DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY TECHNICAL EXPLANATION OF THE CONVENTION BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND THE REPUBLIC OF LATVIA FOR THE AVOIDANCE OF DOUBLE TAXATION AND THE PREVENTION OF FISCAL EVA
颁布时间:1998-01-15
ARTICLE 7
Business Profits
This Article provides rules for the taxation by a Contracting State of
the business profits of an enterprise of the other Contracting State.
Paragraph 1
Paragraph 1 states the general rule that business profits (as defined
in paragraph 7) of an enterprise of one Contracting State may not be taxed
by the other Contracting State unless the enterprise carries on business
in that other Contracting State through a permanent establishment (as
defined in Article 5 (Permanent Establishment)) situated there. When that
condition is met, the State in which the permanent establishment is
situated may tax the enterprise on the income that is attributable to the
permanent establishment, but only on a net basis.
Under certain circumstances, the State in which the permanent
establishment exists may also tax income of the enterprise attributable to
sales in that other State of goods or merchandise of the same kind as
those sold through the permanent establishment, or to other business
transactions carried on in that other State which are of the same or
similar kind as those effected through the permanent establishment. These
rules are of a type known as "limited force of attraction" rules.
This limited force of attraction rule is similar to, but narrower
than, a rule found in the U.N. Model. Under the rule in the U.N. Model, if
an enterprise of one Contracting State derives income from the sale of
goods or the carrying on of other business activities through a permanent
establishment situated in the other Contracting State, income derived
directly by the enterprise (i.e., not through the permanent establishment)
from the sale of goods of the same or similar kind as those sold through
the permanent establishment or from the carrying on of activities of the
same or similar kind as those carried on through the permanent
establishment may be attributed to the permanent establishment. Countries
that insist on including a limited force of attraction rule see it as a
means of preventing avoidance of their tax at source. The force of
attraction rule in this Convention focuses on its anti-abuse function. Its
application is limited to situations in which it can be shown that the
transaction giving rise to the income was carried out outside the
permanent establishment in order to avoid taxation in the country in which
the permanent establishment is situated. For example, if the Riga office
of a U.S. consulting firm provides certain services to small companies in
Latvia and a very large Latvian company requires similar services but on a
scale too large for the permanent establishment to handle, the Latvian
company might enter into a contract with the consulting firm's home office
in the United States to provide those services directly. The income from
that transaction would not be attributed to the permanent establishment
because it could not be shown that the transaction was structured
through the U.S. office in order to avoid Latvian tax. If, however, some
small Latvian companies are served by the Riga office and other
similar-sized companies are served directly from the United States, it
might be possible to show that services were carried out through the home
office to avoid Latvian tax. If such a case were made, the income from
these contracts with the home office would be attributed to the permanent
establishment.
The limited force of attraction rule in this Convention is narrower
than the rule of Code section 864(c)(3).
Paragraph 2
Paragraph 2 provides rules for the attribution of business profits to
a permanent establishment. The Contracting States will attribute to a
permanent establishment the profits that it would have earned had it been
an independent enterprise engaged in the same or similar activities under
the same or similar circumstances. This language incorporates the arm'
length standard for purposes of determining the profits attributable to a
permanent establishment. The computation of business profits attributable
to a permanent establishment under this paragraph is subject to the rules
of paragraph 3 for the allowance of expenses incurred for the purposes of
earning the profits.
The "attributable to" concept of paragraph 2 is analogous but not
entirely equivalent to the "effectively connected" concept in Code section
864(c). The profits attributable to a permanent establishment may be from
sources within or without a Contracting State.
It is understood that the business profits attributed to a permanent
establishment include only those profits derived from that permanent
establishment's assets or activities. This rule is consistent with the
"asset-use" and "business activities" test of Code section 864(c)(2).
Thus, the limited force of attraction rule of Code section 864(c)(3) is
not incorporated into paragraph 2.
This Article does not contain a provision corresponding to paragraph 4
of Article 7 of the OECD Model. That paragraph provides that a Contracting
State in certain circumstances may determine the profits attributable to a
permanent establishment on the basis of an apportionment of the total
profits of the enterprise. The inclusion of such a paragraph is
unnecessary.Paragraphs 2 and 3 of Article 7 authorize the use of such
approaches independently of paragraph 4 of Article 7 of the OECD Model
because total profits methods are acceptable methods for determining the
arm's length profits of an enterprise under Article 9. Any such approach,
however, must be designed to approximate an arm's length result.
Accordingly, it is understood that under paragraph 2 of the Convention, it
is permissible to use methods other than separate accounting to estimate
the arm' length profits of a permanent establishment where it is necessary
to do so for practical reasons, such as when the affairs of the permanent
establishment are so closely bound up with those of the head office that
it would be impossible to disentangle them on any strict basis of
accounts.
Paragraph 3
This paragraph is in substance the same as paragraph 3 of Article 7 of
the U.S. Model. Paragraph 3 provides that in determining the business
profits of a permanent establishment, deductions shall be allowed for the
expenses incurred for the purposes of the permanent establishment,
ensuring that business profits will be taxed on a net basis. Whereas the
U.S. Model explicitly states that deductions are not limited to expenses
incurred exclusively for the purposes of the permanent establishment, in
this treaty, like the OECD model, it is implicitly understood that there
will be allowed a reasonable allocation to the permanent establishment of
expenses incurred by the enterprise, whether those expenses were incurred
for purposes of the enterprise as a whole, or they were incurred for the
part of the enterprise that includes the permanent establishment, see
paragraph 16 of the Commentaries to Article 7 of the OECD Model.
Deductions are to be allowed regardless of which accounting unit of the
enterprise books the expenses, so long as they are incurred for the
purposes of the permanent establishment. For example, a portion of the
interest expense recorded on the books of the home office in one State
may be deducted by a permanent establishment in the other if properly
allocable thereto.
The paragraph specifies that the expenses that may be considered to be
incurred for the purposes of the permanent establishment are expenses for
research and development, interest and other similar expenses, as well as
a reasonable amount of executive and general administrative expenses. This
rule permits (but does not require) each Contracting State to apply the
type of expense allocation rules provided by U.S. law (such as in Treas.
Reg. sections 1.861-8 and 1.882-5).
Paragraph 3 does not permit a deduction for expenses charged to a
permanent establishment by another unit of the enterprise. Thus, a
permanent establishment may not deduct a royalty deemed paid to the head
office. Similarly, a permanent establishment may not increase its business
profits by the amount of any notional fees for ancillary services
performed for another unit of the enterprise, but also should not receive
a deduction for the expense of providing such services, since those
expenses would be incurred for purposes of a business unit other than the
permanent establishment.
The last sentence of the paragraph, which is neither in the U.S. Model
nor in the OECD Model, allows each Contracting State, consistent with its
law, to impose limitations on the deductions taken by the permanent
establishment as long as the limitations are consistent with the concept
of net income. This language was provided at the request of the Latvian
delegation. The language allows the United States and Latvia to place
limits on certain deductions, for example, entertainment expenses.
However, it would not permit the Contracting States to deny a deduction
for wages or interest expenses since such expenses are so fundamental that
denial of deductions would be inconsistent with the concept of net income.
Paragraph 4
Paragraph 4 permits the tax authorities of a Contracting State to
apply the provisions of internal law in determining tax liability in cases
where the information available to the competent authority is not adequate
to measure accurately the profits of a permanent establishment. The
Internal Revenue Service would have this power even in the absence of
such a specific provision.
The determination of profits in such cases, based on the available
information, must be done consistently with the principles of this
Article, i.e., it must seek to reflect arm's length pricing and
appropriate deductions of expenses.
Paragraph 5
Paragraph 5 provides that no business profits can be attributed to a
permanent establishment merely because it purchases goods or merchandise
for the enterprise of which it is a part. This paragraph is identical to
paragraph 4 of the U.S. Model. This rule applies only to an office that
performs functions for the enterprise in addition to purchasing. The
income attribution issue does not arise if the sole activity of the
permanent establishment is the purchase of goods or merchandise because
such activity does not give rise to a permanent establishment under
Article 5 (Permanent Establishment). A common situation in which paragraph
4 is relevant is one in which a permanent establishment purchases raw
materials for the enterprise's manufacturing operation conducted outside
the United States and sells the manufactured product. While business
profits may be attributable to the permanent establishment with respect to
its sales activities, no profits are attributable to it with respect to
its purchasing activities.
Paragraph 6
This paragraph tracks paragraph 5 of Article 7 of the U.S. Model,
providing that profits shall be determined by the same method each year,
unless there is good reason to change the method used. This rule assures
consistent tax treatment over time for permanent establishments. It limits
the ability of both the Contracting State and the enterprise to change
accounting methods to be applied to the permanent establishment. It does
not, however, restrict a Contracting State from imposing additional
requirements, such as the rules under Code section 481, to prevent amounts
from being duplicated or omitted following a change in accounting method.
Paragraph 7
The term "business profits" is broadly defined in paragraph 7 to mean
income derived from any trade or business. Specific examples that are not
meant to be comprehensive include profits from manufacturing, mercantile,
fishing, transportation, communications or extractive activities. Business
profits also include income from the furnishing of the personal services
of other persons, but as the second sentence of paragraph 7 describes,
business profits do not include compensation received by an individual for
the performance of personal services, whether as an employee or in an
independent capacity. Thus, a consulting firm resident in one State whose
employees perform services in the other State through a permanent
establishment may be taxed in that other State on a net basis under
Article 7. The salaries of the employees, however, will be subject to the
rules of Article 15 (Dependent Personal Services).
In accordance with this broad definition, the term "business profits"
includes income attributable to notional principal contracts and other
financial instruments to the extent that the income is attributable to a
trade or business of dealing in such instruments, or is otherwise related
to a trade or business (as in the case of a notional principal contract
entered into for the purpose of hedging currency risk arising from an
active trade or business). Any other income derived from such instruments
is, unless specifically covered in another article, dealt with under
Article 22 (Other Income).
Unlike the U.S. Model and the OECD Model, income derived by an
enterprise from the rental of tangible personal property is not included
in this Article, but instead (with the exception of container leasing
which is included in Article 22 (Other Income) and ship and aircraft
leasing covered by Article 8 ( Shipping and Air Transport)) is included in
Article 12 (Royalties). .
Paragraph 8
Paragraph 8 coordinates the provisions of Article 7 and other
provisions of the Convention. Under this paragraph, when business profits
include items of income that are dealt with separately under other
articles of the Convention, the provisions of those articles will, except
when they specifically provide to the contrary, take precedence over the
provisions of Article 7. For example, the taxation of dividends will be
determined by the rules of Article 10 (Dividends), and not by Article 7,
except where, as provided in paragraph 4 of Article 10, the dividend is
attributable to a permanent establishment or fixed base. In the latter
case the provisions of Articles 7 or 14 (Independent Personal Services)
apply. Thus, an enterprise of one State deriving dividends from the other
State may not rely on Article 7 to exempt those dividends from tax at
source if they are not attributable to a permanent establishment of the
enterprise in the other State. By the same token, if the dividends are
attributable to a permanent establishment in the other State, the
dividends may be taxed on a net income basis at the source State's full
corporate tax rate, rather than on a gross basis under Article 10
(Dividends).
As provided in Article 8 (Shipping and Air Transport), income derived
from shipping and air transport activities in international traffic
described in that Article is taxable only in the country of residence of
the enterprise regardless of whether it is attributable to a permanent
establishment situated in the source State.
Paragraph 9
Paragraph 9 incorporates into the Convention the rule of Code section
864(c)(6). Like the Code section on which it is based, paragraph 8
provides that any income or gain attributable to a permanent establishment
or a fixed base during its existence is taxable in the Contracting State
where the permanent establishment or fixed base is situated, even if the
payment of that income or gain is deferred until after the permanent
establishment or fixed base ceases to exist. This rule applies with
respect to paragraphs 1 and 2 of Article 7 (Business Profits), paragraph 6
of Article 10 (Dividends), paragraph 5 of Articles 11 (Interest),
paragraph 4 of 12 (Royalties), paragraph 3 of Article 13 (Gains), Article
14 (Independent Personal Services) and paragraph 2 of Article 22 (Other
Income).
The effect of this rule can be illustrated by the following example.
Assume a company that is a resident of Latvia and that maintains a
permanent establishment in the United States winds up the permanent
establishment's business and sells the permanent establishment's inventory
and assets to a U.S. buyer at the end of year 1 in exchange for an
interest-bearing installment obligation payable in full at the end of year
3. Despite the fact that Article 13's threshold requirement for U.S.
taxation is not met in year 3 because the company has no permanent
establishment in the United States, the United States may tax the deferred
income payment recognized by the company in year 3.
Relation to Other Articles
This Article is subject to the saving clause of paragraph 4 of Article
1 (General Scope) of the Model. Thus, if a citizen of the United States
who is a resident of Latvia under the treaty derives business profits from
the United States that are not attributable to a permanent establishment
in the United States, the United States may, subject to the special
foreign tax credit rules of paragraph 3 of Article 24 (Relief from Double
Taxation), tax those profits, notwithstanding the provision of paragraph 1
of this Article which would exempt the income from U.S. tax.
The benefits of this Article are also subject to Article 23
(Limitation on Benefits). Thus, an enterprise of Latvia that derives
income effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business may not claim
the benefits of Article 7 unless the resident carrying on the enterprise
qualifies for such benefits under Article 23.
ARTICLE 8
Shipping and Air Transport
This Article governs the taxation of profits from the operation of
ships and aircraft in international traffic. The term "international
traffic" is defined in subparagraph 1(g) of Article 3 (General
Definitions). The taxation of gains from the alienation of ships, aircraft
or containers is not dealt with in this Article but in paragraph 4 of
Article 13 (Gains).
Paragraph 1
Paragraph 1 provides that profits derived by an enterprise of a
Contracting State from the operation in international traffic of ships or
aircraft are taxable only in that Contracting State. Because paragraph 8
of Article 7 (Business Profits) defers to Article 8 with respect to
shipping income, such income derived by a resident of one of the
Contracting States may not be taxed in the other State even if the
enterprise has a permanent establishment in that other State. Thus, if a
U.S. airline has a ticket office in the other State, that State may not
tax the airline's profits attributable to that office under Article 7.
Since entities engaged in international transportation activities normally
will have many permanent establishments in a number of countries, the rule
avoids difficulties that would be encountered in attributing income to
multiple permanent establishments if the income were covered by Article 7
(Business Profits).
Paragraph 2
The income from the operation of ships or aircraft in international
traffic that is exempt from tax under paragraph 1 is further defined in
paragraph 2. In addition to income derived directly from the operation of
ships and aircraft in international traffic, this definition also includes
certain items of rental income that are closely related to those activities.
First, income of an enterprise of a Contracting State from the
rental of ships or aircraft on a full basis (i.e., with crew) when such
ships or aircraft are used in international traffic (i.e., when operated
by a resident of one of the contracting states) is income of the lessor
from the operation of ships and aircraft in international traffic and,
therefore, is exempt from tax in the other Contracting State under
paragraph 1. Also, paragraph 2 encompasses income from the lease of ships
or aircraft on a bareboat basis (i.e., without crew), when the ships or
aircraft are operated in international traffic (i.e., when operated by a
resident of one of the contracting states), and the income is incidental
to other income of the lessor from the operation of ships or aircraft in
international traffic. Thus, the coverage of Article 8 of the Convention
is generally consistent with Article 8 of the OECD Model although narrower
than the U.S. Model, which also covers rentals from bareboat leasing that
are not incidental to the operation of ships or aircraft by the lessee. As
discussed above, the classes of income derived from the rental of ships
and air transport not included in this Article are included in Article 12
(Royalties) or Article 7 (Business Profits).
Paragraph 2 also clarifies, consistent with the Commentary to Article
8 of the OECD Model, that income earned by an enterprise from the inland
transport of property or passengers within either Contracting State falls
within Article 8 if the transport is undertaken as part of the
international transport of property or passengers by the enterprise.
Thus, if a U.S. shipping company contracts to carry property from the
other State to a U.S. city and, as part of that contract, it transports
the property by truck from its point of origin to an airport in the other
State (or it contracts with a trucking company to carry the property to
the airport) the income earned by the U.S. shipping company from the
overland leg of the journey would be taxable only in the United States.
Similarly, Article 8 also would apply to income from lighterage undertaken
as part of the international transport of goods.
Finally, certain non-transport activities that are an integral part of
the services performed by a transport company are understood to be covered
in paragraph 1, though they are not specified in paragraph 2. These
include, for example, the performance of some maintenance or catering
services by one airline for another airline, if these services are
incidental to the provision of those services by the airline for itself.
Income earned by concessionaires, however, is not covered by Article 8.
These interpretations of paragraph 1 also are consistent with the
Commentary to Article 8 of the OECD Model.
Paragraph 3
Under this paragraph, profits of an enterprise of a Contracting State
that is engaged in the operation of ships and aircraft derived from the
use, maintenance or rental of containers (including equipment for their
transport) that are used for the transport of goods in international
traffic are exempt from tax in the other Contracting State.
Thus, this paragraph applies only to income from the use, maintenance or
rental of containers that is incidental to other income from international
traffic. This differs from the U.S. Model in which both incidental and
nonincidental income from the rental of containers is included in Article
8.
Paragraph 4
This paragraph clarifies that the provisions of paragraphs 1 and 3
also apply to profits derived by an enterprise of a Contracting State from
participation in a pool, joint business or international operating agency.
This refers to various arrangements for international cooperation by
carriers in shipping and air transport. For example, airlines from two
countries may agree to share the transport of passengers between the two
countries. They each will fly the same number of flights per week and
share the revenues from that route equally, regardless of the number of
passengers that each airline actually transports. Paragraph 4 makes clear
that with respect to each carrier the income dealt with in the Article is
that carrier's share of the total transport, not the income derived from
the passengers actually carried by the airline. This paragraph corresponds
to paragraph 4 of Article 8 of the OECD Model.
Relation to Other Articles
As with other benefits of the Convention, the benefit of exclusive
residence country taxation under Article 8 is available to an enterprise
only if it is entitled to benefits under Article 23 (Limitation on
Benefits).
This Article also is subject to the saving clause of paragraph 4 of
Article 1 (General Scope) of the Model. Thus, if a citizen of the United
States who is a resident of Latvia derives profits from the operation of
ships or aircraft in international traffic, notwithstanding the exclusive
residence country taxation in paragraph 1 of Article 8, the United States
may, subject to the special foreign tax credit rules of paragraph 3 of
Article 24 (Relief from Double Taxation), tax those profits as part of the
worldwide income of the citizen. (This is an unlikely situation, however,
because non-tax considerations (e.g., insurance) generally result in
shipping activities being carried on in corporate form.)