U.S. income tax treaties. Perhaps most interesting is a legislative proposal to amend the Internal Revenue Code so that it adopts rules applicable to qualified residents of Taiwan that mirror income tax treaty benefits. The rules would go into effect when the Administration reports to Congress that Taiwan has adopted equivalent rules applicable to U.S. persons investing or working in Taiwan. Other recent events related to U.S. income tax treaties include (i) Senate approval of an income tax treaty with Chile, subject to certain reservations regarding the taxation of direct investment dividends and the imposition of the B.E.A.T. provisions of Code §59A, (ii) the signing of an income tax treaty with Croatia that will require the addition of similar language to the reservation in the treaty with Chile, (iii) announcements that signed income tax treaties with Poland and Vietnam that await Senate action will need to be revised related to double tax relief and B.E.A.T., (iv) the termination of the income tax treaty with Hungary, (v) the start of negotiations of a new income tax treaty with Israel, and (vi) and the completion of treaty negotiations with Romania and Norway, also subject to reservations regarding double tax relief for direct investment dividends and the B.E.A.T. provisions. Nina Krauthamer and Wooyoung Lee tell all.

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