Report Challenges Eliminating Deductibility of Foreign Reinsurance Premiums

A report from the Tax Foundation challenges recent tax proposals including the White House’s 2015 budget that call for provisions to limit deductions of “legitimate business costs for tax purposes.”

The report says that provisions that would eliminate the deduction for reinsurance premiums paid to foreign subsidiaries would “ultimately create more problems than they solve.”

The Tax Foundation, which describes its reports as non-partisan, argues that “this specific provision redefines the corporate tax base to effectively ignore legitimate business transactions” and says that it is “poor for growth because it increases the cost of capital, and it doubles down on a dubious corporate tax system in need of broader reforms.”

The report’s conclusions are as follows:

The report notes that the controversy over reinsurance practices and taxes highlight obvious problems with the corporate tax code. “Critics of profit-shifting are right to point out that it is possible, at least in practice, to design a false subsidiary with no real business value, and use that subsidiary to keep income from tax jurisdictions,” it says.

However, according to the Tax Foundation, while critics of foreign reinsurers see the problem that way, if the problem “were that simple, the IRS is already authorized to deal with it.” But the problem for the U.S. tax code is, in the group’s view, that reinsurance transactions represent a “completely legitimately-priced business model that actually provides value.”

“The U.S. corporate tax code has problems. For instance, its statutory rate is the third highest in the world and it is one of six remaining OECD countries under the outdated worldwide system of corporate taxation,” said Tax Foundation economist Alan Cole.

“The problems with the corporate tax code are broad and it is in need of a broad solution. In contrast, the proposal discussed in this report is part of a worrying trend of increasingly-elaborate, industry-specific, arbitrary ways of determining the corporate tax base. Simply put: Piecemeal revisions to the corporate code to not the address underlying issues.”

Source: The Tax Foundation