One thing that the @nytimes report on #TrumpTaxReturns that seems weird is his personal guarantees of loans, guarantees that are largely coming due within the next 4 years. After all, guarantees came back to bite him before. So what's up with those? 1/
Last night, @Omri_Marian made a couple important points: there's an advantageous tax reason for doing it and he may not actually be on the hook for the guarantees. 2/
I don't have a lot of personal knowledge about the second point; I'm pretty sure that Omri's right that it's possible not to actually be on the hook and that taking that kind of position would be a tremendously aggressive tax position to take. I don't have anything to add tho. 3/
I'm going to add a little color to the first part, though, because it's important for understanding what's going on. And frankly, partnership tax rules are probably the most complicated part of the tax law.
So here goes: 4/
First things first: what is a "guarantee"?
It's a promise to pay a debt if the actual borrower doesn't repay the debt. So say my daughter wants to borrow money from the bank, but she doesn't have established credit. The bank probably won't lend to her. 5/
(Or at least it won't with decent terms.)
But I come in and I sign a document saying, "If <daughter's name> doesn't pay you back, I will."
If I have decent credit or sufficient assets, the bank's going to be more comfortable lending to my daughter 6/
because it knows it will get its money back.
It's important (well, "important" may be an overstatement) to note that I'm not primarily liable on the debt. That is, the bank can't come to me and demand that I pay the debt back until after my daughter has defaulted. 7/
A friend in real estate tells me that banks generally require a guarantee on real estate loans. Which is clearly possible; that's totally outside my knowledge base. 8/
But, as Omri pointed out, there may be partnership tax reasons for doing that.
Which requires a shallow dive into the world of partnership taxation.
See, for tax purposes, partnerships aren't taxpayers. 9/
[Brief intermission while I get a couple things done.]
What does it mean that a partnership isn't a taxpayer? It means that a partnership does not pay taxes. Rather, it sends a tax document to each partner telling each partner their share of its income. The partners then treat that income as if they earned it directly. 11/
That's a big advantage of partnerships--their income is only taxed once (as opposed to corporations, which pay taxes when they earn money, and whose shareholders then pay tax when that money is distributed to them). 12/
Also, partnership pass through their losses. So if you're a partner in a partnership and the partnership has a loss
(like, apparently, all of Trump's partnerships), you can use that loss to reduce your taxable income from other sources. 13/
(It's more complicated than that, of course, but that's the general gist.)
There's a limitation, though: you can't take losses in excess of your "basis" in your partnership interest.
"Basis" is another of those tax words with a specific meaning. 14/
The simplified version is, basis is the amount of money you've paid for your partnership interest adjusted by certain things.
One way that you can increase your basis: bear the economic risk of loss on partnership debt.
One way to bear that economic risk of loss? 15/
Guarantee the debt.
So assuming the guaranteed debt is partnership debt, Omri's point is that through the guarantee, Trump is able to use more of the partnership's losses. 16/
Now generally to get the benefit of economic risk of loss, the guarantee means you actually have to be on the risk. There are ways to structure around that, though. And, while we don't have a lot of information about the guarantees, 17/
it would be really interesting to know how on the hook Trump is. 18/18
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Today #HunterBiden filed a suit against the @IRSnews alleging that the IRS unlawfully disclosed his tax return info.
So I thought I'd run through the complaint and take a look. (Note that there may be a big break in tweets--I have a meeting shortly.) 1/storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.usco…
Central to the suit is an allegation that two IRS agents regularly went on network and cable news to discuss audits and criminal investigations against Biden and that this behavior violated the tax law.
The Code provides for not-insignificant civil damages against those who violate it. (Note that largely this applies to federal and state employees and officers, not normal citizens.) 3/ taxnotes.com/research/feder…
Because I have no idea how it applies to me as a professor. Essentially, the training talks about flagging red flags as a financial institution, and especially in dealing with customers.
But here's the thing: even if the university is covered (which I assume it is? 2/
only the training never explained how?), *I* don't deal with student funds. They don't come to me about withdrawals or money or anything like that.
And that absolutely doesn't mean I don't have some kind of Red Flags Law obligation! 3/
I'm thinking I'm going to live-tweet this complaint about Ensign Peak Advisors. Because on the first page it says this: 1/
That's decidedly not true. Currently, the IRS audits about 0.41% to tax returns. That number shoots up for the very wealthy and the very poor, but for the vast majority of Americans, they're never going to face an audit. 2/ trac.syr.edu/reports/706/#:….
I suspect the audit rate for tax-exempt orgs is similarly miniscule. And for religious auxiliary organizations like EPA? Next to zero (if you can be any more next to zero). 3/
There is literally nothing good that can come from @USNewsEducation ranking elementary and middle schools, but there is a ton of potential harms, ranging from discouraging teachers from teaching where they're needed to convincing wealthy and white parents that 2/
they need to sequester their kids from certain schools and neighborhoods.
This is literally the most inequitable and harmful news I can imagine hearing from @USNewsEducation. 3/
I get that Turley likes writing about things he doesn't understand. And I sincerely hope he enjoyed writing about wealth taxes because he very clearly doesn't have a clue what he's writing about. A short thread: 1/
First thing: it's hard to argue that a 2-3% tax is "soaking the rich." The S&P has a long-term average return about 9%.
Now admittedly, people with >$50m aren't investing *all* of their wealth. But their investing a lot of it. 2/
A 2-3% tax will make their money grow more slowly but, unless they're beyond terrible investors, will neither touch principal nor eliminate asset growth. 3/