“Manning Up”: Twenty-First Century Tales of Tax Avoidance and Examination Options on the I.R.S.’s Table
Volume 9 No 2 / Read Article
The U.S. tax system is a “self-assessment” system: upon determining how tax provisions apply to their transactions, taxpayers pay the tax they determine is due, and report the transactions to the I.R.S. in sufficient detail to permit the I.R.S. to confirm that liability was correctly calculated. Paradoxically, the tax system is so complex that it incessantly creates ambiguity and opportunity for abuse. Determining one’s tax obligations is often difficult, even for taxpayers with simple profiles. In a lighthearted article, Andreas A. Apostolides looks at two recent events – the first is a letter written by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden to the Chairman of Bristol-Myers Squibb questioning a ten-year old transaction and the second is a court decision striking down the I.R.S. system of listed transactions and transactions of interest, both part of the anti-tax shelter provisions of U.S. tax law. See more →