NRIs take care! Uncle Sam has
woken up
If media reports of early this month
are any indication, a series of steps taken by the US Internal Revenue
Service will have some impact on the flow of dollar funds from US-based
NRIs and PIOs to commercial banks in India
The US government, nicknamed “Uncle Sam” after Samuel Wilson, who first supplied barrels of beef to the US army during the war of 1812, has been on a prowl to plug all loopholes on tax evasion possibly to shore up its revenues. Surprisingly, it has come out with Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Programs (OVDPs) three times during the last three years. The OVDP was first introduced in 2009, and followed by another offshore voluntary disclosure initiative in 2011 which was initially valid till 31 August 2011 but later extended till 9 September 2011 due to the Hurricane Irene that hit the US at that time.
The US government, nicknamed “Uncle Sam” after Samuel Wilson, who first supplied barrels of beef to the US army during the war of 1812, has been on a prowl to plug all loopholes on tax evasion possibly to shore up its revenues. Surprisingly, it has come out with Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Programs (OVDPs) three times during the last three years. The OVDP was first introduced in 2009, and followed by another offshore voluntary disclosure initiative in 2011 which was initially valid till 31 August 2011 but later extended till 9 September 2011 due to the Hurricane Irene that hit the US at that time.
The IRS (Internal Revenue Service)
again introduced an open-ended OVDP in January 2012 on account of
strong interest witnessed in the 2009 and 2011 programmes. According to the
IRS, under this scheme it is offering people with undisclosed income from offshore
accounts another opportunity to set right their past mistakes and get
current with their tax returns. However, the 2012 OVDP has a higher penalty
rate than the previous programmes but said to offer clear benefits to encourage
all taxpayers in America to disclose foreign accounts now rather than risk
detection by the IRS and possible criminal prosecution later.
As per the Bloomberg report dated 8
January 2013, a person of Indian origin (PIO) and a New Jersey client of HSBC
Holdings Plc pleaded guilty to charges that he dis as much as $4.7 million through Swiss
and Indian accounts not declared to the US Internal Revenue Service.
As per the reports, he will pay a
sum of $2.37 million as taxes and penalty for failing to file reports required
for foreign accounts. He is one of several HSBC clients charged with opening
undeclared accounts through bank’s NRI division, which were marketed to US
clients of Indian origin.
Another New Jersey PIO
businessman pleaded guilty in April 2011 to conspiring with HSBC bankers
to hide his Indian accounts from the IRS. Last August, federal jurors convicted
a Milwaukee neuro-surgeon of Indian origin for filing a false tax return and
failing to file a report of foreign bank and financial accounts related to HSBC
accounts in India.
It is possible that many NRIs or
PIOs residing in the US have invested their surplus funds in India or with
different tax havens world-wide but they may have either innocently or
unknowingly omitted to offer their overseas income to tax in the country of
their residence. They might, therefore, unwittingly become victims of IRS’
aggressive tax recovery efforts. And to come out of this predicament, they
should consult their own tax advisors about the applicability or otherwise of
these changed regulations to their own residential status over there. If it
applies to them, they should then consider the advisability or otherwise of
voluntary disclosure permitted by US government. The present OVDP scheme is an
open-ended scheme without any closure date, but may be closed any time as
stated on the website www.irs.gov. Since the website was last
updated on 29 August 2012, it is not clear whether the scheme is still in
operation and the NRIs wishing to avail the benefit of the scheme should
contact their financial/tax advisors and be guided accordingly.
IRS efforts yielding results
The Internal Revenue Service of
the US has said that its offshore voluntary disclosure programmes have so far
resulted in the collection of more than $5 billion in back taxes, interest
and penalties from 33,000 voluntary disclosures made under the first two
programmes. In addition, another 1,500 disclosures have been made under the new
programme announced in January 2012. This voluntary disclosure programme is
said to be a part of the wider effort by the IRS to stop offshore tax
evasion and ensure tax compliance by all those Americans who have invested
their surplus funds in tax-havens all over the world.
Though these rules are currently
introduced in the United States of America, there is every possibility of its
spreading to other countries as well and NRIs and PIOs living in different
geographies should be wary of local regulations and be prepared to comply with
them in the interest of peaceful living in the country which they have adopted
as their permanent abode.
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