From USA TODAY Hunt for offshore tax evaders widens Feds expand hunt for offshore tax evaders http://usat.ly/1cleDlK
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Showing posts with label offshore assets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label offshore assets. Show all posts
November 12, 2013
January 9, 2013
Bad Marks given by the IRS Taxpayer Advocate on Voluntary Offshore Disclosure Program in Its report to Congress
The IRS National Taxpayer Advocate reported the following to Congress:
The IRS’s Offshore Voluntary Disclosure programs and their failure to distinguish adequately between “bad actors” and “benign actors.” The IRS has sought to increase enforcement of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR) reporting requirements in recent years and has offered a series of voluntary disclosure programs designed to settle with taxpayers who had failed to file required FBAR forms. However, the report says, the programs generally applied a “one-size-fits-all” approach that required the payment of significant penalties and did not distinguish between “bad actors” and “benign actors.” By generally requiring taxpayers who make voluntary disclosures to “opt out” of the disclosure program and submit to comprehensive audits in order to avoid draconian penalties, the report argues that the program has caused excessive burden and fear for taxpayers who had reasonable cause for not filing FBAR forms or whose failure to file was inadvertent.
This confirms the IRS has not created a fair and just program to allow those middle class US Citizens living abroad who were unaware of their US filing and foreign assets reporting obligation to come forward and correct the problem without the risk of unfair civil and criminal penalties. Hopefully this report will encourage Congress and the IRS to soften the procedures and to take into account these citizens or green card holders were never effectively informed of their obligations by the IRS or the US Government.
We can help you catch up now and represent you before the IRS under the current offshore disclosure program. We have advised or represented over a hundred clients so far surface with the IRS with great success.
The IRS’s Offshore Voluntary Disclosure programs and their failure to distinguish adequately between “bad actors” and “benign actors.” The IRS has sought to increase enforcement of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR) reporting requirements in recent years and has offered a series of voluntary disclosure programs designed to settle with taxpayers who had failed to file required FBAR forms. However, the report says, the programs generally applied a “one-size-fits-all” approach that required the payment of significant penalties and did not distinguish between “bad actors” and “benign actors.” By generally requiring taxpayers who make voluntary disclosures to “opt out” of the disclosure program and submit to comprehensive audits in order to avoid draconian penalties, the report argues that the program has caused excessive burden and fear for taxpayers who had reasonable cause for not filing FBAR forms or whose failure to file was inadvertent.
This confirms the IRS has not created a fair and just program to allow those middle class US Citizens living abroad who were unaware of their US filing and foreign assets reporting obligation to come forward and correct the problem without the risk of unfair civil and criminal penalties. Hopefully this report will encourage Congress and the IRS to soften the procedures and to take into account these citizens or green card holders were never effectively informed of their obligations by the IRS or the US Government.
We can help you catch up now and represent you before the IRS under the current offshore disclosure program. We have advised or represented over a hundred clients so far surface with the IRS with great success.
November 10, 2012
U.S. engages with more than 50 jurisdictions to curtail offshore tax evasion
The US Treasury, announced that it is engaged with more than 50 foreign country jurisdictions to improve international tax compliance as part of efforts to implement the information reporting and withholding tax provisions under the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA).
The U.S. has already signed a bilateral agreement with the government of the U.K. Treasury is in the process of finalizing intergovernmental agreements and hopes to finish negotiations in this respect with: France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Japan, Switzerland, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Guernsey, Ireland, Isle of Man, Jersey, Mexico, the Netherlands, and Norway.
Treasury is also maintaining an active dialog with several countries to conclude an intergovernmental agreement. Jurisdictions include: Argentina, Australia, Belgium, the Cayman Islands, Cyprus, Estonia, Hungary, Israel, Korea, Liechtenstein, Malaysia, Malta, New Zealand, the Slovak Republic, Singapore, and Sweden. The government expects to finalize the agreements with many of the listed countries by the end of the year.
Additionally, Treasury is discussing viable options for intergovernmental cooperation with: Bermuda, Brazil, the British Virgin Islands, Chile, the Czech Republic, Gibraltar, India, Lebanon, Luxembourg, Romania, Russia, Seychelles, Saint Maarten, Slovenia, and South Africa.
The government stated it will continue exploring ways of engaging other interested jurisdictions in intergovernmental cooperation including at a meeting of senior government officials and financial institutions.
WHAT DOES THIS MEAN TO US TAXPAYERS LIVING ABROAD? Now is the time to file all past unfiled US tax returns and report all foreign bank accounts, financial accounts, foreign corporations and partnerships, foreign mutual funds, etc. If you wait until the IRS gets your information from a foreign source, the risk of high monetary penalties and criminal prosecution increases dramatically. We can help you get compliant and avoid these problems before it is too late. Email us at ddnelson@gmail.com for further assistance or with questions.
September 22, 2012
UAE to Join the Network to Exchange Tax Data with US and Other Countries
The UAE is expected shortly to join the OCED which is the network of countries that join have joined together to share economic data which includes tax data on residents of those countries with other members of the OCED. The USA is a member of the OCED which means US expats living in those other countries will have their income and other financial information reported to the US International. Do not make the mistake of thinking because the United Arab Emirates has no income taxes information on your will not be sent to the IRS.. READ MORE HERE ABOUT THE UAE tax information sharing arrangement.
For an up to date list of the OCED members who are sharing tax information with each other CLICK HERE. If you live and work on one of these countries, your income and financial information will ultimately or may have already been shared with the IRS.
For an up to date list of the OCED members who are sharing tax information with each other CLICK HERE. If you live and work on one of these countries, your income and financial information will ultimately or may have already been shared with the IRS.
March 16, 2012
Expats Protest Tax Treatment of US Taxpayers Abroad
Accounting Today reports a group of U.S. expatriates has written a letter to IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman to complain he has not responded to a directive from the National Taxpayer Advocate objecting to the way taxpayers who came forward under the 2009 Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program were treated by IRS examiners.
Last December, National Taxpayer Advocate Nina Olson described her concerns in her annual report to Congress and later sent a rarely used Taxpayer Advocate Directive to Shulman (see Taxpayer Uncertainty Prompts Citizenship Renunciations). Olson, who heads the Taxpayer Advocacy Service, argued that IRS examiners treated some taxpayers unfairly who had come forward under the 2009 program to voluntarily declare previously undisclosed bank accounts to the IRS. She said the IRS had subjected them to a “one size fits all” regime and rescinded some of the claims midstream that would have qualified for reduced penalties by way of “reasonable cause” (see Groundhog Day for IRS Voluntary Disclosure Do-over). READ MORE HERE
Last December, National Taxpayer Advocate Nina Olson described her concerns in her annual report to Congress and later sent a rarely used Taxpayer Advocate Directive to Shulman (see Taxpayer Uncertainty Prompts Citizenship Renunciations). Olson, who heads the Taxpayer Advocacy Service, argued that IRS examiners treated some taxpayers unfairly who had come forward under the 2009 program to voluntarily declare previously undisclosed bank accounts to the IRS. She said the IRS had subjected them to a “one size fits all” regime and rescinded some of the claims midstream that would have qualified for reduced penalties by way of “reasonable cause” (see Groundhog Day for IRS Voluntary Disclosure Do-over). READ MORE HERE
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