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Double Taxation

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Introduction

Double taxation arises when an individual or business acquiring income in a foreign country is required to pay taxes on that income in both the foreign country as well as the country of origin. For example, an American company operating in a developing country, in the absence of a tax treaty between the two countries may have to pay a withholding tax to the government of the developing country, as well as corporation tax to the United States government (Howard, 2001, p. 259).

The purpose of this paper is to examine the merit of three basic systems, which is exemption system, credit system and deduction system. These systems are dealings with the essence of tax relief from international double taxation.

A discussion of various countries on their practices on tax relief system and the rationale for using the system will be presented, followed by an analysis of the most advantages system to taxpayers. Finally identifies the system that most preferred by countries and the justification for adopted such system.

Systems adopted by countries to ameliorate the burden of International Double Taxation

Double taxation is always considered to be one of the most important issues in international taxation. With the more and more business moving towards globalization and cross-border investment, double taxation is often cited as a major obstacle to liberate economic progress.

There are basically three types of systems for double taxation relief, the exemption system, credit system & reduction system. The globalization drive has led to an increased knowledge and understanding of the various taxation systems in countries around the world.

• The Exemption System

Under exemption systems, a taxpayer of a country (the residence country), will not be taxed regardless of where the income is generated, instead, taxpayers are taxed based on the source of their income (the host country), that is, only the country where the income is generated has taxing authority over the income (Stephens, 1998, p.159)

With exemption system, it’s encourages resident individual or companies to venture outside their domestic environment and compete with their foreign competitors. Hence it is frequently used term of capital import neutrality. In general, it can be said that a tax exemption system encourages businesses to trade outside their home country, thus accelerating the trends towards globalization and increase of global welfare.

Countries that are purely on exemption system are often referred to as "tax havens" because the country does not tax any foreign source income (FSI) earned by individuals or corporations that have that country as their home country (Stephens, 1998).

A tax haven is a place where foreigners may receive income or own assets without paying high rates of taxes. Generally speaking, the main characteristic of a tax haven is a very low effective tax rate on foreign income. Major tax havens are the Bahamas, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Hong Kong, Panama, and Singapore. Most tax havens are developing countries where governments believe that tax haven status would accelerate their rate of economic growth (Howard, 2001, p.256).

• The Tax-Credit System

The credit system allows tax paid in one state to be used as credit against a taxpayer’s liability in another state. The credit will be in the form of a direct credit or indirect credit (August, 2004, p 732)

The philosophy behind a tax credit system is to allow international businesses to operate under the same conditions as domestic enterprises. If a business ventures abroad, it must pay tax on foreign and domestic business income domestically at the same tax rate and tax basis. Foreign tax paid (dividend withholding tax and corporate income tax on the original profits) can be deducted against domestic tax due. This system is also referred as Capital Export Neutral system.

Tax-credit systems have been implemented in the United States, OECD countries, and newly industrialized economies in which investment taxes paid to foreign countries can be deducted at home if the home tax rate exceeds the foreign tax rate.

• Deduction System

Under a deduction system, a resident may deduct the taxes paid to a host country as deductions in calculating his taxable income in his residence country.

The burden on taxpayer is very heavy if is using deduction system. A country that chooses the deduction system indicates that it prefers to increase tax revenues even though it will discourage the level of outbound investment and attract foreign investment into the country. The rationale underlying such a preference is that

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