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For Immediate Release April 9, 2002 202-285-0244 www.freedomandprosperity.org
46 Lawmakers Urge Withdrawal of Clinton-Era IRS Regulation: Accuse IRS of Putting Foreign Tax Collectors Ahead of US Economic Interests
Link to Letter | PDF
Washington, DC (April 9, 2002) -- Representative Dave Weldon (R-FL) and Representative Robert Wexler (D-FL) released a bi-partisan letter calling on President George W. Bush to permanently
withdraw an Internal Revenue Service proposed regulation that would require US financial institutions to report interest income they pay to nonresident alien account holders. The letter, signed by 46 Members of
Congress, explains that the IRS initiative is an abuse of the regulatory process and that the proposal would undermine US financial institutions and weaken the American economy.
"Representatives Weldon and Wexler should be congratulated on their leadership," said Andrew Quinlan President of the Center for Freedom and Prosperity. "This last-minute Clinton-era regulation,"
Quinlan added, "is not in the best interest of the County, which explains why 99 percent of the public comments and 100 percent of the public statements at the IRS hearing were against the proposed regulation.
Moreover, every financial trade association – from those representing small, local credit unions to those representing large money center banks – oppose this regulation."
Five House Committee Chairmen or Ranking Members signed the letter including Government Reform Committee Chairman Dan Burton (R-IN), Rules Committee Chairman David Dreier (R-CA), Science Committee
Ranking Member Ralph Hall (D-TX), Small Business Committee Chairman Don Manzullo (R-IL) and House Administration Committee Chairman Robert Ney (R-OH).
Daniel Mitchell, Senior Fellow at the Heritage Foundation, remarked that, "The IRS regulation should have been withdrawn the day President Bush took office. The agency put ideology above the law, and
its actions are threatening American jobs and American companies."
For more information on the IRS regulation please visit CFP's "Dump the IRS Reg" web page, link below: http://www.freedomandprosperity.org/update/irsreg/irsreg.shtml
Text of the letter:
April 5, 2002
The Honorable George W. Bush President of the United States The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue Washington, DC 20500
Dear Mr. President,
America's financial institutions benefit greatly from deposits of foreigners in U.S. banks. These deposits help finance jobs and generated economic growth mainly benefiting local communities,
consumers, families, and small businesses. For more than 80 years, the United States has recognized the importance of foreign deposits and has refrained from taxing the interest earned by them or requiring their
reporting.
Unfortunately, a rule proposed by the Internal Revenue Service would overturn this practice and would likely result in the flight of hundreds of billions of dollars from U.S. financial institutions. A
regulation proposed in the waning hours of the previous administration requires the reporting of bank deposit interest paid to foreign account holders so that this information can be made available to the countries
of origin of the nonresident alien account holders.
Mr. President we appreciate all that you have done to prevent the finalization of this proposed rule.
We have several objections to this initiative, and strongly urge you to permanently withdraw the proposed regulation. Specifically:
The regulation will cause serious irreparable harm to the U.S. economy. Because of the attractive tax and privacy laws of the United States, nonresident aliens are
estimated to have deposited over $1 trillion in U.S. financial institutions. Should this regulation be finalized, economic and academic sources indicate that a substantial portion of that capital will be withdrawn
from the U.S. economy.
Some deposits have started leaving U.S. financial institutions already. During this time of economic concern, we urge that every effort be made to keep capital within the borders of the United States.
The regulation flagrantly violates the intent of Congress. On several occasions, lawmakers have chosen to refrain from taxing the deposit interest paid to
nonresident aliens. These actions were made for the explicit purpose of attracting and keeping capital in the U.S. economy. We feel the IRS is abusing its regulatory authority and doing so in a manner that is
contrary to Congress' intent and the last eighty years of legislative history.
The regulation will weaken the competitiveness of U.S. financial institutions. Should the proposed rule take affect, American companies will lose hundreds of billions of
dollars in deposits to institutions in competing jurisdictions that maintain privacy protections. The purported goal of the regulation will not be achieved, but will instead disadvantage American businesses and
communities.
This proposal may be good news for high-tax governments, but it is contrary to American economic interest. The jobs of American workers and the competitiveness of U.S. companies should be our top
priorities. This regulation works against both. It will put Americans out of work and it will force dollars out of U.S. financial institutions and into foreign financial institutions.
It has now been longer than one year since the IRS proposed this rule.
We urge that you withdraw this proposed regulation and send a clear message to existing and potential depositors that the U.S. encourages such deposits and believes America's best interest is served by maintaining current policy.
Sincerely,
Dave Weldon Robert Wexler Spencer Bachus Jim DeMint Jim Ryun Mike Ferguson Charles Gonzalez Max Sandlin Don Manzullo David Dreier Jim Davis Phil Crane
Steve Chabot Jeff Miller Chris Cannon Mark Foley Sue Kelly Walter Jones John Doolittle Gil Gutknecht John Hostettler Joe Pitts Todd Akin Tom Tancredo Sam Johnson John Shadegg
Butch Otter Phil English Bob Barr Jennifer Dunn Robert Ney Jack Kingston Ralph Hall Lincoln Diaz-Balart Michael Bilirakis Bart Gordon J. Randy Forbes Dan Burton
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen Peter Deutsch Dan Miller Jim Gibbons Ron Paul llen Boyd Wally Herger Pete Sessions
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