DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY TECHNICAL EXPLANATION OF THE
PROTOCOL 4 BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND CANADA
颁布时间:1997-07-29
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY TECHNICAL EXPLANATION OF THE PROTOCOL 4 BETWEEN
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND CANADA SIGNED AT OTTAWA ON JULY 29, 1997
AMENDING THE CONVENTION BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND CANADA
WITH RESPECT TO TAXES ON INCOME AND ON CAPITAL SIGNED AT WASHINGTON ON
SEPTEMBER 26, 1980 AS AMENDED BY THE PROTOCOLS SIGNED ON JUNE 14, 1983,
MARCH 28, 1984 AND MARCH 17, 1995 GENERAL EFFECTIVE DATE UNDER ARTICLE
XXX: 1 JANUARY 1985
INTRODUCTION
This document is a technical explanation of the Protocol Between the
United States of America and Canada signed on July 29, 1997 (the
"Protocol") amending the Convention Between the United States of America
and Canada With Respect to Taxes on Income and on Capital Signed at
Washington on September 26, 1980 as Amended by the Protocols Signed on
June 14, 1983, March 28, 1984 and March 17, 1995 (the "Convention").
This technical explanation is an official guide to the Protocol. It
reflects the policies behind particular Protocol provisions, as well as
understandings reached with respect to the application and interpretation
of the Protocol. References in this technical explanation to "he" or "his"
should be read to mean "he or she" or "his or her."
ARTICLE 1
Article 1 of the Protocol amends paragraph 3 of Article XIII (Gains)
of the Convention.
Paragraph 1 of Article XIII of the Convention provides that gains
derived by a resident of a Contracting State from the alienation of real
property situated within the other Contracting State may be taxed in that
other State. The term "real property situated in the other Contracting
State" is defined for this purpose in paragraph 3 of Article XIII of the
Convention.
Under paragraph 3(a) of Article XIII of the Convention, real property
situated in the United States includes real property (as defined in
Article VI (Income from Real Property) of the Convention) situated in the
United States and a United States real property interest. Under section
897(c) of the Internal Revenue Code (the "Code") the term "United States
real property interest" includes shares in a U.S. corporation that owns
sufficient U.S. real property interests to satisfy an asset-ratio test on
certain testing dates.
Under Paragraph 3(b) of Article XIII of the Convention, real property
situated in Canada means real property (as defined in Article VI of the
Convention) situated in Canada; shares of stock of a company, the value of
whose shares consists principally of Canadian real property; and an
interest in a partnership, trust or estate, the value of which consists
principally of Canadian real property. The term "principally" means more
than 50 percent.
Under the Code, stock of a foreign corporation is not considered a
"United States real property interest." Therefore, the United States does
not tax a resident of Canada on the sale of stock of a foreign
corporation, regardless of the composition of the corporation's assets.
Although the Convention permits Canada to tax a U.S. resident on the sale
of stock of a company that is not a resident of Canada if the value of the
company's shares consists principally of Canadian real property, Canada
does not currently impose such a tax. However, on April 26, 1995,
amendments were proposed to the Canadian Income Tax Act that would impose
Canadian income tax on gains realized on stock of certain companies that
are not residents of Canada if
(i) more than 50 percent of the fair market value of all of the
company's properties consists of any combination of taxable Canadian
property, Canadian resource property, timber resource property in Canada
and income interests in Canadian trusts, and
(ii) more than 50 percent of the fair market value of the shares in
question is derived directly or indirectly from any combination of real
property located in Canada, Canadian resource property, and timber
resource property in Canada.
This amendment is proposed to be effective as of April 26, 1995 with
proration for gains that accrued before that date. Although the Canadian
Parliament was dissolved before these amendments were passed, they are
expected to be re-introduced in the current session with the same
effective date.
The Protocol amends paragraphs 3(a) and 3(b)(ii) of Article XIII of
the Convention to limit each State's right to tax the gains of a resident
of the other State from the sale of stock of a real property holding
company to cases where the company is resident in that State. Although the
United States does not impose and is not currently considering imposing a
tax under the Code on gains from the sale of stock of nonresident real
property holding companies, the Protocol nevertheless amends the
Convention to prohibit the imposition of such a tax on Canadian residents.
Although Canada is considering imposing such a tax on gains from the sale
of shares of companies that are not residents of Canada, this Protocol
provision will cause the proposed amendments to the Canadian Income Tax
Act to be inapplicable to U.S. residents who derive gains from the sale of
stock of real property holding companies that are not residents of Canada.
This provision will be retroactively effective to April 26, 1995, the
date the previous Canadian legislation was proposed to be effective.
ARTICLE 2
Paragraph 1
Paragraph 1 of Article 2 of the Protocol amends paragraph 3 of Article
XVIII (Pensions and Annuities) of the Convention to clarify that social
security benefits paid by one Contracting State in respect of services
rendered to that State or a subdivision or authority of that State are
subject to the rules set forth in paragraph 5 of Article XVIII, and are
not subject to Article XIX (Government Service). Thus, all social security
benefits paid by a Contracting State will be subject to the same rules,
regardless of whether the services were rendered to a private sector
employer, the government, or both.
Paragraph 2
Paragraph 2 of Article 2 of the Protocol amends paragraph 5 of Article
XVIII of the Convention, which provides rules for the taxation of social
security benefits (including tier 1 railroad retirement benefits but not
including unemployment benefits), and reverses changes made by the third
protocol to the Convention, which was signed on March 17, 1995 and
generally took effect as of January 1, 1996 (the "1995 Protocol"). Under
the Convention prior to amendment by the 1995 Protocol, the State of
residence of the recipient of social security benefits had the exclusive
right to tax social security benefits paid by the other State on a net
basis but exempted 50 percent of the benefit. This was changed by the 1995
Protocol. Under the 1995 Protocol, effective January 1, 1996 benefits paid
under the U.S. or Canadian social security legislation to a resident of
the other Contracting State (or, in the case of Canadian benefits, paid to
a U.S. citizen)are taxable exclusively in the paying State.
Canada and the United States impose different source-basis taxing
regimes on social security benefits. Under Code section 871(a)(3), 85
percent of social security benefits paid to a nonresident alien are
includible in gross income. The taxable portion of social security
benefits is subject to the regular 30 percent withholding tax, with the
result that the gross social security benefit is subject to an effective
tax rate of 25.5 percent. This is a final payment of tax and Canadian
recipients of U.S. social security benefits, regardless of their level of
income, may not elect to be taxed in the United States on a net basis at
graduated rates.
In Canada, social security benefits paid to nonresidents are subject
to a general withholding tax of 25 percent. However, Canada permits U.S.
recipients of Canadian benefits to file a Canadian tax return and pay tax
at regular graduated rates on their net income. As a result, low-income
U.S. recipients of Canadian social security typically pay little or no tax
on their benefits.
The Protocol returns to a system of residence-based taxation in which
social security benefits are exclusively taxable in the State where the
recipient lives. Social security benefits will generally be taxed as if
they were benefits paid under the social security legislation in the
residence State. Therefore, social security benefits will be taxed on a
net basis at graduated rates and low-income recipients will not pay any
tax on these benefits. However, the Protocol modifies the residence
State's taxation of cross-border benefits in order to take into account
how the benefits would have been taxed in the source State if paid to a
resident of that State.
In the case of Canadian recipients of U.S. social security benefits,
the Protocol provides that only 85 percent of these benefits will be
subject to tax in Canada. This reflects the fact that, although in Canada
social security benefits are fully includible, a maximum of 85 percent of
United States social security benefits are includible in income for U.S.
tax purposes. See Code section 86. This is also consistent with the
taxation of social security benefits under the Convention prior to the
effective date of the 1995 Protocol, since at the time the pre-1996 rule
was adopted the United States included a maximum of 50 percent of the
social security benefits in income.
In the case of U.S. recipients of Canadian social security benefits,
the Protocol provides that the benefits will be taxed as if they were
payments under the Social Security Act. Therefore, a maximum of 85 percent
of the Canadian benefits will be included in the gross income of a U.S.
recipient, even though the entire benefit would have been taxed by Canada
if received by a Canadian resident. However, if the Canadian benefit is of
a type that is not subject to Canadian tax when paid to a resident of
Canada, it will not be subject to U.S. tax when received by a resident of
the United States. This provision is necessary to take into account
certain proposed changes to Canada's Old Age Security benefits. At
present, Old Age Security benefits paid to U.S. residents are subject to
both ordinary Canadian income tax and an additional "recovery tax" that
has the effect of means-testing the benefit. Canada has proposed to change
the Old Age Security benefit system so that the benefit would be
means-tested at source and not subject to the recovery tax. Because the
amount of such future benefits will have already been reduced to take into
account the recipient's income, it would not be appropriate to subject
such benefits to additional U.S. tax.
ARTICLE 3
Article 3 of the Protocol contains the rules for bringing the Protocol
into force and giving effect to its provisions.
Paragraph 1
Paragraph 1 provides for the ratification of the Protocol by both
Contracting States according to their constitutional and statutory
requirements and instruments of ratification will be exchanged as soon as
possible.
In the United States, the process leading to ratification and entry
into force is as follows:
Once a protocol has been signed by authorized representatives of the
two Contracting States, the Department of State sends the protocol to the
President who formally transmits it to the Senate for its advice and
consent to ratification, which requires approval by two-thirds of the
Senators present and voting. Prior to this vote, however, it generally has
been the practice for the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations to hold
hearings on the protocol and make a recommendation regarding its approval
to the full Senate. Both Government and private sector witnesses may
testify at these hearings. After receiving the advice and consent of the
Senate to ratification, the protocol is returned to the President for his
signature on the ratification document. The President's signature on the
document completes the process in the United States.
Paragraph 2
Paragraph 2 of Article 3 provides that the Protocol will enter into
force on the date on which the instruments of ratification are exchanged.
However, the date on which the Protocol enters into force will not be the
date on which its provisions will take effect. Paragraph 2, therefore,
also contains rules that determine when the provisions of the Protocol
will have effect. Under paragraph 2(a), Article 1 of the Protocol will
have effect as of April 26, 1995. As discussed above, this is the date on
which certain proposed amendments to Canadian law would be effective.
Under paragraph 2(b), Article 2 of the Protocol will have effect as of
January 1, 1996, which is the date as of which the changes to the taxation
of social security benefits that were implemented by the 1995 Protocol
became effective. Consequently, the source-basis taxation of social
security benefits that was implemented by the 1995 Protocol will be
retroactively eliminated and recipients of cross-border social security
benefits will be entitled to a refund of any source-State tax withheld on
their benefits for 1996 and later years. This return to residencebasis
taxation of social security benefits means that some high-income
recipients of cross-border benefits may be required to pay additional
taxes to their State of residence if their average tax rate on these
benefits in their State of residence is higher than the current rate of
source-State withholding tax. It is only for future years, however, that
such high-income recipients of benefits will be subject to a higher rate
of tax. No one will be subject to a higher rate of tax for the retroactive
period. If, as a result of the change, the residence-State tax would
exceed the amount of the refund otherwise due, there will be neither a
refund of source-State tax nor the imposition of additional
residence-State tax.
Subparagraphs (b)(i) and (ii) provide rules that determine how the
retroactive effect of the Protocol will generally be implemented for the
year in which the Protocol enters into effect. As discussed below, these
rules are required as a result of administrative limitations on the
ability of the relevant Government organizations to effect the payment of
refunds. Withholding taxes imposed by the United States on cross-border
social security benefits are collected and administered by the Social
Security Administration (SSA), not the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
However, any refunds of withholding tax improperly collected on social
security benefits are ordinarily paid by the IRS. If the Protocol enters
into force prior to September 1 of a calendar year, it is possible for the
SSA to pay refunds of the tax withheld for the entire year directly to the
individual Canadian recipient. If the Protocol enters into force after
August 31 of a calendar year,it will not be possible for SSA to pay
refunds of tax withheld for that year and refunds must be paid through the
IRS.
Paragraphs 3, 4 and 5 of Article 3 establish administrative procedures
to govern the payment of refunds through the IRS, including rules to
ensure that benefits will not be subject to a higher rate of tax in the
residence State for the retroactive period. The taxes withheld on social
security benefits paid for years after 1995 and prior to the calendar year
in which the Protocol enters into force (referred to in the Protocol as
"source-taxed benefits") will be subject to the refund procedures set
forth in paragraphs 3, 4, and 5, regardless of when the Protocol enters
into force. Social security benefits paid for calendar years beginning
after the Protocol enters into force will not be subject to the refund
procedures set forth in paragraphs 3, 4, and 5 because source State tax
will not be withheld.
If the Protocol enters into force after August 31 of a calendar year,
subparagraph (b)(i) provides that social security benefits paid during
such calendar year will be treated as benefits paid for calendar years
ending before the year in which the Protocol enters into force (and thus
will be treated as "source-taxed benefits"). In this case, the taxes
withheld on these benefits will be subject to the refund procedures set
forth in paragraphs 3, 4, and 5 of Article 3 and these benefits will not
be subject to a higher rate of residence-State tax. If the Protocol enters
into force before September 1 of a calendar year, subparagraph (b)(ii)
provides that social security benefits paid during such calendar year will
be treated as benefits paid for calendar years beginning after the year in
which the Protocol enters into force. In this case, the taxes withheld on
these benefits will be directly and automatically refunded by the source
State and the potentially higher rate of residence-State tax will apply.
Paragraph 3
Paragraph 3 of Article 3 of the Protocol provides rules governing the
payment of refunds of source-State tax with respect to "source-taxed
benefits." In general, all applications for refund must be made to the
competent authority of the source State within three years of entry into
force of the Protocol.
Except as set forth in subparagraph (b) of paragraph 2, the
retroactive effect of the Protocol is elective and applies only if a
recipient of benefits applies for a refund of the tax paid or withheld.
Consequently, if a recipient of benefits does not apply for a refund of
the tax paid or withheld, the Protocol will not be given retroactive
effect, except as set forth in subparagraph (b) of paragraph 2. If the
residence-State tax that would be imposed on such source-taxed benefits is
greater than the source-State tax imposed on such benefits, it is assumed
that the recipient will not apply for a refund of the source-State tax and
such benefits will not be subject to the retroactive effect of the
Protocol. Because the application for refund may be made on a year-by-year
basis, the recipient may elect the most beneficial treatment for each
year. Therefore, social security benefits will not be subject to a higher
rate of tax for the retroactive period, except as set forth in
subparagraph (b) of paragraph 2.
The refund procedure depends on the recipient's State of residence. In
the case of U.S. residents who received Canadian social security benefits
that were subject to Canadian tax, a U.S. resident who elects to have the
Protocol apply retroactively will apply directly to the Canadian competent
authority for the refund of any Canadian tax not previously refunded. On
the receipt of such refund, the Canadian social security benefits will be
includible in the U.S. resident's gross income for the years with respect
to which the refund was paid. Consequently, the U.S. recipient may be
required to file an amended U.S. income tax return for such years and pay
U.S. tax on such benefits. Pursuant to Article XXVII (Exchange of
Information) of the Convention, the Canadian competent authority will
provide the U.S. competent authority with information regarding the
payment of refunds.
In the case of Canadian residents who received U.S. social security
benefits, the Canadian competent authority shall be the only person
entitled to apply for a refund of the U.S. taxes withheld on such
benefits. Individual residents of Canada will not apply directly to the
IRS for refunds. However, the Canadian competent authority may base its
applications on information received from individual Canadians, as well as
on information to be provided by the United State competent authority. The
Protocol provides that the Canadian competent authority shall apply for
and receive all such refunds on behalf of individual residents of Canada
and shall remit such refunds to individual residents of Canada after
deducting any additional Canadian tax that may be imposed as a result of
such social security benefits being subject to tax in Canada. The Canadian
competent authority shall make such application for refund on behalf of an
individual resident of Canada only if the additional Canadian tax that
would be imposed is less than the amount of the U.S. tax to be refunded.
If, with respect to an individual resident of Canada, the additional
Canadian tax that would be imposed on the individual's social security
benefits is equal to or greater than the U.S. tax withheld, the Canadian
competent authority shall not apply for a refund of the U.S. tax withheld
on the individual's benefits. This provision ensures that refunds of U.S.
tax will be paid only when the refund will benefit an individual resident
of Canada. A refund of U.S. tax will not be paid if it would simply result
in a payment from the U.S. Treasury to the Government of Canada without
any portion of the refund being paid to an individual resident of Canada.
Paragraph 4
Paragraph 4 provides that all taxes refunded as a result of the
Protocol will be refunded without interest. Consequently, any additional
taxes assessed as a result of the Protocol will be assessed without
interest provided that the additional taxes are paid in a timely manner.
However, interest and penalties on underpayments may be assessed for
periods beginning after December 31 of the year following the year in
which the Protocol enters into force.
Paragraph 5
Paragraph 5 provides that the competent authorities shall establish
procedures for making or revoking the application for refund provided for
in paragraph 3 and such other procedures as are necessary to ensure the
appropriate implementation of the Protocol. It will be necessary to
establish procedures for a taxpayer to revoke his application for refund
because a taxpayer may apply for a refund and then determine that the
residence-State tax imposed on his social security benefits pursuant to
Article 2 of the Protocol exceeds the amount of source-State tax refunded.
Such a taxpayer (or, in the case of a Canadian resident, the Canadian
competent authority acting on behalf of such taxpayer) will be permitted
to revoke his application for refund provided that the taxpayer returns the
source-State refund and the three-year period established in paragraph 3
has not expired as of the date on which the revocation is filed. The
competent authorities will also establish procedures to ensure that
duplicate refunds are not paid.