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High-Tax
Country Resident Planning To Stay Put:
US
The
IRS has done quite a thorough job of catching
the income or capital gains from just
about every kind of offshore or foreign
investment that US residents can get involved
in. Taxes are either applied as gains
are made, or they are applied when an
investment is realised, with taxes being
calculated back over the period of the
investment and compounded forward to the
time of payment.
Some
of the key tax collection mechanisms developed
over the years have been aimed at Controlled
Foreign Corporations, Foreign Personal
Holding Companies, Foreign Investment
Companies, Passive Foreign Investment
Companies, Grantor Trust Provisions and
Foreign Trust Reporting Requirements.
Although
US citizens may still choose to set up
offshore trusts, the rationale will be
asset protection rather than tax minimisation.
Trusts are caught by the legislation as
much as other types of investment structure,
and should be considered as tax-neutral
at best.
As
far as 'passive' income is concerned,
international tax planning for US residents
is therefore concerned with providing
investment structures which are fiscally
transparent, so that the gains from higher-yielding
international or offshore investments
can be taxed in the investor's hands on
the same basis as domestic investments.
This usually means employing limited partnership
or limited liability company structures,
which are provided by many offshore jurisdictions,
which are usually un-taxed in the offshore
jurisdiction, and which are treated as
fiscally transparent by the IRS.
Straightforward
investments into public offshore investment
funds, which may offer superior returns
to domestic funds, will be caught by the
Passive Foreign Investment Company legislation,
and it will often be correct to make a
QEF election in order to pay tax year-by-year
on the fund's increase in asset value
(excluding unrealised capital gains).
Individuals
who have significant 'active' business
income may be able to make use of offshore
corporate tax shelters, although the foreign
sales corporation (outlawed by the WTO)
has now been abolished.
www.lowtax.net
contains details of the corporate and
partnership legal structures available
in the 35 most prominent offshore jurisdictions,
together with descriptions of the most
important business sectors in each jurisdiction,
local tax regimes, and the international
treaties entered into by each jurisdiction.
NB: The suggestions given above do not
constitute investment advice. They are intended
only to assist individuals in finding appropriate
professional advice, which is essential
for anyone planning offshore investment.
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