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Accounting

Preventing Corporate Inversions May Risk U.S. Economic Health

There seems to be somewhat of a general misconception that it is the “inversion” itself, in other words the acquisition of a U.S. corporation by a foreign acquirer, which creates the favorable tax structure for multinationals.

The U.S. Treasury Department’s continuing attack on inversions claimed its latest victim this week, ending the deal between US based fertilizer maker, CF Industries, and its smaller Dutch counterpart, OCI. The recently announced proposed tightening of the rules relating to the tax deductibility of interest payments also led last month to the termination of Pfizer’s proposed $160bn takeover of Ireland based Allergan.

There seems to be somewhat of a general misconception that it is the “inversion” itself, in other words the acquisition of a U.S. corporation by a foreign acquirer, which creates the favorable tax structure for multinationals. In reality, it is only following the inversion that an inverted U.S. company looks to reduce its taxable income in the US, often through post-acquisition restructuring or refinancing, and regularly via internal debt structures.  The most recent efforts of the Treasury Department take a different approach by focusing on the foundational aspect – interest deductibility – of these transactions. 

However, by focusing not on the unique aspects of inversions (being the acquisition of a U.S. corporation by a foreign acquirer) but, instead, on interest deductibility, the Treasury Department will likely have a more sustained impact on the viability of inversion transactions.  It is also having a collateral impact on all foreign based multinationals with subsidiaries in the US.  The logical result will be an increased US tax burden for these companies.  Whether this was an intended outcome for the Treasury Department cannot be said with certainty, but it is hard to believe that they were not aware of this likely impact. 

How it will affect foreign investment into the U.S. will only become clear with time.  In particular, there has been a fair amount of public discussion of the U.S. “infrastructure deficit” and the desirability of attracting foreign investment capital into infrastructure projects, particularly from large pools of foreign capital such as pension and sovereign wealth funds.  The anti-inversion restrictions as they currently stand cannot be helpful in that regard.

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Tim Wach is Managing Director of Taxand and a Taxand Board member. He works across all of Taxand ensuring an enhanced and seamless cross-border service, with knowledge sharing and best practice at heart to deliver first class services to multinational clients.