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| '''Interest Equalization Tax''' was a domestic tax measure implemented by U.S. President [[John F. Kennedy]] in July 1963. It was meant to make it less profitable for U.S. investors to invest abroad by taxing the purchase of foreign [[securities]]. The design of the tax was to reduce the [[Balance of payments|balance-of-payment]] deficit. Although it was originally intended to be a temporary tax, it lasted until 1974.<ref>{{cite web|last=Joint Committee on Taxation|title=The Interest Equalization Act of 1963|url=http://www.archive.org/details/theinterestequal1064unit|publisher=US Congress|accessdate=27 February 2011}}</ref>
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| ==Purpose==
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| The purpose of the tax was to decrease the balance of payments deficit in the US. This was achieved conceptually by making investments in foreign [[securities]] less appealing. By increasing the price of the security, investors will buy fewer of them, all else equal. With fewer domestic investors purchasing foreign securities, capital outflows will be lower, thereby reducing the balance-of-payments deficit. The equation for the balance of payments is:
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| : <math>\text{BOP} = \text{current account} - \text{capital account} \pm \text{balancing item} \,</math>
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| The identity for the capital account is:
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| :<math> | |
| \begin{align}
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| \mbox{Capital account} & = \mbox{Change in foreign ownership of domestic assets} \\
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| & - \mbox{Change in domestic ownership of foreign assets} \\
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|
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| \end{align}
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| </math>
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| So when capital outflows are decreased, the capital account decreases. When the capital account decreases, the balance-of-payments increases.
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| ==Dates Effective==
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| The tax was effective on purchases made after July 18, 1963. It was scheduled to expire on January 1, 1966, but was extended multiple times, and eventually abolished on January, 1974.
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| ==Amount of the tax==
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| * For foreign [[stock]]s, the tax is 15% of the price<ref>{{cite web|last=Joint Committee on Taxation|title=The Interest Equalization Act of 1963|url=http://www.archive.org/details/theinterestequal1064unit|publisher=US Congress|accessdate=27 February 2011}}</ref>
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| * For debt obligations there is a range between the following bounds:
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| # For debt obligations having 3 to 3.5 years remaining until [[Maturity (finance)|maturity]], the tax is 2.75% of purchase price
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| # For debt obligations having 28.5 years remaining until maturity, the tax is 15% of purchase price
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| ==Exemptions==
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| * Debt obligations with less than 3 years remaining until [[Maturity (finance)|maturity]]
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| * Investments in developing countries
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| * Investments that result in the U.S. citizen owning a 10% or more voting stock in the foreign corporation
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| * Debt obligations that were issued to a U.S. person in order for that foreign corporation to purchase U.S.-produced goods
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| * Foreign securities that would endanger international monetary stability. The President will determine if any foreign securities qualify for this exemption. Canadian-issued securities were the only initial exemption from the tax in 1963
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| * Debt obligations acquired by commercial banks to make loans (deposits, etc.)
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| * Insurance companies who invest in foreign securities with premiums collected from foreigners
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| * Labor unions that invest in foreign securities with the money from dues collected abroad from foreign members
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| *Investment banks that underwrite foreign securities are exempt from the tax when they acquire and resell such securities from the corporation
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| *U.S.-controlled foreign corporations (>50% owned by U.S. persons and registered on U.R. securities exchanges)
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| ==Estimated Revenue==
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| The tax was expected to raise $30 million per year.
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| ==Effect on the Deficit==
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| As the original intent of the Interest Equalization Tax was the reduce the balance-of-payments deficit, a majority consider the tax successful.
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| * Between 1961 and 1964, the deficit averaged $2.5 billion
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| * In the years 1965 to 1966, the deficit averaged $1.1 billion
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| * In 1967, the deficit was $3.5 billion
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| * In 1968, there was a surplus of $93 million<ref>{{cite journal|last=Butterworth|first=Robert A.|title=The United States Interest Equalization Tax|journal=Lawyer of the Americas|date=June 1970|volume=2|issue=2|pages=164–72|jstor=40175358}}</ref>
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| Since many factors influence the balance-of-payments account, the effect of the tax is unclear. However, there was a positive trend in the years after it was enacted.
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| ==References==
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| {{reflist}}
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| [[Category:United States federal taxation legislation]]
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