Tax Treaty

  

Categories: Tax, International

If you invest in foreign assets, and are then taxed both at home and abroad, this will, um...make you sad. And governments don’t like sad investor-citizens.

A tax treaty is an agreement between two countries which resolves this potential double-taxation issue. Not only do countries want to make sure foreign investors feel welcome, but also that other types of wealth aren’t double-taxed: income taxes, estate taxes, capital taxes, and wealth taxes.

Tax treaties not only help little investor Joe, but also businesses—the big money movers. They help the countries involved, too, in the same way that free trade (with few tariffs and quotas and such) does.

The OECD, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, developed a tax model for its almost three-dozen wealthy countries, which is referenced by other nations when writing up their tax treaties. In general, the OECD tax treaty model benefits the country with higher capital exports than the one with fewer benefits.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is Balance of Trade?14 Views

00:00

Finance a la shmoop... what is balance of trade...up, down, up, down yeah all right [Squirrels riding a see-saw]

00:10

think of balance of trade the same way you would think of that seesaw in your

00:14

schoolyard instead of the big-boned third-grader

00:17

weighing in against the you know waiting to grow kindergartner when it comes to [Ship sailing out of harbor]

00:21

international economies and the goods they buy and sell from into each other

00:25

we have exports this guy and imports this guy if two countries have a balance

00:30

in trade well then the financial weight on this seesaw thing here is even the

00:35

three future NFL linemen weigh about the same as eleven future tax auditors yeah [Linemen players and tax auditors in a see-saw]

00:41

but that's rarely the case when countries trade among each other

00:45

and if you're on the seesaw you want to be heavy like fat with feet firmly

00:50

planted on the ground where you are exporting or selling to another country [Goods travelling to foreign countries]

00:54

a whole lot more stuff than you're importing what you want is to be

00:58

collecting boatloads of their currency or oil or velcro kilts from Scotland and

01:04

as you capture more and more of their trade or wealth [Wealth sucked into the US]

01:08

the powerful imbalanced one well that'd be you here you get to have more and

01:13

more influence on them and the world they live in is there a way to gain this

01:18

system cheat? well sorta yeah politicians and governments get very nervous when

01:23

the balance of trade is not in their favor and they have the ability to pile [Imports and exports pile on a see-saw]

01:26

a bunch of books on their side of the seesaw to help their skinny accountants

01:31

compete better how do they do this magic you ask okay yeah we know you didn't ask

01:35

but we'll tell you anyway they smack a tax on goods they import from you like

01:41

the US government in the middle of our loss of dominion over the auto industry [Auto industry logos land in a seesaw]

01:45

to Japan and Korea and Germany well we placed a big fat tax on foreign cars

01:50

being imported into the US and we still lost the war there so yeah the seesaw ie

01:56

the balance of trade isn't always fair and by the way if you ever see this guy

02:00

coming run at least feed him [Man running in a park]

Up Next

Finance: What are oligopolies and oligopsonies?
6 Views

What are oligopolies and oligopsonies? Oligopolies are market manifestations where a small group of product or service providers control a market i...

Econ: What are Gains From Trade?
4 Views

What are Gains From Trade? Gains from Trade is the term used to describe the benefits derived from two parties engaging in trade. The gains include...

Finance: What is Free Trade?
12 Views

What is free trade? Well, we’ll give you our knowledge of free trade in exchange for a click on this video...

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)