SteveSy wrote:The argument made here is that 61 shows you owe the income tax regardless...well, that's true if only you use 61, but then if you're a foreigner making money in a foreign land you would owe also.
No. If you're a foreigner making money in a foreign land -- a non-resident alien -- you would owe U.S. federal income tax only to the extent provided by U.S. tax law. And section 61 by itself does not impose a federal income tax -- on anyone.
Non-resident aliens can owe some U.S. federal income tax in limited circumstances -- but that has nothing much to do with section 61.
I am still playing hide the ball, Steve. Your problem is that you haven't read the Internal Revenue Code. The answer is right there in the statute. You need to read ALL APPLICABLE PROVISIONS -- not just section 61, not just section 861.
The general rule is that for a
non-resident alien (the person in India, a citizen of India, a resident of India, who is not a citizen or resident of the USA), the regular federal income tax (imposed by section 1) and the alternative minimum tax (under section 55) are imposed ONLY to the extent provided under either section 871 or section 877.
But do you know why, Steve?
Keep looking, Steve.
I'm merely pointing out that IF we were to rely on 61 to determine if we owe the tax then it would also mean other things we know aren't taxed would be taxed. I simply disposed of a flawed argument. Section 61 doesn't impose any tax, it provides a list of items of gross income that come from sources. Since there is a source section in the code its safe to presume whatever source means whether sources within or without the U.S. Unless of course you know of some source that isn't within or without the U.S.?
I think you're missing the big picture, Steve. Nobody is saying that we rely on section 61 -- i.e., ONLY on section 61 -- to determine whether we owe the tax. We rely not only on section 61, but also on ALL APPLICABLE PROVISIONS OF THE INTERNAL REVENUE LAWS,
including (there's that word!) the Internal Revenue Code, certain other statutes, the regs, the tax treaties, and so on.
EDIT: Steve wrote:
Since there is a source section in the code its safe to presume whatever source means whether sources within or without the U.S.
That's correct. The phrase "whatever source" means
any source, regardless of whether that source is within or without the United States.
But that doesn't change the point that Larken Rose completely flubbed it, in his interpretation of the Internal Revenue Code. Again, the answer is all there in the law -- but you have to know where to look for it.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet