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Search Results: keywords:"inverted corporations"

  • H.R. 8268, known as the “Stop Corporate Inversions Act of 2024,” aims to change how the U.S. tax code treats certain foreign corporations. It proposes that if a foreign corporation acquires a significant portion of a U.S. company's assets and meets specific conditions, it would be treated as...

    Simple Explanation

    The bill wants to make sure that if a company from another country buys a big part of an American company and does a lot of business in the U.S., it has to pay U.S. taxes just like an American company, to stop companies from avoiding paying taxes.

  • The bill S. 4275 aims to modify the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to address the issue of "inverted corporations." An inverted corporation is a company that shifts its headquarters overseas to avoid paying U.S. taxes while still maintaining significant business operations in...

    Simple Explanation

    The bill S. 4275 wants to stop companies from pretending to be in another country just so they pay less in taxes while still doing a lot of work in the U.S. It says these companies should still be seen as American if they do a lot of work here or buy a lot of things from another U.S. company.

  • The “Corporate Tax Dodging Prevention Act” aims to amend the Internal Revenue Code to adjust how taxes apply to foreign corporations and to ensure that foreign and domestic income are taxed equally. The bill proposes a progressive corporate tax rate, modifies rules for tax credits and...

    Simple Explanation

    The bill wants to make sure big companies from other countries pay taxes just like companies in the United States, by changing how much tax they pay based on their income and stopping certain old rules that let them pay less.