This book investigates how some corporations have avoided tax liability with intellectual property holding companies, and how different constituencies are working to stop them.
Jeffrey A. Maine is Maine Law Foundation Professor of Law at the University of Maine School of Law. An expert on tax law, he has published seven books and numerous articles in the field. Professor Maine focuses his current research on the intersection of taxation and intellectual property, and has co-authored with Xuan-Thao Nguyen a treatise and a law school textbook on the tax treatment of intellectual property. Formerly a practicing attorney at Holland and Knight, Professor Maine has more than twenty years of experience in teaching, including positions at six law schools.
1. Introduction; 2. The Delaware gift to corporations; 3. The domestic IP holding company's structure and phantom; 4. The scrutiny from the States; 5. Domestic tax haven; 6. Key incentives to created foreign intellectual property holding companies; 7. International structures used by Apple and other multinational companies; 8. Government barriers to intellectual property income shifting and their (in)effectiveness; 9. Foreign tax havens: exploring solutions to intellectual property income shifting offshore; 10. Final thoughts on IP holding companies and corporate social responsibility.