CONVENTION BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
AND THE GOVERNMENT OF IRELAND FOR THE AVOIDANCE OF DOUBLE TAXATION
AND THE PREVENTION OF FISCAL EVASION WITH RESPECT TO TAXES ON INC
颁布时间:1997-07-28
TAX CONVENTION WITH IRELAND
GENERAL EFFECTIVE DATE UNDER ARTICLE 29: 1 JANUARY 1998
TABLE OF ARTICLES
Article 1---------------------------------General Scope
Article 2 --------------------------------Taxes Covered
Article 3 --------------------------------General Definitions
Article 4 --------------------------------Residence
Article 5 --------------------------------Permanent Establishment
Article 6 --------------------------------Income from Removable (Real
Property)
Article 7 --------------------------------Business Profits
Article 8 --------------------------------Shipping and Air Transport
Article 9 --------------------------------Associated Enterprises
Article 10 -------------------------------Dividends
Article 11 -------------------------------Interest
Article 12 -------------------------------Royalties
Article 13 -------------------------------Capital Gains
Article 14--------------------------------Independent Personal Services
Article 15 -------------------------------Dependent Personal Services
Article 16 -------------------------------Directors' Fees
Article 17 -------------------------------Artistes and Sportsmen
Article 18 -------------------------------Pensions, Social Security,
Annuities,Alimony and Child Support
Article 19 ------------------------------Government Service
Article 20 ------------------------------Students and Trainees
Article 21 ------------------------------Offshore Exploration and
Exploitation Activities
Article 22 ------------------------------Other Income
Article 23 ------------------------------Limitation on Benefits
Article 24 ------------------------------Relief from Double Taxation
Article 25 ------------------------------Non-Discrimination
Article 26 ------------------------------Mutual Agreement Procedure
Article 27 ------------------------------Exchange of Information and
Administrative Assistance
Article 28 ------------------------------Diplomatic Agents and Consular
Officers
Article 29 ------------------------------Entry into Force
Article 30 ------------------------------Termination
Protocol --------------------------------of 28 July, 1997
Notes of Exchange -------------------of 28 July, 1997
Letter of Submittal--------------------of 19 August, 1997
Letter of Transmittal------------------of 24 September, 1997
The "Saving Clause"------------------Paragraph 4 of Article 1
MESSAGE
FROM
THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
TRANSMITTING
CONVENTION BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA AND THE GOVERNMENT OF IRELAND FOR
THE AVOIDANCE OF DOUBLE TAXATION AND THE PREVENTION
OF FISCAL EVASION WITH RESPECT TO TAXES ON INCOME AND
CAPITAL GAINS, SIGNED AT DUBLIN ON JULY 28, 1997, TOGETHER
WITH A PROTOCOL AND EXCHANGE OF NOTES DONE ON THE SAME DATE
LETTER OF SUBMITTAL
DEPARTMENT OF STATE,
Washington, August 19, 1997.
THE PRESIDENT: I have the honor to submit to you, with a view to its
transmission to the Senate for advice and consent to ratification, the
Convention Between the Government of Ireland for the Avoidance of Double
Taxation and the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with Respect to Taxes on
Income and Capital Gains, signed at Dublin on July 28, 1997, ("the
Convention") together with a Protocol and an exchange of notes done on the
same date, which, in each case provides binding interpretations and
understandings concerning the application of the Convention.
This Convention will replace the existing Convention Between the
Government of the United States of America and the Government of Ireland
for the Avoidance of Double Taxation and the prevention of Fiscal Evasion
with Respect to Taxes on Income signed at Dublin on September 13, 1949.
The new Convention maintains many provisions of the existing convention,
but it also provides certain additional benefits and updates the text to
reflect current tax treaty policies.
This Convention is similar to the tax treaties between the United
States and other OECD nations. It provides for maximum rates of tax to be
applied to various types of income, protection from double taxation of
income, exchange of information, and contains rules making its benefits
unavailable to persons that are engaged in treaty shopping.
Like other U.S. tax conventions, this Convention provides rules
specifying when income that arises in one of the countries and is
attributable to residents of the other country may be taxed by the country
in which the income arises (the "source" country). In most respects, the
rates under the new Convention are the same as those in many recent U.S.
tax treaties with OECD countries.
The maximum rates of tax that may be imposed on dividend and royalty
income are generally the same as in the current U.S.-Ireland treaty.
Pursuant to Article 10, dividends from direct investments are subject to
tax by the source country at a rate of five percent. The threshold
criterion for direct investment has been reduced from 95 percent ownership
of the equity of a firm to ten percent consistent with other modern U.S.
treaties, in order to facilitate direct investment. Other dividends are
generally taxable at 15 percent. Under Article 12, royalties derived and
beneficially owned by a resident of a Contracting State are generally
taxable only in that State.
As in the current convention, under Article 11 of the proposed
Convention, interest arising in one Contracting State and owned by a
resident of the other Contracting State is exempt from taxation by the
source country. The restrictions on the taxation of royalty and interest
income do not apply, however, if the beneficial owner of the income is a
resident of one Contracting State who carries on business in the other
Contracting State in which the income arises and the income is
attributable to a permanent establishment in that State. In that
situation, the income is to be considered either business profit or income
from independent personal services.
The maximum rates of withholding tax described in the preceding
paragraphs are subject to the standard anti-abuse rules for certain
classes of investment income found in other U.S. tax treaties and agreements.
The taxation of capital gains, described in Article 13 of the
Convention, generally follows the rule of recent U.S. tax treaties as well
as the OECD model. Gains on real property are taxable in the country
in which the property is located, and gains from the sale of personal
property are taxed only in the State of residence of the seller, unless
attributable to a permanent establishment or fixed base in the other
State.
Article 7 of the new Convention generally follows the standard
rules for taxation by one country of the business profits of a resident of
the other. The non-residence country's right to tax such profits is
generally limited to cases in which the profits are attributable to a
permanent establishment located in that country. The present convention
grants taxing rights that are in some respects broader and in others
narrower than those found in modern treaties.
As do all recent U.S. treaties, this Convention preserves the right of
the United States to impose its branch profits tax in addition to the
basic corporate tax on a branch's business (Article 7). This tax, which
was introduced in 1986, is not addressed under the present treaty.
Paragraph 4 of the Protocol also accommodates a provision of the 1986 Tax
Reform Act that attributes to a permanent establishment income that is
earned during the life of the permanent establishment but is deferred and
not received until after the permanent establishment no longer exists.
Consistent with U.S. treaty policy, Article 8 of the new Convention
permits only the country of residence to tax profits from international
carriage by ships or aircraft and income from the use, maintenance, or
rental of containers used in international traffic. This reciprocal
exemption also extends to income from the rental of ships and aircraft if
the rental income is incidental to income from the operation of ships and
aircraft in international traffic.
Article 21 of the proposed Convention provides special thresholds to
determine when income derived in connection with the offshore exploration
for, and exploitation of, natural resources may be taxed in the source
country. The general rule of Article 21 is that all exploitation
activities give rise to a permanent establishment while exploration
activities create a permanent establishment only if they continue for a
period of 120 days in a twelve-month period. Article 21 also provides that
salaries and other remuneration of a resident of one Contracting State
derived from an employment in connection with offshore activities carried
on through a permanent establishment in the other may be taxed by the
other State. Other U.S. treaties with countries bordering on the North Sea
(e.g., Norway, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands) have similar
articles dealing with offshore activities.
The taxation of income from the performance of personal services under
Articles 14 through 17 of the new Convention is essentially the same as
that under other recent U.S. treaties with OECD countries. Unlike many
U.S. treaties, however, the new Convention, at Article 18, provides for
the deductibility of cross-border contributions by temporary residents of
one State to pension plans registered in the other State under limited
circumstances.
Article 23 of the new Convention contains significant
anti-treaty-shopping rules making its benefits unavailable to persons
engaged in treaty-shopping. The current convention contains no such
anti-treatyshopping rules. The Limitation on Benefits of the proposed
Convention also eliminates another potential abuse by denying U.S.
benefits with respect to income attributable to third-country permanent
establishments of Irish corporations that are exempt from tax in Ireland
by operation of Irish law (the so-called "triangular cases"). Under the
new Convention, full U.S. treaty benefits generally will be granted in
these triangular cases only when the U.S. source income is subject to a
significant level of tax in Ireland or in the country in which the
permanent establishment is located.
The proposed Convention also contains rules necessary for its
administration, including rules for the resolution of disputes under the
Convention (Article 26) and for exchange of information (Article 27). The
Convention would permit the General Accounting Office and the tax-writing
committees of Congress to obtain access to certain tax information
exchanged under the Convention for use in their oversight of the
administration of U.S. tax laws.
This Convention is subject to ratification. In accordance with Article
29, it will enter into force upon the exchange of instruments of
ratification and will have effect for payments made or credited on or
after the first day of January following entry into force with respect to
taxes withheld by the source country; with respect to other taxes, the
Convention will take effect for taxable periods beginning on or after the
first day of January following the date on which the Convention enters
into force. When the present convention affords a more favorable result
for a taxpayer than the proposed Convention, the provisions of the present
convention will continue to apply for one additional year. Article 29 (5)
also provides that certain companies that are owned by residents of member
states of the European Union or of parties to the North American Free
Trade Agreement not be subject to the terms of Article 23 (5) (b) for an
additional two years.
The proposed Convention will remain in force indefinitely unless
terminated by one of the Contracting States, pursuant to Article 30. That
Article provides that, at any time after five years from the date the
Convention enters into force, either State may terminate the Convention by
giving prior notice through diplomatic channels of six months.
A Protocol and an exchange of notes accompany the Convention and
provide binding interpretations and understandings concerning the
application of the Convention. The Protocol, which states that it is an
integral part of the Convention, elaborates on the meaning of certain
terms used in the Convention. The exchange of notes provides further
clarification and will constitute an agreement that will enter into force
upon entry into force of the Convention.
A technical memorandum explaining in detail the provisions of the
Convention will be prepared by the Department of the Treasury and will be
submitted separately to the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.
The Department of the Treasury and the Department of State cooperated
in the negotiation of the Convention. It has the full approval of both
Departments.
Respectfully submitted,
MADELEINE ALBRIGHT.
LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL
THE WHITE HOUSE, September 24, 1997.
To the Senate of the United States:
I transmit herewith for Senate advice and consent to ratification the
Convention Between the Government of the United States of America and the
Government of Ireland for the Avoidance of Double Taxation and the
Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with Respect to Taxes on Income and Capital
Gains, signed at Dublin on July 28, 1997, (the "Convention") together with
a Protocol and an exchange of notes done on the same date. Also
transmitted is the report of the Department of State concerning the
Convention.
This Convention, which is similar to tax treaties between the United
States and other OECD nations, provides maximum rates of tax to be applied
to various types of income and protection from double taxation of income.
The Convention also provides for resolution of disputes and sets forth
rules making its benefits unavailable to residents that are engaged in
treaty shopping.
I recommend that the Senate give early and favorable consideration to
this Convention, with its Protocol and exchange of notes, and that the
Senate give its advice and consent to ratification.
WILLIAM J. CLINTON.