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Innovation Promotion Act (view source)
Revision as of 17:02, 4 December 2015
, 17:02, 4 December 2015no edit summary
'''
'''Quick Summary'''
Under the act, companies will be allowed up to a 71% deduction of the lessor of their taxable income or their innovation box profit.
'''Innovation box profit ''' = Tentative innovation profit x (5yr R&D expenditure / 5yr total costs)
'''5yr R&D costs ''' are those that allowed under Section 174(a) and 174(b), without regard to sections 41 (R&D tax credit definition) or 280(C)(e).
'''5yr total costs ''' are the excess of all costs over COGS + Interest + Taxes, using a rolling five year window including the current tax year. Reading the ‘over’ as a ‘less’, this would make total costs as all of those not directly related to production, capital costs, and taxes. R&D expenses for testing in foreign countries (if conducted because required by law or there is insufficient testers in the US) are not included in 5yr total costs.
'''Tentative Innovation Profit ''' = excess of qualified gross receipts after COGS + Expenses, losses, and deductions
'''Qualified gross receipts ''' are those attributable to qualified property. This includes revenue from the sale, lease, licence or “other disposition of” (which includes compensation for infringement) qualified property. Note that sales “to related persons” has a special treatment.
It is unclear how the sale of a finished product embodying qualified property will be accounted for – that is, what fraction of revenue should be attributed to qualified property and how this fraction will be determined. Determining optimal fractions is very tricky problem in economics. This is passed over in the act in Section 250(b)(1)(C) “Allocation Method”, which says merely that “The Secretary will prescribe rules”. This section also notes that “such rules will provide the proper allocation of items whether or not such items are directly allocable” (emphasis added).
'''Qualified property ''' means intangible property described in:
• Section 936(h)(3)(B)(i) (this includes any “patent, invention, formula, process, design, pattern, or know-how”)
• Section 168(f)(3) (this seems to be films and video tape!)
It should be noted that copyright (936(h)(3)(B)(ii) and trademarks (iii) aren’t included.
'''Additional Detail'''
Revenue from sales to related persons is generally excluded in the Act, except when qualified property is sold to a subsidiary etc. outside of the United States if it is then resold to an unrelated person outside the United States.
Related persons are those that are treated as a single employer under Sections 52(a) or 52(b) (without regard to section 1563(b)), or Sections 414(m) or 414(o).