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Study Guide

📖 Core Concepts Tax Avoidance – Legal use of tax rules in a single jurisdiction to lower tax payable; exploits provisions the law permits even if not intended. Tax Evasion – Illegal, fraudulent actions to hide income or falsify information. Tax Planning vs. Avoidance – Planning follows the government’s intended use of the law; avoidance may use the same law in unintended ways. Principles of Avoidance (Stiglitz, 1986) Postponement: Deferring tax reduces its present value. Bracket Arbitrage: Shift income among family members or over time to hit lower marginal rates. Income‑Stream Arbitrage: Use differing tax treatments for different types of income. Substance‑Over‑Form – Economic reality outweighs the literal wording of a provision (OECD principle). Business Purpose Rule – A transaction must have a genuine commercial purpose; tax benefit cannot be the primary driver. General vs. Specific Anti‑Avoidance Rules GAAR: Broad statutory test prohibiting aggressive avoidance lacking a genuine business purpose. SAAR: Targeted rules aimed at particular avoidance techniques. 📌 Must Remember Legal vs. Illegal – Avoidance = legal; evasion = illegal. GAAR Applies When the main purpose of a transaction is tax benefit and there is no real business purpose. Ramsay Principle (UK) – Artificial pre‑arranged steps with no commercial purpose are disregarded; tax is based on the overall effect. Double‑Taxation Treaties protect against being taxed twice but are scarce with recognized tax havens. Step‑up in Basis – At death, heir’s cost basis resets to market value, wiping out unrealized gains. Diverted Profits Tax (“Google Tax”) – UK 2015 measure to deter profit shifting out of the UK. 🔄 Key Processes Assessing GAAR Applicability Identify the transaction → Determine if a genuine business purpose exists → If absent, GAAR may invalidate the arrangement. Using a Double‑Taxation Treaty Determine source country → Verify residence country → Apply treaty article to claim exemption or credit → File required forms. Creating an Offshore Entity for Shelter Choose jurisdiction → Incorporate company/trust → Transfer assets → Ensure management/control is legally offshore → Report as required. Share Repurchase Tax Benefit Company buys back shares → Shareholder receives cash → Treated as capital gain → Apply lower capital‑gain tax rate vs dividend tax. 🔍 Key Comparisons Tax Avoidance vs. Tax Evasion Avoidance: Legal, uses existing law. Evasion: Illegal, involves deception. Tax Planning vs. Tax Avoidance Planning: Uses law as intended. Avoidance: Uses law in ways not intended. GAAR vs. SAAR GAAR: Broad, purpose‑based test. SAAR: Narrow, technique‑specific prohibitions. ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “All tax shelters are illegal.” – Only abusive shelters (e.g., those labeled by the IRS) are illegal; legitimate shelters comply with substance‑over‑form. “Changing residence automatically eliminates tax.” – Residence change only works if the new jurisdiction taxes the individual and there is no treaty that still taxes certain income streams. “Ramsay Principle only applies in the UK.” – The principle influences many common‑law jurisdictions but is not a universal rule. 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition “The Real‑World Lens” – Always ask: What is the economic substance of the transaction? If the answer is “nothing,” it’s likely a GAAR target. “Tax Rate Ladder” – Visualize marginal tax rates as steps; moving income down a step (via family members or timing) reduces liability. 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases Treaties with Tax Havens – Very few; lack of treaty means income may still be taxed in the source country even if the taxpayer resides in a haven. Retrospective Legislation – UK can apply tax law retroactively (e.g., BN66) to capture schemes after the fact. Alternative Minimum Tax (US) – Captures certain high‑benefit avoidance strategies even when regular tax is low. 📍 When to Use Which Choose GAAR analysis when a transaction is complex and the business purpose is unclear. Apply SAAR when dealing with a known, legislated avoidance technique (e.g., specific loan‑interest offset schemes). Use a Double‑Taxation Treaty when income originates in one country but the taxpayer is resident elsewhere; only if the treaty covers that income type. Deploy an offshore entity when the goal is to shift passive investment income; ensure substance requirements are met to survive GAAR. 👀 Patterns to Recognize Artificial Step Chains – Multiple transactions that individually have no commercial purpose but together achieve a tax result → Ramsay/GAAR red flag. Bracket‑Shifting Signals – Large transfers to family members or trusts near year‑end → possible bracket arbitrage. Treaty‑Avoidance Gaps – Income from jurisdictions lacking treaties → higher risk of double taxation or aggressive sheltering. 🗂️ Exam Traps Distractor: “Tax avoidance is always illegal.” – Wrong; it is legal but may be subject to anti‑avoidance rules. Distractor: “GAAR applies only to corporations.” – Incorrect; GAAR can apply to individuals and any taxpayer. Distractor: “All offshore trusts automatically evade tax.” – Misleading; they can be legitimate if substance and reporting requirements are met. Distractor: “Share buybacks are always taxed at dividend rates.” – Wrong; they are usually taxed as capital gains, which are lower. Distractor: “Retrospective legislation violates the rule of law.” – While controversial, many jurisdictions (e.g., UK) have used it, and it is legally permissible.
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