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51 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (1995)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0049 and id is 1 raw text is: October 30, 1995 No. 51
KEEP INTEREST DEDUCTIBLE ON
LOANS BACKED BY CORPORATE
OWNED LIFE INSURANCE
The tax bill developed by the House Ways and
Means Committee has a provision that would deny
the normal interest-expense
deduction for interest costs
businesses incur when they
borrow against their corporateeCLI
owned life insurance policies  expediency, a
(COLI   policies).    This   tax principles.
disallowance would apply to   Conference
all interest payments made    reconciliation
after 1995 on loans secured by  COLI proposa
COLI    policies,  including
interest payments on already
outstanding loans. The Senate Finance Committee's
version of the bill would also terminate the interest
deduction on these borrowings, with the exceptions
that the interest deduction
would   continue  on  loans
existing prior to June 20, 1986,
and would be phased out over  [   e   te
five years on loans existing  income, the d,
prior to 1996.                deduction
As an example, suppose a  taxation: the g
business borrows against a    both the lend
COLI policy and subsequently  on the samie
makes   a  $1,000  interest
payment on the loan it has
obtained. Under current law, the company can
deduct this interest payment from its taxable

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income. Under the House and Senate plans, it could
not. (If the loan existed prior to 1996 and the
interest was paid in the period 1996-2000, the
Senate Finance Committee's version would allow a
partial deduction.) At a 35 percent corporate tax
rate, the denial of the deduction would raise the
company's tax bill and, thus, increase its cost of
doing business by $350.
Although the U.S. Treasury Department has
long viewed denial of the interest-deduction on
COLI-backed loans as a possible revenue raiser,
preventing a business from claiming an interest
expense violates fundamental tax principles. First,
it taxes businesses on income they do not have.
Income is revenues less expenses, and interest costs
are business expenses. Second, because the lender
must include the interest in its own taxable income,
the denial of the interest
deduction  produces  double
ataxation: the government is
tsal  isornk       taxing both the lender and the
 f sborrower on the same income.
House-Senate      (Lenders on COLI policies are
ittee  on  the    generally insurance companies,
Fiould drop the    and   although   their  tax
treatment   is   extremely
complex, they do pay tax.)
Somehow,      government
officials who are so concerned whenever they feel
the government is not collecting all it should have
no compunction about taxing two different taxpayers
on the same income.
- must include         Those who object to the
own taxable      interest deduction  seem  to
own taxable      think that paying interest is
of  eitet         costless.  In fact, interest
tces   double      payments reduce the resources
ment is taxing    of the payers, which is why
the borrowver    people don't borrow unless the
use of the borrowed funds
produces revenues greater than
the cost of servicing the debt.
In the real world, of course, households and
business borrow for purposes like buying homes,

Institute for
Research on the
Economics of
Taxation

IRET is a non-profit, tax exempt 501 c){3) economi c pol icy research and educational organization devoted to informing the
public about policies that will promote economic growth and efficient operation of the free market economy.
1730 K Street, NWV., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 * Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www. iret.org

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