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Talking Tax

Talking Tax

436 episodes — Page 7 of 9

Paycheck Program in Flux as Congress Tweaks Its Rules

The federal Paycheck Protection Program was rolled out in a hurry—and it showed. Its initial round of loans totaling nearly $350 billion, intended to keep businesses afloat during the pandemic crisis, was exhausted in less than two weeks. And many small business owners complained that it was as hard to spend their loan dollars in compliance with the law as it was to even get a loan in the first place. Since then, Congress has added more money to the program. And now it's changing the rules of who can get that money and how they can spend it. On this week's episode of Talking Tax, host Amanda Iacone talks with Capitol Hill reporter Kaustuv Basu about the revision of the PPP program that cleared Congress late Wednesday night. Kaustuv also explains why the next pandemic relief bill that Congress takes up may be one that makes your vacations tax deductible.

Jun 4, 202013 min

SCOTUS May Curb Treasury Civil War-Era Lawsuit Shield

Trying to get a court injunction against an IRS rule that hasn't been used yet to take your taxes? You may be out of luck. A law dating back to the mid-1800s specifically forbids taxpayer lawsuits that challenge many Treasury Department actions that haven't been enforced yet. The idea behind the law is that, if litigation were to hinder the department's ability to collect revenue, the government could grind to a halt. This law is about to get a lot more scrutiny in the coming months now that the Supreme Court accepted a case for its next term that challenges its constitutionality. On this week's episode of Talking Tax, reporter Aysha Bagchi speaks with host Siri Bulusu about why the Supreme Court is taking up this case now and about what could happen if it rules against the Treasury Department.

May 28, 202011 min

Accountants Must Forecast the Future, Pandemic or Not

This is not a great time to be in the future predicting business, but unfortunately that's what accountants at companies large and small are paid to do. On this week's episode of Talking Tax, host Amanda Iacone speaks with accounting consultant Esther Mills about how to create estimates at a time when predicting what conditions will be like just a few months from now seems laughable. Mills talks about what accountants can do to be honest and accurate while still providing investors with the information they need.

May 21, 202016 min

How Pandemic Vacations Can Turn Into Tax Nightmares

Many people are now working and living away from their usual homes or offices, either by choice or otherwise, as they wait out the spread of the coronavirus. In which jurisdiction do these people pay taxes? On this episode of Talking Tax, reporters Isabel Gottlieb and Siri Bulusu look at why this is a huge headache not just for taxpayers but also for their employers, who may have to start withholding in states they've never withheld in before. They also talk about the even more complicated issue of people who are working remotely from another country.

May 14, 20208 min

Virus Strains Professional, Personal Lives of Tax Pros

The months of self-isolation and social distancing are beginning to weigh on all of us, and tax professionals are no different. On today's episode of Talking Tax, we hear from four different accountants about the new stresses they're facing and how they're managing to cope. Talking Tax host Amanda Iacone speaks with a nearly 40-year veteran of the industry, the owner of a husband-and-wife practice juggling her firm and her five kids, and more. We learn how work practices have been forced to change and about how the crisis has made it imperative that tax professionals shift their role from accountant to adviser. Producers: Amanda Iacone and David Schultz

May 7, 202012 min

Huge Stimulus Now, Higher Taxes Later, EY Exec Says

Many tax chiefs at international companies are struggling to figure out the implications of the trillions of dollars of stimulus funds countries have injected into their economies in recent months. But Kate Barton, the global vice chair of tax at EY, says they should also be looking out for the ensuing hangover: an inevitable series of tax hikes that will be needed to pay for all of this. Barton spoke with Talking Tax host Siri Bulusu about what firms' tax managers should be watching as the global economic response to the coronavirus pandemic continues to unfold.

Apr 30, 20205 min

Latest Pandemic Relief Bill Likely Won't Be the Last

Another day, another multi-billion dollar emergency spending bill clears Congress. On this episode of our podcast, Talking Tax, congressional reporter Colin Wilhelm talks about why the legislation passing today is more of a stopgap measure, and how a larger bill that could have significant impacts on the tax code is likely just over the horizon.

Apr 23, 202013 min

Tech Savvy Accounting Firms May Thrive After Pandemic

Some accounting firms that delayed or deprioritized adopting new technology are now finding that their slow-and-steady strategy is no longer an option. The remote work necessitated by the coronavirus pandemic is forcing these firms to go digital—and fast. On today's episode of Talking Tax, host Amanda Iacone talks with Garrett Wagner, a CPA who also runs a consulting firm that helps accountants upgrade their tech. He says the firms that are behind in their remote work capabilities may need to partner with—or, in some cases, be outright taken over by—other firms that are stronger in this area.

Apr 16, 202019 min

Tax Day Delay Makes Accountants Rip Up Their Calendars

Many tax professionals plan their entire years around this upcoming Wednesday, April 15—also known as Tax Day. But things will be different this year. The IRS has delayed the filing and payment deadlines for federal taxes by three months to give tax payers and tax preparers more time to deal with the fallout from the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. And while this extra time was certainly welcomed, it does mean that this filing season will be unlike nearly any other most CPAS have experienced. On this episode of Talking Tax, we talk to Ed Karl, vice president at the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, about what this sudden schedule change means for tax preparers. (Note: This interview with Karl was recorded on April 8, before the IRS moved back many of its filing deadlines for things like trusts and estates.)

Apr 9, 20209 min

How to Report Earnings After an Unprecedented Quarter

This would normally be the time when most companies would be closing their books for the first quarter and getting ready to report their earnings. But now, with the coronavirus pandemic in full force, many companies are simply struggling to survive and operating with a skeleton crew. On this week's episode of our podcast, Talking Tax, we hear from Todd Castagno, a tax and accounting analyst for institutional investors at Morgan Stanley. He tells Talking Tax host Amanda Iacone about the challenges companies are facing in communicating with investors when many are having a hard time even quantifying their own assets. Producer: David Schultz.

Apr 2, 202018 min

Tax Code Is Weaponized in Feds' Fight Against Virus

Congress and federal agencies are taking steps that, until recently, would have been unthinkable in an attempt to mitigate some of the economic damage wrought by the coronavirus pandemic. On this episode of Talking Tax, we hear from reporter Allyson Versprille about whether the IRS is doing enough to make life easier for taxpayers—and for its own employees. And Bloomberg Tax's Colin Wilhelm talks about how Congress' $2 trillion spending package is essentially a "bridge loan for the American public."

Mar 26, 202013 min

How Congress Will Step in to Solve State Tax Chaos

Small businesses are still struggling to deal with the chaos that resulted from the Supreme Court's Wayfair decision less than two years ago. Rep. Andy Kim (D-N.J.) is one of the people hoping to bring order from this chaos for small businesses. On this episode of our podcast, Talking Tax, we speak with Kim, the chairman of a House Small Business subcommittee that handles tax issues, about how the Wayfair decision is affecting businesses in his district and elsewhere, and about whether Congress is inclined to address their problems.

Mar 19, 20207 min

Virus for CFOs Is Recession, 9/11, and War All-in-One

These are trying times for CFOs at companies both large and small. Ash Noah, a former CFO for a global logistics company, says it reminds him of the Great Recession, the 9/11 attacks, and the Gulf War all rolled into one. On this special coronavirus episode of our Talking Tax podcast, we hear from Noah, now a managing director at the Association of International Certified Professional Accountants, about what CFOs need to be doing now to respond to the pandemic and about what the federal government should be doing to help keep companies' finance departments above water.

Mar 13, 202011 min

New Retirement Law Giving Benefits Managers Headaches

The ink from the President’s signature was barely dry on last year’s SECURE Act before many of its provisions went into effect, forcing companies to change the way they manage their employees’ retirement accounts. Many of these companies are turning to people like Veena Murthy, a principal at the accounting firm Crowe, LLP, who helped craft the SECURE Act in her previous job as a counsel at Congress’ Joint Committee on Taxation. Bloomberg Law’s Warren Rojas spoke with Murthy about some of the changes the SECURE Act wrought and what benefits managers should be doing about them.

Mar 12, 202010 min

Swiss Re Exec Says Keep Close Eye on OECD Tax Talks

Andrea Grainger, head of transfer pricing operations at insurance and reinsurance giant Swiss Re, is closely watching ongoing OECD talks aimed at rewriting global corporate tax systems. She spoke with Bloomberg Tax reporter Isabel Gottlieb about how different parts of the plan would affect her industry—and why all companies should be paying attention.

Mar 5, 202013 min

IRS's Blessing Discusses IP, Real-Time Auditing Issues

Peter Blessing, an associate chief counsel at the IRS, joins Bloomberg Tax senior reporter Allyson Versprille to talk about the agency's strategy for wrapping up implementation of the 2017 tax law. At Bloomberg Tax's 2020 Outlook on Tax event in Washington, Blessing discusses challenges resulting from companies wanting to bring intellectual property back to the U.S. He also addresses initial international issues arising from the IRS's real-time auditing program for some large corporations.

Feb 20, 202022 min

Treasury's Harter Talks International Tax Regulations

L.G. "Chip" Harter is spearheading the Treasury Department's implementation of the international provisions of the 2017 tax law. He said the department aims to finish this by October. Harter spoke with Bloomberg Tax reporter Isabel Gottlieb at Bloomberg Tax's 2020 Outlook on Tax event in Washington. Harter spoke about a Senate inquiry into Treasury's rulemaking process and he also addresses what's next for U.S. negotiations on tax treaties after the Senate finally broke a decade-long treaty logjam last year.

Feb 20, 202010 min

Nobelist Romer Wants to Target Tech Giants With Taxes

Google, Facebook, and other tech giants have too much market power and way too much information about all of us. That's the opinion of lots of political figures, as well as of Nobel economist Paul Romer. What makes Romer different is his preferred way of dealing with this problem: taxes. U.S. states would be the best place to start, Romer says. He speaks with Bloomberg Tax correspondent Michael Bologna on the latest episode of Talking Tax.

Feb 13, 202014 min

Introducing Downballot Counts

This week, we're sharing an episode of the newest weekly podcast from Bloomberg Industry Group, Downballot Counts. It's a podcast about the 2020 U.S. House and Senate elections and the fight to control Congress. The series is hosted by Bloomberg Government Senior Elections Reporter Greg Giroux and Elections Team Leader Kyle Trygstad. Subscribe to Downballot Counts wherever you get your podcasts.

Feb 10, 202021 min

Converting to a C Corporation: Things to Think About

Some of the biggest investment funds—Ares Management Corp., KKR & Co. Inc., and others—converted from partnerships to C corporations after Congress slashed the corporate tax rate in the 2017 tax law. But conversions aren’t for everyone, not by a long shot. Jeremy Swan, managing principal at CohnReznick in New York, talks about the pros and cons, the questions that businesses should ask themselves, and the political uncertainties right now that signal the wisdom of a “wait and see” approach to further conversions.

Feb 6, 202012 min

Millionaires Group Eyes Corporate Tax Fairness, Too

Patriotic Millionaires isn’t just about advocating higher taxes for the wealthy, as Chair Morris Pearl discussed in a recent Talking Tax episode. The group also thinks fairness requires multinational companies to pay tax in the countries where their sales revenue comes from, and they should disclose how much tax they pay in each country. In this episode, Pearl talks with host Amanda Iacone about these issues and why corporate political spending is a problem.

Jan 29, 202012 min

Patriotic Millionaires ‘Move Needle’ on Taxing Rich

Morris Pearl is somewhat encouraged by all the talk about wealth taxes these days. The Patriotic Millionaires, which he chairs as a volunteer job, has “made a lot of progress in moving the needle” toward its argument for taxing the rich more and paying people more equitably. Pearl, who made his wealth initially at BlackRock Inc., talks with Bloomberg Tax’s Amanda Iacone about the wealth tax proposals, legislation to tax investment income at the same rate as earned income, the “ridiculous” carried interest tax benefit for fund managers, and more.

Jan 23, 202019 min

Congress Went to Court for Trump’s Tax Returns. Why?

House committees, among others, have been trying to get President Donald Trump’s tax returns and other financial documents, and have turned to the courts to enforce the effort. Why doesn’t Congress use its own enforcement? Cornell law professor Josh Chafetz thinks the legislative branch has ceded too much power to the judicial branch. He points to the Nixon tapes effort in the 1970s as a significant turning point, when Congress went to courts for the first time in an information dispute with the executive branch. He talks with Bloomberg Tax legal reporter Aysha Bagchi about the arguments he makes in his book, Congress’s Constitution, and speculates on how the cases may play out.

Jan 16, 202022 min

The Tax Decade: How the 2010s Led to Where We Are Now

Talking Tax embarks on the 2020s with a lively conversation about how tax policy evolved through the 2010s. Bloomberg Tax law analyst Mary Gillmarten, a veteran of government and private-practice work, reviews the decade’s major developments—especially how the U.S. and other countries started tackling globalization and the digitalized economy. And she has thoughts about implications for our future.

Jan 9, 202024 min

The OECD and Taxes for the Digital Economy: a Primer

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development is going into 2020 with some of its most complex work ever: shepherding efforts for a global rewrite of corporate taxation systems in the digital economy. Host Siri Bulusu spoke with Bloomberg Tax reporter Isabel Gottlieb about issues the OECD is facing and implications for countries and companies.

Dec 19, 201913 min

Supreme Court Hears Case Over Divisive Tax Refund Rule

U.S. Supreme Court justices turned their attention this term to a long-standing federal common law rule—the Bob Richards rule—that courts have used to determine who gets a tax refund in cases involving a parent company’s bankruptcy. Bloomberg Tax legal reporter Aysha Bagchi sits down with host Siri Bulusu to describe the controversy and walk through the lively Dec. 3 oral arguments in the case, Rodriguez v. FDIC.

Dec 12, 201924 min

U.S. Treasury Tax Policy: A Talk With David Kautter

David Kautter, assistant Treasury secretary for tax policy, discussed international digital tax issues, regulations stemming from the 2017 tax law, and more in an exclusive interview at the Bloomberg Tax Leadership Forum Nov. 19. Background reading: The Treasury Department is planning to issue regulations restricting how hedge fund managers can claim a valuable tax break by early next year. IRS Office Carrying Out 2017 Tax Law No Longer Exists: Kautter

Nov 21, 201921 min

Technology Means Transformation for Audit Sector

Patricia Cummings, chief risk officer and a managing partner at accounting and consulting firm Citrin Cooperman, discusses how technology is transforming the accounting and auditing environment. Artificial intelligence, data analytics, and blockchain are changing what aspiring auditors should know—as the industry looks for “critical, strategic thinkers.”

Nov 14, 201921 min

Religion and the Tax Code

In the U.S., religious practices have an unclear relationship to the tax code. Sam Brunson, a professor at Loyola University Chicago School of Law, has an idea to give some structure to the way policy makers deal with that relationship. Congress historically writes religious accommodations into the tax code on a case-by-case basis: A group of people appears with a specific tax problem, and lawmakers decide whether to write a fix. But what if there were a framework that would help them consider the problems consistently and fairly? Brunson proposes such a framework in his book, “God and the IRS: Accommodating Religious Practice in United States Tax Law.” Discussing it with Bloomberg Tax legal reporter Aysha Bagchi, he says the government will surely continue to grant accommodations. The question is “will they be thoughtful, or will they continue to be ad hoc?”

Nov 7, 201913 min

The View From a Global Tax Chief: EY’s Kate Barton

Kate Barton has been navigating unprecedented change in tax systems around the planet since becoming EY’s global vice chair for tax and legal services in early 2018. Trade wars and Brexit are roiling markets and expectations, and countries are scrambling for their share of corporate revenue while trying to transform their tax regimes for the digital-commerce age. The OECD aims for consensus by 2020 in its project on tax system modernization, but as Barton points out, “these are in fact guidelines, and then 140 countries have to read these and then legislate their own country legislation.” Interesting, she says, especially “in a world right now where we seem to be a little more nationalistic.” Talking Tax host Amanda Iacone talked with Barton about all of that and more, including EY’s legal managed services business and diversity.

Oct 31, 201921 min

CECL: What You Need To Know About New Bank Accounting

A new U.S. accounting standard is about to make a huge difference in what banks’ financial statements and earnings look like—and for some of them, what their future lending practices could be. The standard is known as CECL—for current expected credit losses. It’s considered accounting rulemakers’ chief response to the 2008 financial crisis. Starting in 2020 banks have to venture into new territory, factoring future economic developments into expectations for credit losses, and put aside loan loss reserves for them. That means impacts on earnings, stock prices, and capital. Some critics say it could affect banks’ appetites for anything but the safest loans. Bloomberg Tax reporter Nicola White spoke with Talking Tax host Amanda Iacone about how the standard works, what challenges banks face, and the latest developments from the Financial Accounting Standards Board.

Oct 24, 201917 min

How Are States Taxing the Income Called GILTI?

The federal tax on a category of income called GILTI—global intangible low-taxed income—has state-level implications for multinational businesses. Congress created GILTI to stop companies from shifting profits abroad through intangible assets—royalties, patents, and the like. When a company’s total overseas income has been taxed abroad at less than a certain rate, the U.S. applies a tax. In the U.S., state governments often conform their own tax laws to the federal tax code. But with GILTI, states are all over the map. For most states it means a very modest increase in their corporate tax base, but for companies it can mean dealing with multiple approaches and calculations. And there’s talk of legal challenges. Talking Tax host Siri Bulusu talked about GILTI with Bruce Fort, counsel to the Multistate Tax Commission, who has an eagle’s-eye view of what the states are doing. They spoke at the American Bar Association tax section’s fall meeting in San Francisco.

Oct 17, 201918 min

ESG Investment Boom Spotlights Corporate Disclosure

It’s a major theme for a burgeoning number of investors: concern for sustainability and social values as drivers of financial decisions. That means boom time for ESG investing—driven by examination of businesses’ environmental, social, and governance positions. Companies are disclosing more and more about their environmental footprints, how they treat their employees, how their leadership operates, and more. The information, which is beginning to appear in mainstream financial reports like 10-Ks, can help stakeholders assess a company’s long-term resilience and value. Talking Tax host Amanda Iacone discussed the ESG disclosure landscape and the growth of ESG auditing with Kristen Sullivan, sustainability and key performance indicators services leader with Deloitte. She also chairs the Sustainability Assurance and Advisory Task Force at the American Institute of CPAs. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast | Via Spotify

Oct 10, 201921 min

India Tax Dispute Plays Out at International Court

Businesses are watching India closely as the Modi government cuts taxes and takes other steps to woo investors into the enormous market. One place to watch is the Hague, where a longstanding dispute between India and Cairn Energy is playing out. Cairn Energy is fighting a big tax bill—$1.6 billion plus interest and penalties—that India delivered retroactively for a 2006 internal restructuring transaction. The company took India to binding arbitration at the International Court of Justice, under terms of the bilateral investment treaty. India's position is that the treaty doesn't govern tax issues. Whatever the outcome, India's response could signal the country's posture with respect to arbitration and, generally, to the issue of tax sovereignty. Talking Tax hosts Amanda Iacone and Siri Bulusu discuss the Cairn case, with a special insight from Mukesh Butani, managing partner at BMR Legal in New Delhi, and specialist in international tax and transfer pricing law. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast | Via Spotify

Oct 3, 20198 min

What Are Micro-Captive Insurers?

Micro-captive insurance companies play a useful role for relatively small businesses that need to insure risks they can't buy coverage for elsewhere. The businesses self-insure, setting up companies that are captive to their owners. Because Congress allowed micro-captive owners a tax advantage, some companies have abused the structures in ways that induced the Internal Revenue Service to put them on its list for extra-close scrutiny. The IRS has won a few big cases against micro-captives, and hundreds more are docketed in the U.S. Tax Court. The IRS has offered to settle with some of these companies in an effort to deal with the issue in a comprehensive way. Host Amanda Iacone talked with Bloomberg Tax reporter Allyson Versprille about the nature of micro-captives and what the settlement offer might signal for the future of legitimate micro-captive structures. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast | Via Spotify

Sep 26, 201910 min

Weed Shops Have a Cash Problem. Can States Make It Easier?

Wads of cash. That’s how owners of recreational marijuana businesses haul in their taxes, because big banks are reluctant to work with the industry while marijuana is still illegal under federal law. U.S. states may pull in as much as $1.6 billion in taxes from recreational marijuana sales this year—that’s not including medical marijuana—so that’s a lot of wrinkled bills from the register. A number of states and cities have stepped up with ideas to make payment safer and more efficient. Nevada is developing a pilot digital currency system for paying taxes. Ohio already allows bitcoin tax payments by businesses. Washington state tax payments can be made through state-chartered banks and credit unions. An Arizona startup is testing an approach involving armored cars and blockchain-based tokens. And there’s more. Bloomberg Tax reporter Brenna Goth looked into these and other ways states are tackling the problem. She spoke with Talking Tax host Amanda Iacone. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast | Via Spotify

Sep 19, 201918 min

OECD’s Saint-Amans Talks Up Global Tax Deal Prospects

“Relax a bit,” Pascal Saint-Amans advised countries that may fear losing a lot of revenue under a new global approach being developed to tax cross-border business—especially digital business. The OECD-led project toward agreement on a plan aims not to create big revenue winners or losers, Saint-Amans said in a Sept. 11 interview at the International Fiscal Association meeting in London. He’s the OECD’s top tax official, heading work on the plan that would give more taxing rights to countries where companies’ consumers are. Saint-Amans brought Bloomberg Tax’s Siri Bulusu up to date on the latest expectations for the project, which gained even more political urgency this summer when France enacted a 3% tax on some digital business revenue of big companies, including U.S. giants like Facebook Inc. and Alphabet Inc.'s Google. Other countries are eyeing such taxes of their own. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast | Via Spotify

Sep 11, 201913 min

How Apple’s Hometown Tax Deal Grew to $70 Million

Many states and cities offer tax breaks and other incentives to lure businesses and jobs—often raising questions about the actual benefit of the expensive measures. California communities have a unique version, one that Bloomberg Tax’s Laura Mahoney shed light on this year. In extensive data research and reporting, Mahoney uncovered Cupertino’s payment of nearly $70 million to Apple through the years. It started when the company was in trouble in 1997, and it continues with monthly payments to the now-giant global enterprise. Defenders say agreements like this help the economy of job-hungry cities; critics call them an unwarranted tax giveaways. Other companies have similar arrangements—Best Buy, for example, has one with the city of Dinuba. The money comes from a special California mechanism that shares sales tax revenue with communities where companies are located or that are designated as points of sale. Bloomberg Tax team leader Jeff Harrington spoke with Mahoney about the issue and her reporting. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast | Via Spotify

Aug 29, 201916 min

Buffalo Wings and Opinions: Judge Holmes Talks Tax

U.S. Tax Court Judge Mark Holmes is one of those judges who can make a person glad to be reading a legal opinion. His judgments are often marked by wit, clarity, and pointed references to literature that illuminate a plaintiff’s plight or a point of law. He once explored Buffalo wings and other cuisine in a decision about a tax dispute involving “material participation.” In this episode, Holmes reveals that he will write an “interesting and very long opinion” in probably his biggest pending case: the Michael Jackson estate’s battle with the Internal Revenue Service. Bloomberg Tax’s Siri Bulusu talked with Holmes about his writing, his serendipitous landing in the tax law arena, procedural challenges the IRS is facing, and the “parade of humanity” he enjoys dealing with at the court. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast| Via Spotify

Aug 22, 201926 min

Tax Extenders, Corrections on Capitol Hill’s Fall Menu

Some complicated tax issues face Congress when lawmakers return after Labor Day. Extenders—those expired or about-to-expire temporary tax breaks for specific groups—remain in play big-time in both House and Senate. The House Ways and Means Committee has passed an extenders package, and Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) says he will make the issue a Finance Committee priority in September. Meanwhile, the outlook for passage of technical corrections to the 2017 tax law remains unclear. There’s the so-called retail glitch—an inadvertent blow to stores and restaurants that make renovations—and what’s known as the church parking tax problem. Amanda Iacone talked about the Capitol Hill tax picture with Bloomberg Tax reporters Stu Basu and Colin Wilhelm. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast | Via Spotify

Aug 15, 201917 min

$100M Donation Case Opens Window on Donor-Advised Funds

The National Philanthropic Trust calls donor-advised funds the most popular method of charitable giving—nearly a half-million accounts hold $110 billion in assets. Now a court fight between a wealthy family and a fund to which they donated stock may offer a look into how these funds work. Universities and community foundations run their own charitable funds, but big-name investment managers like JP Morgan, Vanguard, and Fidelity operate them, too. They often convert complex donations—art, stock, or cryptocurrency, for example—into cash that can be given to charities over a period of years, often with tax advantages. The Fairbairns sued Fidelity Charitable, saying the fund violated contract law by promising a sophisticated liquidation and then selling their donated stock too quickly. That caused the value of the stock to plunge, lowering the value of their $100 million donation and the tax deduction they had hoped to receive along with it. Ohio State University professor Brian Mittendorf has been researching donor-advised funds. He spoke with Bloomberg Tax reporter Aysha Bagchi about the Fairbairn case and the tax and policy ramifications of these funds. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast | Via Spotify

Aug 8, 201919 min

Trump Could Dust Off Tax Rule for French Retaliation

Countries around the world are talking about taxing the revenue of giant digital-business companies. In July, France became the first European country to enact a digital services tax—immediately drawing the ire of U.S. officials. The U.S., home of digital giants like Amazon.com Inc., wants France and other countries to wait for a global agreement on digital taxation, which could rewrite the rules that determine where and how multinationals in many industries are taxed. In the meantime, Washington has opened a trade investigation. President Donald Trump tweeted that taxing French wine might be a way to retaliate. But he has another option, buried in the tax code. The provision—Section 891, which has never been used—stems from another tax dispute between the U.S. and France, more than 80 years ago. Bloomberg Tax’s Isabel Gottlieb spoke with Itai Grinberg, professor of international tax at Georgetown University. Previously an attorney in the Treasury Department’s Office of International Tax Counsel and in private practice, Grinberg also consults with multilateral institutions on international tax issues. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast | Via Spotify

Aug 1, 201912 min

Trust Tax Questions Remain After High Court Ruling

The Supreme Court in June threw out North Carolina’s taxation of a family trust’s income because the trust didn’t have enough of a connection to the state. The decision, in the case of the Kimberley Rice Kaestner 1992 Family Trust, didn’t give trust and estate attorneys as much instruction as many wanted with respect to state taxation of trusts. Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s opinion was narrowly drawn. But lawyers still can draw some guidance from it as they advise wealthy clients how, and where, to structure trusts that will minimize tax burdens. Bloomberg Tax’s Aysha Bagchi spoke with attorney Bob Kleinknecht of Oakstone Law in Florida about how trusts work and what the Kaestner ruling may mean for estate planning. Kleinknecht has experience not only with Florida estate and trust practice but with New York and Massachusetts as well. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast | Via Spotify

Jul 25, 201914 min

China Refuses US Audit Inspections. Why it matters

Effective auditing of companies' financial statements is important for investor confidence, but Chinese companies traded in the U.S. don't get U.S. oversight of their audits as other companies do. And that could be a risk for investors. The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, the U.S. audit regulator created to restore confidence in financial reporting after accounting scandals of the early 2000s, isn't allowed to inspect the work of China-based accountants. That lack of access is a concern to the PCAOB, the Securities and Exchange Commission. and some members of Congress. They have introduced legislation to crack down on China if it doesn't let audit inspectors in. Bloomberg Tax's Amanda Iacone spoke with Paul Gillis, who teaches at Peking University’s school of management in Beijing, about the significance of the problem and what may lie ahead. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast | Via Spotify

Jul 18, 201918 min

SALT Cap Workarounds: States Try Pass-Through Taxes

When Congress put a $10,000 cap on the amount of state and local taxes individuals can deduct from their federal income taxes, high-tax states tried to fight for their residents in a couple of different ways. One way—charitable funds that earned people state tax credits for donations—got shot down by the IRS. But states have tried another kind of workaround. Because the deduction cap applies only to individuals, not to businesses, some states have instituted new taxes on pass-through businesses, like LLCs and partnerships. These entities normally don’t pay taxes. Instead, their individual owners pay tax on the business income. Bloomberg Tax team lead Jeff Harrington explored the state workarounds with Cannon-Marie Green, the managing editor overseeing Bloomberg Tax’s editorial coverage of state corporate income tax and pass-throughs. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast | Via Spotify

Jul 11, 20199 min

IRS Top Attorney Names Priorities Post-2017 Tax Law

Michael Desmond became the Internal Revenue Service’s chief counsel earlier this year as the agency was well into implementing the complex 2017 tax code overhaul. In a wide-ranging conversation with senior editor Colleen Murphy June 27 at the Bloomberg Tax Leadership Forum in New York, Desmond expressed encouragement at the hiring of “energized attorneys” to implement the law. He recommended that companies pay attention to interrelationships among various provisions, especially in the international arena. He talked about non-tax overhaul priorities, too—including strengthening partnership audits and figuring out long-term streamlining of controversies over syndicated conservation easements. Listen to their conversation—plus a bit of Q&A with the forum audience—on a special episode of Talking Tax.

Jun 27, 201933 min

Buying Online? ‘Wayfair’ Tax Is Straining E-Commerce

The U.S. Supreme Court’s 2018 South Dakota v. Wayfair decision upended a 26-year precedent that limited a state’s authority to tax goods being sold across state lines. A year later, states have amended their laws to target remote sellers and online sales platforms like Amazon.com Inc. Bloomberg Tax reporter Ryan Prete spoke with Diane Yetter, founder of the Sales Tax Institute and president of consulting firm Yetter Tax, to discuss the ruling’s legacy so far and possible future legal issues. She said legal challenges could begin with differing interpretations of the laws, and go as far as class-action lawsuits against sellers for not collecting the taxes appropriately. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast | Via Spotify

Jun 20, 201915 min

C Corp Conversation: Companies Vet 2017 Tax Law Options

The 2017 tax law lowered the corporate tax rate to 21%. That has some companies taking a look at their corporate structure and asking: Is a C corp better? "We have the conversation a lot," said Elizabeth Stieff, a tax attorney with Venable LLC in Baltimore. Stieff said clients see this great 21% tax rate and they want to take advantage of it. But, as she explained to Bloomberg Tax's Amanda Iacone, it's only a great opportunity for specific businesses in specific circumstances. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast| Via Spotify

Jun 13, 201914 min

Global Tax Revamp Focuses on Getting Consensus by 2020

The OECD released a blueprint for how to rewrite global tax rules. The group hopes to get international consensus around proposals to set a global minimum tax and reallocate more of companies’ taxable profits to countries where their consumers are located. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development wants to get 129 countries to agree to the plan by 2020. Martin Kreienbaum, director general of international taxation at Germany’s finance ministry, spoke with Bloomberg Tax reporter Siri Bulusu about the outlook for the OECD’s effort. Listen and subscribe to Talking Tax from your mobile device: Via Apple Podcasts | Via Stitcher | Via Overcast| Via Spotify

Jun 6, 201915 min

Growing U.S. Gig Workforce Exposes Outdated Tax System

American workers are cashing in on their side hustle, picking up small jobs through Task Rabbit, driving for Lyft, or selling jewelry on Etsy. But they owe taxes on that work. And many of these self-employed workers are under-reporting their income to the IRS. It’s contributing to an estimated $450 billion tax gap. Annette Nellen, who directs the graduate tax program at San Jose State University, spoke with Bloomberg Tax reporter Amanda Iacone about how the gig economy is changing the tax landscape and the challenges facing both workers and preparers.

May 30, 201918 min