Home United States USA — Financial Supreme Court leaves Trump-era offshore tax in place on investors

Supreme Court leaves Trump-era offshore tax in place on investors

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The case had potentially trillions of dollars in tax consequences for the federal budget, and the court’s decision could have severely limited congressional options in enacting tax policy.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday ruled against a couple who challenged the constitutionality of a Trump-era tax provision, handing the government a victory in a case that had huge potential consequences for the federal budget.
At issue was a tax enacted in 2017 to pay for President Trump’s massive corporate tax cut and to prevent off-shore tax dodges. It was challenged by Charles And Kathleen Moore, who were required to pay a one-time $15,000 tax on an investment in India that grew in value from $40,000 to over a half million dollars.
Backed by conservative anti-regulatory groups, the couple claimed that because they had received no payments or dividends from the company, there was no income to be taxed. And they maintained that the tax violated the Sixteenth Amendment to the constitution, enacted in 1913, which authorizes Congress to collect taxes on income.
This tax, they maintained, was not on income, and thus was unconstitutional.
But the Supreme Court disagreed by a vote of 7 to 2.
Although on paper the case appeared obscure, it had potentially trillions of dollars in tax consequences for the federal budget, and an adverse decision could have severely limited congressional options in enacting tax policy.
Indeed, former Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan, who shepherded the tax through the House of Representative, warned that if the tax were invalidated, it could unravel a third of the tax code.

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