Talking Tax

  • Autore: Vários
  • Narratore: Vários
  • Editore: Podcast
  • Durata: 107:17:22
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We cover tax issues from Capitol Hill to the courts and the IRS.

Episodi

  • Companies Still Lag in Use of Data for Tax Planning

    08/09/2022 Durata: 12min

    Tax data and technology can be helpful for companies when making projections for tax planning purposes, but companies have to weigh when the best time is to implement them. Data can give more certainty for companies in scenario planning, such as for the Inflation Reduction Act and everyday business decisions, said Greg Engel, vice chair of tax at KPMG LLP. Still, 52% of companies aren’t using tax data for this work, according to a recent KPMG report. On this episode of Talking Tax, Engel speaks about the importance of companies incorporating tax data into tax planning, how companies are trying to hire to fill this need, and why now is the best time to integrate it. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

  • IRS Aims to Stop Abusive Schemes from Gaining Traction

    01/09/2022 Durata: 14min

    The IRS is seeking to prevent new, potentially abusive transactions from gaining traction with taxpayers. Early this year, the agency launched a group, called the Joint Strategic Emerging Issues Team, so that representatives from a wide range of IRS offices can collaborate to quickly identify areas where there's a high risk of noncompliance and determine how best to address these issues. On this episode of Talking Tax, we speak with two IRS officials involved in the team: Benjamin Swartz, senior adviser to the commissioner of the Small Business/Self-Employed Division, and Holly Porter, associate chief counsel for passthroughs and special industries. Swartz and Porter discuss the goals of JSEIT, the makeup of the team, and the types of issues the group is focusing on. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

  • Companies Urged to Start Preparing for Global Tax Deal

    25/08/2022 Durata: 10min

    Tax directors around the world are grappling with a two-pillar global tax agreement that will require multinational companies to change where and how much tax they pay. As details of how these complex new rules will work in practice come to light, some companies have begun modeling their effect on their tax bills. Rio Tinto PLC, which is part of the OECD's business advisory group, has had a front row seat during the development of the rules and has already put together a team to analyze their impact. On this episode of Talking Tax, we speak with Mark Munsel, general manager of the OECD digital project at Rio Tinto. He heads up the multi-disciplinary team at the company that has been tasked with figuring out how the rules work. Munsel advises companies to start early and begin collecting and organizing the data required to comply with the rules, or risk not being ready when countries start implementing them. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-36

  • Navigating Accounting Firm Mergers and Shakeups

    11/08/2022 Durata: 10min

    The accounting world has been shaken up with several high-profile mergers and acquisitions among firms in recent years, reflecting the growing needs of clients. Abe Schlisselfeld of Marks Paneth LLP had a front-row seat to this trend, serving as the firm's managing director during its acquisition by accounting firm CBIZ Inc. in 2021. Schlisselfeld was at the helm to help shepherd the top-50 accounting firm's transition. On this episode of Talking Tax, Schlisselfeld, senior managing director of CBIZ Marks Paneth, speaks about his experience of overseeing an accounting firm merger, focusing on the challenges faced and lessons learned, as well as sharing advice about how to retain talent and manage major changes. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

  • Becoming Tax Court Chief Judge in the Time of Covid

    04/08/2022 Durata: 13min

    Kathleen Kerrigan is stepping into her new role as the US Tax Court's chief judge with an overarching goal to help the court in living with the Covid-19 pandemic. Kerrigan says her work will include moving to more in-person trials while still maintaining flexibility. In addition, she hopes to increase electronic filing now that DAWSON—the case management system launched by the court in late 2020—makes that possible. On this week's Talking Tax, Kerrigan also spoke about access to Tax Court records, avenues to advance or resolve cases pre-trial, and work by the court to promote diversity and equity. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

  • States Eye Reforms Aimed at Shell Corporation Secrecy

    28/07/2022 Durata: 22min

    The United States ranks first globally for financial secrecy, according to the latest report by the Tax Justice Network and US authorities are trying to do something about it. The Pandora Papers show secretive business structures are thriving in states including Delaware, Nevada, South Dakota, and Wyoming. A few states are taking the problem seriously including New York, which debated but failed to enact the LLC Transparency Act (A9415/S8439) earlier this year. Among other things, the proposed law would require full disclosure of the beneficial owners of limited liability companies and the creation of a publicly searchable database of this information. On this episode of Talking Tax, we hear two perspectives on New York’s proposal. Ryan Gurule, policy director of the Financial Accountability and Corporate Transparency Coalition, contends the states have an important role to play to halt illicit financial flows that facilitate tax evasion and money laundering. Elizabeth “Beth” Garvey, a shareholder in the gove

  • The Implications of Ending the US-Hungary Tax Treaty

    21/07/2022 Durata: 16min

    The July 8 news that the US was canceling a bilateral tax treaty with Hungary that has been in place since 1979 took a lot of people by surprise. While Treasury pointed to conditions in the treaty it said were unfavorable to the US, the announcement also came amid Hungary's continued opposition at the European Union to the 15% minimum tax the Biden administration has championed. On this week's Talking Tax, Sean Foley, the global head of KPMG's transfer pricing dispute resolution network, talks about the implications of the treaty termination, including on dispute resolution and withholding taxes. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

  • Land Conservation Tax Break Under Increasing Scrutiny

    14/07/2022 Durata: 15min

    Tax-advantaged land deals known as syndicated conservation easements are under increasingly heavy scrutiny from the IRS and Congress. The transactions involve a tax break under tax code Section 170(h) that is designed to encourage property owners to give away the development rights for land or buildings for conservation purposes. Syndicated deals—which involve multiple parties who buy into a property, often based on promises of super-sized deductions worth several times more than their investment—are designated as tax schemes on the IRS's infamous Dirty Dozen list. The IRS has been fighting some of these deals in court, while legislation targeting the practice has progressed on Capitol Hill, albeit slowly. On the latest episode of Talking Tax, Tabetha Peavey, an attorney adviser for the Tax Law Center at New York University Law, and Rep. Mike Thompson (D-Calif.), who has introduced legislation targeting the deals, discuss syndicated easements. Peavey explains how the transactions work and what the IRS has don

  • Biden's Economic Plan Races the Clock on Capitol Hill

    07/07/2022 Durata: 16min

    The Biden administration and Democratic lawmakers are quickly running out of time to move a revamped tax, climate, and health care package before the midterm elections. Biden's broad "Build Back Better" agenda stalled in December when Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), a pivotal vote in the evenly split chamber, announced he wouldn't support it. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) has been negotiating with Manchin about a narrower bill focused on clean energy incentives, health care, and tax hikes on corporations and the wealthy. There have been some recent signs of progress, with tentative agreements on prescription drugs and extending the solvency of Medicare. But there are still many issues to hash out and not much time to do it. On the latest episode of Talking Tax, Capitol Hill reporters Kaustuv Basu and Zach C. Cohen break down the state of the negotiations. They cover what's in, what's out, and what obstacles remain. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voi

  • Tax Credit Limit Looms Over Electric Vehicle Market

    30/06/2022 Durata: 14min

    The electric vehicle market in the United States is reaching an inflection point as companies look to boost manufacturing at the same time that two more large automakers are on the verge of losing a critical consumer incentive. The $7,500 electric vehicle tax credit begins phasing out at 200,000 vehicles sold per manufacturer, a threshold General Motors Co. and Tesla Inc. hit years ago. Ford Motor Co. and Toyota Motor Corp. are quickly approaching that sales milestone, which has automakers and EV advocates looking to Congress to step in. Democrats remain interested in ways to expand the EV credit, but that effort is wrapped up in the Biden administration's stalled tax, climate, and social spending plan. Ellen Hughes-Cromwick, a senior resident fellow for climate and energy at the think tank Third Way, is the guest on the latest episode of Talking Tax. Hughes-Cromwick—who previously worked at the Commerce Department and Ford—discusses growth in the electric vehicle sector, breaks down the argument for expandin

  • Crypto Industry Likes Senators' Tax Plans. Should You?

    23/06/2022 Durata: 21min

    A sweeping cryptocurrency bill unveiled earlier this month addresses many of the biggest open questions for the young and volatile asset class, from sanctions compliance to stablecoin oversight. When it comes to the taxation of digital assets, the proposal from Sens. Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) would give the industry much of what it has been asking for. The bill would establish that cryptocurrency rewards created through the processes known as "staking” and “mining" would be taxed when the rewards were sold, rather than when they were created. It also includes a de minimis tax exemption and a narrower definition of brokers for cryptocurrency reporting requirements established in last year's bipartisan infrastructure law. On this episode of Talking Tax, we discuss the implications of the Lummis-Gillibrand bill with Seth Wilks, director of government relations at software company TaxBit, and Omri Marian, a law professor at the University of California, Irvine, School of Law. Wilks d

  • Oil and Gas Super Profits Hit With New Windfall Taxes

    16/06/2022 Durata: 09min

    More countries are turning to temporary windfall taxes targeting the huge profits being made by oil and gas companies as prices continue to climb. The UK, Italy, and Argentina, among other countries, have taken different approaches in designing these new taxes. The UK and Italy want to impose a 25% tax on the profits of energy companies to help people facing a cost-of-living crisis, while Argentina wants to impose a 15% tax. On this episode of Talking Tax, senior reporter Hamza Ali spoke with Rhiannon Kinghall Were, a partner and head of tax policy at law firm Macfarlanes. They discuss the different approaches countries can take when applying windfall taxes, and possible long-term consequences of applying these temporary levies. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

  • Navigating the New Foreign Tax Credit Regulations

    09/06/2022 Durata: 14min

    One of the hottest issues in the corporate-tax world right now is about when multinational companies can use the taxes they pay in foreign countries to defray their US tax bills. The Treasury Department has made that process tougher. Last December, it tightened US foreign tax credit rules, narrowing the range of taxes that qualify for it. But many companies have complained that Treasury went too far—rendering some taxes ineligible for the credit even though they’ve been eligible for years, and thus requiring companies to pay taxes twice on the same income. Earlier this month, the chief financial officers of 28 major companies urged Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen to modify the rules. Treasury has acknowledged the companies’ complaints and says it plans steps to address some of them. But it has defended the basic thrust of the rules. Yellen told a Senate committee this week that “these regulations are very important to protect critical interests of the United States." On this episode of Talking Tax, we discuss

  • Navigating the IRS's Complex New Partnership Audits

    02/06/2022 Durata: 09min

    A 2015 law promised to streamline the Internal Revenue Service's method for auditing partnerships—a type of "pass-through" business where the partners report their share of the proceeds on their personal tax returns. The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 included provisions intended to make it easier for the IRS to scrutinize partnerships. But the law created new concerns and unintended consequences for those navigating the audit process, according to Rochelle Hodes, principal of the Washington National Tax office at Crowe LLP. "The simple has become complex," Hodes said on the latest episode of the Talking Tax podcast. She discusses the complexities of the BBA centralized partnership audit regime, who is eligible to opt out, and what partners undergoing an audit need to consider. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

  • Flat Income Tax Revival Draws Sharply Mixed Reviews

    26/05/2022 Durata: 23min

    With cash cushions plump with federal pandemic relief dollars and a surge in tax revenues, state legislatures across the country have cut taxes aggressively this year. But several states went further, converting their tiered income tax structures to flat-rate systems. Arizona, Georgia, Iowa, and Mississippi have committed to the flat tax in recent weeks, and Oklahoma is likely to join the group soon. The shift away from graduated income tax structures, which tax higher incomes at higher rates, is a dramatic departure from decades of state tax policy. While the motivations in state capitols vary, flat tax proponents framed their proposals as efforts to limit outmigration and improve their state’s economic horsepower. But skeptics warned of long-term social and economic consequences. On this episode of Talking Tax, we hear two perspectives on this shift. Katherine Loughead, a senior policy analyst with the Tax Foundation, contends flat taxes are more transparent and easier to administer, and boost a state’s com

  • Tax Automation Promises to Ease Tech Frustrations

    19/05/2022 Durata: 17min

    Automation tools increasingly used by seasoned tax professionals are helping to take some of the pain and manual labor out of routine compliance work. That futuristic tech goes beyond robotics process automation and can link together the many programs and platforms that accountants rely on everyday. Those building blocks can automate every step in the tax process from onboarding clients to tax return delivery, according to John McGowan, the CEO of Hubsync and former chief information officer for two Big Four tax practices. On this episode of Talking Tax, McGowan talks to Bloomberg Tax's Amanda Iacone about the challenges that firms face in adopting new ways of working and how it can not only help get work done faster but could make CPA firms more attractive to job candidates and clients alike. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

  • Student Loan Interest Deduction Needs a New Look

    12/05/2022 Durata: 12min

    Some or all of the interest paid on student loans can be deducted from your taxes. But despite the proliferation of these types of loans over the years, many taxpayers don't see a real benefit. That's because, unlike with home mortgage interest, the student loan interest deduction has significant limitations and has changed numerous times over the years. Bloomberg Tax columnist Kelly Phillips Erb says Congress needs to rethink how the tax code treats student loans—especially if President Biden forgives a huge swath of them, as he's discussed doing. Kelly also talks about the struggles of paying for higher education and about her family's decision whether to borrow money for her kids, even though she's still paying off her own student loans. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

  • Brazil Poised to Overhaul Its Transfer Pricing Rules

    05/05/2022 Durata: 14min

    As part of its bid to join the OECD, Brazil is working on a major overhaul of its rules governing transfer pricing—the way a group’s related entities value transactions between themselves. Historically, Brazil’s transfer pricing rules have relied on a system of fixed margins. But officials have now committed to moving Brazil to the arm’s length standard, the basis of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's guidelines, and many countries’ approaches to transfer pricing. Romero Tavares, a partner at PwC in Brazil, talks to Bloomberg Tax’s Isabel Gottlieb about what the changes mean for multinationals operating in Brazil, benefits and challenges companies will face under the new system, and what to expect as the government moves ahead with the project. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

  • The NFT Market Is Booming, but Few States Are Imposing Taxes

    28/04/2022 Durata: 21min

    Have you noticed digital works of art with names like Cool Cats, CryptoPunks, and Bored Ape Yacht Club while surfing the web or posting a snarky tweet? They’re all examples of non-fungible tokens, or NFTs, unique digital assets serving as certificates of authenticity for digital products including works of art, music, and collectibles. NFTs are also a surging new industry, expected to reach global sales of $80 billion by 2025. Despite this booming market, state revenue agencies haven’t figured out how to tax or even characterize these digital assets. More than 30 states arguably have authority to collect sales tax on NFTs, but none of them have issued guidance on the subject. Bloomberg Tax took a deep dive into how states might choose to tax NFTs by speaking with two professionals steeped in digital economy tax issues. Wendy Walker, a solutions principal at the tax software company Sovos, talked about the evolution of blockchain technology and the tax treatment of products and services living on blockchains.

  • Broken IRS Vexed by Problems Money Alone Won't Solve

    21/04/2022 Durata: 24min

    The IRS is struggling. As millions of Americans completed their annual tradition of filing taxes earlier this week, they again connected with a sprawling government agency besieged by issues that money alone can't solve. The IRS is still working through a backlog of unprocessed tax returns and can't keep up with a flood of phone calls from taxpayers looking for help. Bloomberg Tax took a deep dive into the IRS's longstanding structural deficiencies, from an over-reliance on paper documents and outdated technology to a less-than-stellar public perception. We asked current and former government officials, agency watchdogs, and tax professionals to offer their strategy for fixing the IRS. To round out the Fixing the IRS series, former IRS Commissioner John Koskinen and Carlos Lopez, founder of the Latino Tax Professionals Association, join the latest episode of our Talking Tax podcast. They discuss what the agency can do to get back on the right track. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give u

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