In
a letter sent to John
Snow, the Coalition for
Tax Competition, which
is comprised of more
than forty free-market
organisations, urged
the US Treasury Secretary
to "permanently withdraw a proposed IRS regulation (Reg 133254-02) that would force
U.S. banks to report
deposit interest paid
to nonresident aliens".
The
Coalition, which
includes among its
members the Center
for Freedom and Prosperity
(CFP), the Heritage
Foundation, and the
American Enterprise
Institute, stated that: "This initiative is inconsistent with current law and it will undermine our economy's
performance by causing
capital to flee the
American banking system.
The regulation was
misguided when issued
in the final days of
the Clinton Administration,
and the cosmetic changes
the IRS put forth in
2002 do not address
the proposed regulation's
fundamental shortcomings."
The
letter continued: "This regulation is bad tax policy and bad regulatory policy. It is inconsistent
with President Bush's
tax reform agenda and
it will hurt the U.S.
economy by reducing
the amount of capital
for workers, consumers,
homeowners, and entrepreneurs."
The
President of the Center
for Freedom and Prosperity,
Andrew Quinlan supported
this on Monday. He
observed that: "Since January 2001, this proposed regulation has undermined U.S. banks as they
compete for global
capital. In the last
51 months, not one
Member of Congress
has endorsed the proposed
rule. In fact, 18 Senators
and more than 90 House
Members have asked
for its withdrawal."
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family limited partnerships
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