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Export Tax Benefits and the WTO: Foreign Sales Corporations and the Extraterritorial Replacement Provisions , Record No.: RS20746, Date: January 24, 2002 1 (January 24, 2002)

handle is hein.tera/crstax0183 and id is 1 raw text is: Order Code RS20746
Updated January 24, 2002

Export Tax Benefits and the WTO:
Foreign Sales Corporations and the
Extraterritorial Replacement Provisions
David L. Brumbaugh
Specialist in Public Finance
Government and Finance Division

Summary

The U.S. tax code's Foreign Sales Corporation (FSC) provisions provided a tax
benefit for U.S. exporters, permitting U.S. exporters to exempt part of their export
income from U.S. tax. However, the countries of the European Union (EU) in 1997
charged that the provision was an export subsidy and thus contravened the World Trade
Organization (WTO) agreements. A WTO panel ruling essentially upheld the EU
complaint. To avoid WTO-sanctioned retaliatory tariffs, the United States in November
2000 repealed FSC and enacted new extraterritorial income (ETI) provisions,
consisting of a tax benefit for exports of the same magnitude as FSC. The EU
maintained that the new provisions are likewise not WTO-compliant and asked the WTO
to rule on the matter and to approve $4 billion in retaliatory tariffs on U.S. products. A
WTO panel issued a report in August 2001 that concluded the ETI provisions are not
WTO-compliant. The United States appealed the decision, but on January 14, 2002, an
appellate body denied the appeal. A WTO arbitration panel subsequently began
consideration of the EU's request for tariffs; observers have suggested a ruling will be
issued by the end of March. For its part, economic analysis suggests that FSC and ETI
do little to increase exports but likely trigger exchange rate adjustments that also result
in an increase in U.S. imports; the long-run impact on the trade balance is probably
extremely small. Economic theory also suggests the export incentives likely reduce U.S.
economic welfare. This report will be updated as events in Congress and elsewhere
occur.
Historical Background: DISC and the General Agreements on
Tariffs and Trade
The current FSC/ETI controversy has its roots in the legislative antecedent of both:
the U.S. tax code's Domestic International Sales Corporation (DISC) provisions, enacted
as part of the Revenue Act of 1971 (P.L. 92-178). Like FSC and the ETI provisions,
DISC provided a tax incentive to export, although its design was different in certain
Congressional Research Service °0° The Library of Congress

CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web

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