Abstract

The federal income tax conceptualizes the standard loan transaction as an exchange of cash for promises to pay interest and to repay the amount borrowed by the end of the term. This formulation is subtly incorrect in ways that have led to a weaker foundation for existing tax rules than they merit. Conceptualizing loans instead as closely akin to leases places most of the tax rules for debt on sounder footing because it clarifies that interest is the consideration paid for the use of the loan proceeds. If interest is the cost of the use of money, then simple borrowing is a fully-paid-for transaction, full basis credit in the loan proceeds for the period for which interest is paid is appropriate, and cancellation of debt is a straightforward accession to wealth in the period in which it occurs. These conclusions hold whether the interest is deductible or not and are consistent with current law, which has come under fire from some quarters.Although the proposed reconceptualization of loan as lease supports a number of longstanding income tax rules, one area in which it counsels significant reform is the taxation of partnerships. If loans are like cash leases made in exchange for interest qualifying as rent, Treasury should provide for the allocation of basis credit among partners for the partnership’s debt based on who bears the economic burden of the interest expense. The rule should apply regardless of whether the debt is recourse or nonrecourse and regardless of who would have discharge of indebtedness income on default. Such an approach differs markedly from the existing rules for recourse obligations but is closer to the rules for certain nonrecourse obligations. A modification of the rules applicable to partnership debt consistent with the loan-as-lease theory, therefore, would remove a significant discontinuity in the current tax treatment of partnership debt.

Highlights

  • The federal income tax conceptualizes the standard loan transaction as an exchange of cash for promises to pay interest and to repay the amount borrowed by the end of the term

  • Most of the tax rules that apply to loans are settled, but the proper tax treatment of loans has long been in dispute.[1]

  • That analysis has resulted in the following settled rules:[3] the transfer of loan proceeds is nontaxable to the borrower and non-deductible to the lender;[4] the borrower has full basis credit in the loan proceeds,[5] meaning that no tax arises on the use of the proceeds to purchase property and the borrower has a cost basis in the purchased property; and there is no deduction to the borrower and no inclusion to the lender on repayment.[6]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Most of the tax rules that apply to loans are settled, but the proper tax treatment of loans has long been in dispute.[1]. It is not obvious that the lender suffers no loss on transfer of the loan proceeds since the lender has lost use of the funds during the loan term and has placed the funds at risk This Article argues that the tax rules described above are nearly correct but the justifications for them are not because they rest on a faulty understanding of the economic substance of the loan transaction. The value-for-value exchange for the use of the funds—the “rent”—is, correspondingly, not an obligation to return but instead what is denominated “interest.” Because the payment of interest is an ongoing obligation that reflects an arm’s-length cash purchase, the tax consequences of borrowing are straightforward: no income on receipt of the loan proceeds, no deduction on repayment, and full basis credit in the funds borrowed as long as interest payments remain current. The central feature of the standard view is its conceptualization of the loan transaction as the exchange of a fee interest in cash on one hand for promises to pay interest and a return of the fee on the other

Tax Law Characterization of Loans
Proposition 1
Treatment of Borrower
Treatment of Lender
Proposition 2
Proposition 3
What is a Loan?
What Tax Consequences Follow From LAL?
LAL When the Lender Assumes Risk
Considering the Risk of Loss as a Partial Receipt of the Fee
Provision of Security and Covenants
Taxation of DOI
Irrelevance of Interest Deductibility
Recourse Liabilities
Nonrecourse Liabilities
Partnership Borrowing Under LAL
Findings
CONCLUSION
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