Wednesday, December 6, 2023
Harvard Law Review Spikes Commissioned Article On Genocide In Gaza
The Intercept, Harvard Law Review Editors Vote to Kill Article About Genocide in Gaza:
The article on the Gaza war and the Nakba was commissioned, edited, fact-checked, and prepared for publication — but was then blocked amid a climate of fear.
A week after Hamas’s October 7 massacre, by which time Israel’s all-out assault on Palestinians in the Gaza Strip had killed thousands of civilians, the online editors of the prestigious Harvard Law Review reached out to Rabea Eghbariah.
The two online chairs, as they are called, had decided to solicit an essay from a Palestinian scholar for the journal’s website. Eghbariah was an obvious choice: A Palestinian doctoral candidate at Harvard Law School and human rights lawyer, he has tried landmark Palestinian civil rights cases before the Israeli Supreme Court.
Eghbariah submitted a draft of a 2,000-word essay by early November. He argued that Israel’s assault on Gaza should be evaluated within and beyond the “legal framework” of “genocide.”
In line with the Law Review’s standard procedures, the piece was solicited, commissioned, contracted, submitted, edited, fact checked, copy edited, and approved by the relevant editors. Yet it will never be published with the Harvard Law Review.
Following an intervention to delay the publication of Eghbariah’s article by the Harvard Law Review president, the piece went through several committee processes before it was finally killed by an emergency meeting of editors. The essay, “The Ongoing Nakba,” would have been the first from a Palestinian scholar published by the journal. ...
Eghbariah’s article was published Tuesday night at The Nation, under the headline “The Harvard Law Review Refused to Run This Piece About Genocide in Gaza.”
For some of the more than 100 editors at the Harvard Law Review, the delay and subsequent killing of Eghbariah’s piece did not hew to the usual process. In a forthcoming public statement viewed by The Intercept, 25 Harvard Law Review editors objected to the move to squash the essay.
“We are unaware of any other solicited piece that has been revoked by the Law Review in this way,” the editors wrote. “This unprecedented decision threatens academic freedom and perpetuates the suppression of Palestinian voices. We dissent.”
Brian Leiter (Chicago), Harvard Law Review "On-Line" Pulls Article That Expressed Incorrect Views About Israel and Palestine:
When one considers all the actual crap published by Harvard and other student-edited law reviews, the idea that this decision has anything to do with the "quality" of the essay, as opposed to its point of view, is beyond absurd.
Paul Horwitz (Alabama), Some Thoughts About the Latest Law Review Imbroglio
This incident may be unusual. But it's not unique. It ain't all about Gaza and the political sensitivities around it, or Bill Ackman or "doxxing trucks." If this was a wrongful act of censorship, then so was the effort first to bowdlerize and then the outright cancellation of Larry Alexander's piece in the Emory Law Journal not so long ago. If the HLR editors demanding that an accepted publication be spiked despite its having gone through the usual processes constitutes a (successful) effort at censorship, then a similar label should attach to the (unsuccessful) effort of Oxford University Press USA employees to get the press to "reconsider" its publication of Holly Lawford-Smith's book Gender-Critical Feminism. The same goes for the American Indian Law Review's abrupt rejection, also of reasonably recent vintage, of an article it had already agreed to publish.
If the more general argument is that the editors wrongly took political considerations into account instead of simply publishing a plausibly acceptable scholarly writing, I welcome it! But any honest reader of law reviews in the past several years (not to speak of years past) must acknowledge that their selection process has been quite political--increasingly so--even (or especially) when such selections are not visible. (Sometimes they are. When you run a whole issue or symposium devoted to a particular politically inflected substantive view and exclude any questioning, doubting, or critical views, even when it's obvious that such views exist and that there is ample room for serious, good-faith scholarly questions and criticism on the topic, that's a visibly political decision, as well as a bad one.) As I said, I doubt politics were at the bottom of the editors' action here. But if people believe otherwise and still have a problem with it, they will not lack occasions for alarm.
- Common Dreams, The Nation Publishes Gaza Genocide Article Killed by Harvard Law Review
- The Harvard Crimson, The Harvard Law Review’s Palestine Exception
December 6, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
Tuesday, December 5, 2023
Christians & Magalhães: The Case For Taxing Away Unsustainable Profits
Allison Christians (McGill; Google Scholar) & Tarcísio Diniz Magalhães (Antwerp; Google Scholar), The Case for Taxing Away Unsustainable Profits, 91 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 697 (2023):
When businesses offload environmental and social costs on the public, the resulting profits are windfalls extracted from current and future taxpayers. Prevailing regulatory and tax remedies have not only failed to eliminate such profiteering, but they have in fact incentivized it. To prevent some from receiving windfalls while everyone else bears the costs, profits can be distinguished between sustainable profits, when costs are internalized, and unsustainable profits, when costs are externalized. While the former would remain subject to the traditional corporate income tax, the latter should be completely taxed away with a surtax. A viable way to achieve this is to combine advanced mechanisms for measuring environmental and social damage across supply chains with classic and emerging legal techniques for differentiating categories of income for tax purposes.
December 5, 2023 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax Scholarship | Permalink
Pepperdine Caruso Law At The Supreme Court
I had the honor yesterday morning of moving the admission of eleven Pepperdine Caruso Law alumni and friends into the U.S. Supreme Court Bar:
December 5, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education, Pepperdine Legal Ed | Permalink
Combining Businesses And Their Ownership: The Case For Uniform Nonrecognition Under The Internal Revenue Code
Anthony P. Polito (Suffolk), Combining Businesses and Their Ownership: The Case for Uniform Nonrecognition under the Internal Revenue Code:
If a juridical entity that conducts a bona fide business is absorbed entirely into another juridical entity that also conducts a bona fide business, and the equity holders of the absorbed business receive nothing but equity in the absorbing entity in the transaction, and the equity holders of the absorbing entity retain in form exactly the same legal entitlements as before the transaction, no tax consequences should be triggered with respect to the gain or loss accrued with respect to either the business assets or the equity interests involved.
December 5, 2023 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Scholarship | Permalink
McGinnis: Addressing The Rot In Our Universities
John O. McGinnis (Northwestern), Addressing the Rot in Our Universities:
The reactions at universities to Hamas’ October 7 massacre have finally awakened many alumni, forcing them to recognize the woke takeover of their alma maters. Many university presidents who had issued statements deploring racial incidents in the United States and events around the world were initially silent about the greatest mass slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust. Others issued vague platitudes of concern about violence. Some elite university students, who during the George Floyd riots cried out that silence was violence, welcomed actual violence, celebrating the massacre as part of Palestinian resistance.
Not surprisingly, there was a backlash from many donors who suggested they would withhold their gifts. As a result of the threat to their bottom line, the universities then put out some more muscular statements condemning Hamas. They created task forces against antisemitism on campus. Some expressed concern about student slogans that favored a Free Palestine spanning from the Red Sea to the Jordan River, leaving no space for Israel and the Jews who lived there.
Unfortunately, these actions treat the symptoms rather than the causes of the ideological miasma that has enveloped our universities. Indeed, by buying into the paradigm of the politically active university and further empowering it, political statements by universities and their appointment of task forces based on identity will make things worse in the long run. ...
December 5, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
Listen To Moore v. United States Supreme Court Oral Argument Today At 10:00 AM ET
The oral argument in Moore v. United States is available live on C-Span today at 10:00 am ET:
American Spectator, The Scariest SCOTUS Case This Term: Moore v. United States
- Bloomberg, Moore Petitioners Make Strongest Case to Toss Repatriation Tax
- Bloomberg, Tax World Is Nervous as Court Arguments in Moore Case Approach
- Steven Calabresi (Northwestern), The Amar Brief in Moore Should Not Be Embraced: Part 2
- Steven Calabresi (Northwestern), Moore v. United States: Income Must Be Realized
- Steven Calabresi (Northwestern), Chief Justice Roberts' Chance to Redeem Himself!
- Steven Calabresi (Northwestern), Final Post on Moore v. United States
- Conor Clarke (Washington University), The Supreme Court Takes On Yet Another Made-Up Controversy
- Foreign Policy, This Corporate Law Case Could Accidentally Overturn U.S. Taxes
- Erik Jensen (Case Western), Supreme Court Must Go the Distance in Moore to End Tax Confusion
- Just Taxes Blog, With the Moore vs. United States Case, the Supreme Court Could Unleash Chaos on Our Tax System
December 5, 2023 in New Cases, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax News | Permalink
BLT: Can Large Language Models Handle Basic Legal Text?
Andrew Blair-Stanek (Maryland; Google Scholar), Nils Holzenberger (Institut Polytechnique de Paris) & Benjamin Van Durme (Johns Hopkins; Google Scholar), BLT: Can Large Language Models Handle Basic Legal Text?:
We find that the best publicly available LLMs like GPT-4 and PaLM 2 currently perform poorly at basic text handling required of lawyers or paralegals, such as looking up the text at a line of a witness deposition or at a subsection of a contract. We introduce a benchmark to quantify this poor performance, which casts into doubt LLMs' current reliability as-is for legal practice. Finetuning for these tasks brings an older LLM to near-perfect performance on our test set and also raises performance on a related legal task. This stark result highlights the need for more domain expertise in LLM training.
December 5, 2023 in Legal Ed Scholarship, Legal Ed Tech, Legal Education, Scholarship | Permalink
Monday, December 4, 2023
Blank & Osofsky: Democratic Accountability And Tax Enforcement
Joshua D. Blank (UC-Irvine; Google Scholar) & Leigh Osofsky (North Carolina; Google Scholar), Democratic Accountability and Tax Enforcement, 61 Harv. J. on Legis. __ ( 2024):
One of the most powerful charges that can be leveled against the IRS is that it is targeting taxpayers. Charges of political targeting have dogged the IRS for over a century, including in major controversies such as the so-called Tea Party auditing scandal in 2013. Commentators and scholars have long-critiqued the IRS for focusing audit resources on some of the lowest-income Americans. And, most recently, a group of researchers estimated that the IRS audits Black taxpayers at a 2.9 to 4.7 times greater rate, as compared to non-Black taxpayers.
December 4, 2023 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax Scholarship | Permalink
Legal Ed News Roundup
ABA Journal, ABA Legal Ed Council Rejects Golden Gate University’s Plan To End Its JD Program
- ABA Journal, Anti-Zionist Policies By Student Groups At UC Berkeley Law Fostered Harassment And Hatred, Suit Alleges
- ABA Journal, Campus Politics Playing Bigger Role In Prelaw Students’ Law School Considerations, Survey Says
- ABA Journal, Debt Management: ABA Advocates For Student Loan Reforms In A Changing Landscape
- ABA Journal, DePaul University College Of Law Dean Will Lead ABA Legal Education Starting Next Summer
- ABA Journal, Judicial Task Force Will Take Deep Look At Legal Ed, Bar Admissions
- ABA Journal, Minority Law School Applicants Lean On Personal Statements Post-Harvard Decision
- Daily Report Online, Duke Law School to Benefit From $100M Award to Entire University
December 4, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
Joondeph: Remote Work And State Taxation Of Nonresident Employees
Bradley W. Joondeph (Santa Clara), Remote Work and the State Taxation of Nonresident Employees, 2023 Wis. L. Rev. 873:
The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic caused millions of Americans to telecommute across state lines. In response, several states deemed the salaries of employees who had previously worked at workplaces in the state to be “sourced” temporarily to that state. Some rival states contended this was unconstitutionally extraterritorial and sought to file an original complaint at the Supreme Court. Ultimately, the justices declined to hear New Hampshire v. Massachusetts, leaving the issue to be litigated by individual taxpayers.
This article explains why such sourcing rules are constitutional.
December 4, 2023 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Scholarship | Permalink
NY Times: Why Tax Prof Neil Buchanan And Other Liberal Tenured Professors Are Leaving Florida's Public Universities
New York Times, In Florida’s Hot Political Climate, Some Faculty Have Had Enough:
Liberal-leaning professors are leaving coveted jobs with tenure. And there are signs that recruiting scholars has become harder.
Gov. Ron DeSantis had just taken office in 2019 when the University of Florida lured Neil H. Buchanan, a prominent economist and tax law scholar, from George Washington University.
Now, just four years after he started at the university, Dr. Buchanan has given up his tenured job and headed north to teach in Toronto. In a recent column on a legal commentary website, he accused Florida of “open hostility to professors and to higher education more generally.”
He is not the only liberal-leaning professor to leave one of Florida’s highly regarded public universities. Many are giving up coveted tenured positions and blaming their departures on Governor DeSantis and his effort to reshape the higher education system to fit his conservative principles.
December 4, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Ed Tech, Legal Education, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax News, Tax Prof Moves | Permalink
Lesson From The Tax Court Repost: Ipse Dixit Cannot Fix It
[Author's Note: I am preparing exams and so take a break this week from writing a new Lesson. I offer a reposting of a Lesson from 2019 that I really liked, but one that did not get a lot of views when originally posted. I hope you enjoy it!]
Mitchel Skolnick and Leslie Skolnick, et al. v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2019-64 (June 3, 2019) (Judge Lauber), teaches an important lesson about the proper use of expert witnesses. In Skolnick, the Tax Court rejected the taxpayer’s expert witness valuation of of 153 horses at two points in time 7 years apart because the expert did not adequately disclose the facts and methodology used to value each horse. Judge Lauber held that the taxpayer could not fix the value of the horses through expert’s ipse dixit.
The form of the lesson is also instructive. The opinion merely grants an interstitial motion, called a motion in limine, to exclude the expert’s report from the evidentiary record at trial, held in April 2019. The 68-page final decision was issued in December 2019 (you can read it here) and the taxpayers lost, as you might expect. They then took an appeal to the Third Circuit...and lost again. Skolnick v. Commissioner, 62 F.4th 95 (3rd Cir. 2023).
One might ask why the Court would take the time to issue an opinion on just one aspect of a case after the bother of a trial. Why did not the Court just issue an opinion on the merits of the dispute? After all, if the expert’s opinion is worthless enough to exclude from evidence, it is unlikely to really be helpful in deciding the merits of the case.
I give my thoughts on both lessons below the fold, although I won’t blame you if you prefer to just watch this classic Monty Python sketch “The Argument Clinic.” Ipse Dixit is the form of argument that predominates in the sketch and is part of what makes it funny. In real life, however, taxpayer representatives who do not heed today’s lesson will not be laughing.
December 4, 2023 in Bryan Camp, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax Practice And Procedure | Permalink | Comments (1)
Foley & Lardner Is Third Law Firm To Rescind Offer To Incoming Associate Due To Anti-Israel Comments
Law360, Foley & Lardner Axes Associate Job Offer Over Israel Remarks:
Foley & Lardner has rescinded a job offer to a former summer associate and recent Georgetown University Law Center graduate over her public comments about Hamas' attack on Israel, the law firm said Thursday.
Foley & Lardner pulled back its job offer to recent Georgetown Law graduate Jinan Chehade, who was slated to start in October, after it learned she had made public statements about Hamas' Oct. 7 attack on Israel "that were inconsistent with our core values," the firm told Law360.
"In the face of rising anti-Semitism, Islamophobia and acts of hatred towards Israelis and Palestinians, Foley & Lardner's foremost commitment is — and has been — to our people," a firm spokesperson said in a statement Thursday. "Led by our core values, there is no room for anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, racism or any other form of violence, hatred or bigotry at the firm. ...
December 4, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
TaxProf Blog Weekend Roundup
- This Week's Ten Most Popular TaxProf Blog Posts
- ABA Rejects Golden Gate Law School's Plan To Terminate Its JD Program
- STEAM: Should Accounting Be Added To STEM To Reinvigorate And Diversify The Profession?
- Charlie Adelson Spent 35 Hours On Prison Phone With His Mother Donna In The Week Between His Conviction And Her Arrest In Dan Markel's Murder
Sunday:
- The Liberal Arts: Truth U, Social Justice U, Or Jesus U?
- NY Times Op-Ed: Conservative Church Critics Of Pope Francis Get Fired, While Progressive Critics Get Sternly Worded Letters
- BYU, Catholic, Cumberland, Liberty, Notre Dame, And Pepperdine Deans Support ABA's Proposed Free Speech Accreditation Standard, But Object To Extra Burden Placed On Faith-Based Law Schools
- The Case For And Against Keeping Donna Adelson In Jail Before Her Trial In Dan Markel's Murder
- The Top Five New Tax Papers
December 4, 2023 in Legal Education, Tax, Tax Daily, Weekend Roundup | Permalink
Sunday, December 3, 2023
The Liberal Arts: Truth U, Social Justice U, Or Jesus U?
Christianity Today Op-Ed: The Christian Liberal Arts Tradition Can Appeal to Christians and Non-Christians Alike, by Joseph Claire (Dean, College of Humanities, George Fox University) (adapted from his chapter in The Liberating Arts: Why We Need Liberal Arts Education (2023)):
College and university professors in the liberal arts (humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences) are almost entirely left-leaning, liberal, or progressive, and this is especially true among faculty in the humanities and social sciences. The trend is even more pronounced in certain selective schools.
Students who attend liberal arts colleges or universities often adopt more liberal or progressive points of view as a result of their education. ...
Is this phenomenon accidentally related to the demography of the professoriate or somehow intrinsically related to the craft and content of the liberal arts themselves and the culture and atmosphere of the campus?
The terms “liberal” and “progressive” represent different political traditions in the West, and, when applied to the liberal arts, represent different approaches to education.
“Liberal” liberal arts education represents a modern vision of an Enlightenment-style view of objective truth pursued by rational and empirical methods. The “progressive” model, on the other hand, is often associated with postmodern visions of education, ones suspicious of privileged categories such as knowledge, truth, and understanding. It aims at dismantling systems of illegitimate power, ensuring equal outcomes, and achieving other goals connected to the mission of social justice.
New York University social psychologist Jonathan Haidt argues that these visions of the liberal arts are ultimately incompatible and that universities should choose between the aims of objective truth and social justice. He calls the “liberal” approach “Truth U” and the progressive approach “Social Justice U.” He notes that most major liberal arts institutions in America today have become Social Justice Us by default, owing simply to the makeup of their faculties.
Haidt notes that some religious colleges present themselves as pursuing an entirely different telos, or guiding purpose. As an example, he points to the evangelical Wheaton College, whose mission statement mentions “serv[ing] Jesus Christ and advanc[ing] His Kingdom.” Haidt calls this exceptional case “Jesus U,” but he doesn’t seem to take it seriously, given his commitment to an Enlightenment-style vision of the liberal arts.
December 3, 2023 in Faith, Legal Education | Permalink
NY Times Op-Ed: Conservative Church Critics Of Pope Francis Get Fired, While Progressive Critics Get Sternly Worded Letters
New York Times Op-Ed: Pope Francis Tries to Settle Accounts, by Ross Douthat:
For years now, Pope Francis’ governance of the Roman Catholic Church has been seemingly designed to drive the church’s conservative and liberal wings ever further apart. Thus the persistent question hanging over his pontificate: How will he hold this thing together?
By opening debate on a wide array of hot-button subjects without delivering explicit changes, he has encouraged the church’s progressives to push the envelope as far as possible, even toward real doctrinal rebellion, in the hopes of dragging him along. At the same time, by favoring the progressives in his personnel decisions and making institutional war on the legacy of John Paul II and Benedict XVI, he has pushed conservatives toward crisis, paranoia and revolt.
On both fronts it’s unclear whether the papacy’s weakening authority can pull either group of rebels back. But in the last few weeks we’ve seen a clear attempt to use that authority, a real test of the pope’s ability to keep the church together.
December 3, 2023 in Faith, Legal Education | Permalink
BYU, Catholic, Cumberland, Liberty, Notre Dame, And Pepperdine Deans Support ABA's Proposed Free Speech Accreditation Standard, But Object To Extra Burden Placed On Faith-Based Law Schools
Following up on my previous post, ABA Council Unanimously Votes To Send Law School Free Speech Accreditation Standard To House Of Delegates For Final Approval In February: Law.com, ABA Council Sends 'Academic Freedom' Proposal to Hpuse of Delegates:
The Council of the American Bar Association Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar voted to send Standard 208 to the ABA House of Delegates for concurrence at the ABA Midyear Meeting in February 2024:
Standard 208. ACADEMIC FREEDOM AND FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
(a) A law school shall adopt, publish, and adhere to written policies that protect academic freedom. A law school’s academic freedom policies shall:
(1) Apply to all full and part-time faculty, as well as to all others teaching law school courses;
(2) Apply to conducting research, publishing scholarship, engaging in law school governance, participating in law related public service activities, and exercising teaching responsibilities, including those related to client representation in clinical programs; and
(3) Afford due process, such as notice, hearing, and appeal rights, to assess any claim of a violation of the academic freedom policies.
December 3, 2023 in Faith, Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
The Case For And Against Keeping Donna Adelson In Jail Before Her Trial In Dan Markel's Murder
Tallahassee Democrat Op-Ed: Former Florida Lawmaker Makes Case That Donna Adelson Should Be Released From Jail, by Benjamin Graber, M.D. ("Editor's Note: — The author of this op-ed is a 40-year friend of Donna Adelson."):
Charlie Adelson, Katherine Magbanua, and Sigfredo Garcia: A toxic love triangle. ... The love triangle where Katherine is the love focus of two competing macho men where she controls the information to both because they do not talk to each other. She plays one against the other using jealousy and competition to get what she needs. From Sigfredo, she wants love and devotion for herself and children. From Charlie, she wants love and devotion, security and gifts, and possibly marriage or a way out of her predicament in life. This is common in toxic love triangles. ...
Dan Markel murder: An alternative theory of the case. ... Katherine was eventually convicted as the organizer and Charlie as the plotter. But would Charlie, an educated, meticulous person who dots every I, staple his money together, make such an absurd and clumsy plan to kill someone then tell them he would pay them later? I don’t think so. ...
Charlie may be a risk taker, but he is not a killer or criminal at all and never has been. The evening of Dan Markel’s killing Katherine went to his house. He was afraid for his own safety, even carrying an open pistol for protection. Sigfredo, on the other hand, is a natural born killer. Katherine is a manipulative woman with motives for these actions in a toxic love triangle that motivates her behavior. And Rivera has a criminal history and societal complexities.
Donna Adelson is neither a sociopath nor vindictive. Donna Adelson is a 73-year-old grandmother who raised her children to be model citizens, students, humanitarians and respectful. I’ve known Donna for 40 years.
December 3, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
The Top Five New Tax Papers
There is a bit of movement in this week's list of the Top 5 Recent Tax Paper Downloads, with a new paper debuting on the list at #4. The #1 paper is #1,257 among 17,872 tax papers in all-time downloads.
[612 Downloads] Efficiency vs. Welfare in Benefit-Cost Analysis: The Case of Government Funding, by Zachary Liscow (Yale; Google Scholar) & Cass Sunstein (Harvard; Google Scholar)
- [587 Downloads] Common Sense Recommendations for the Application of Tax Law to Digital Assets, by Linda Beale (Wayne State) et al.
- [400 Downloads] Loss Harvesting or Gain Deferral? A Surprising Source of Tax Benefits of Tax-Aware Long-Short Strategies, by Stanley Krasner & Nathan Sosner (AQR Capital Management)
- [300 Downloads] Complying with BEPS Substance Requirements Through Remote Personnel: Business Profit Allocation, the PPT and ATAD 3, by Aitor Navarro (Max Planck; Google Scholar)
- [261 Downloads] Moore, The 16th Amendment, And The Underpinnings Of The TCJA’s Deemed Repatriation Provision, by Christopher Hanna (SMU)
December 3, 2023 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax Scholarship, Top 5 Downloads | Permalink
Saturday, December 2, 2023
This Week's Ten Most Popular TaxProf Blog Posts
- New York Law Journal, Fall Out From Antisemitism At NYU And UC-Berkeley Law Schools
- CBC, Former Law School Dean Faces Disbarment For Allegedly Misspending $500,000 From Endowment Intended For Students
- David Brooks (New York Times Op-Ed), Universities (And Law Schools) Are Failing At Inclusion
- Reuters, Straight White Male NYU 1L May Proceed Anonymously In Law Review Discrimination Case
- Paul Caron (Dean, Pepperdine), BigLaw Associate Compensation Soars To $240k for 1st Years, $550k For 8th Years 1300
- The Messenger, 25 Year Old Law Student, Presumed To Be A Hostage Since October 7, Found Dead Under Ambulance
- Golden Gate University Newsroom, Law School Will Terminate Its JD Program In May 2024; 1Ls And 2Ls Can Complete Their Degrees At Other Law Schools
- Paul Caron (Dean, Pepperdine), One-Third Through Fall 2024 Law School Admissions Season: Black (+3%), Hispanic (+2%) & Asian (+1%) Applicants Are Up; White (-3%) & 170-180 LSAT (-8%) Applicants Are Down
- Scott Rempell (South Texas), A Blueprint to Reclaim Legal Education from U.S. News
- Law.com, 58% Of Prospective Law Students Want To Attend A School With Classmates Of The Same Political Views
Tax:
- Wall Street Journal, Does The IRS Have Authority To Circumvent Congressional Tax Policy With Tax Cuts By Administrative Fiat?
- Bryan Camp (Texas Tech), Lesson From The Tax Court: Taxpayers Cannot Invoke The 'Augusta Rule' With Unplayable Lie
- The Messenger, Jeff Bezos Will Save Billions In Taxes By Moving To Miami
- Paul Caron (Dean, Pepperdine), Kristin Hickman Will Not Join The Texas Faculty In January 2024 And Will Remain At Minnesota
- Edward Fox (Michigan), Presentation Of Who Benefits From Corporate Tax Cuts?: Evidence From Banks And Credit Unions Around The TCJA At Columbia And NYU
- Reuven Avi-Yonah (Michigan), Two New International Tax Papers On SSRN
- Ariel Jurow Kleiman (Loyola-L.A.), Shayak Sarkar (UC-Davis) & Emily Satterthwaite (Georgetown), Presentation Of Towards an Understanding of Nannies' Tax Experiences and Preferences At Loyola-L.A.
- SSRN, Tax Professor Rankings
- Young Ran (Christine) Kim (Cardozo), Review Of The Mirage Of Mobile Capital, By Wei Cui (British Columbia)
- SSRN, The Top Five New Tax Papers
Faith:
- Anne Lamott (Washington Post Op-Ed), At 33, I Knew Everything. At 69, I Know Something Much More Important.
- Russell Moore (Editor in Chief, Christianity Today), What Does It Profit A Christian To Protect An Institution But Lose Their Soul?
- Washington Post, Why Thomas Jefferson Hated Thanksgiving
- Robert Tracy McKenzie (Wheaton College), Was Abraham Lincoln A Christian?
- John Inazu (Washington University), The Lack Of Clarity And Courage In Higher Education On Hamas And Israel
December 2, 2023 in About This Blog, Legal Education, Tax, Tax Daily, Weekly Top 10 TaxProf Blog Posts | Permalink
ABA Rejects Golden Gate Law School's Plan To Terminate Its JD Program
Following up on yesterday's post, Golden Gate Will Terminate Its JD Program In May 2024; 1Ls And 2Ls Can Complete Their Degrees At Other Law Schools: Council and Executive Committee Decision (ABA Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar), Golden Gate University School of Law Teach-Out Plan (Nov. 2023):
At a meeting on November 16-17, 2023, the Council of the Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar of the American Bar Association (the “Council”) considered the Teach-Out Plan submitted by Golden Gate University School of Law (the “Law School”).
After careful review of the Law School’s submission, the Council rejected the Teach-Out Plan as filed because the plan did not include sufficient detail relating to the operation of a teach-out.
As provided by Rule 29(k)(2), the Executive Committee of the Council directed the Law School to revise and resubmit the Teach-Out Plan on or before January 12, 2024. The revised Teach-Out Plan will be considered by the Executive Committee of the Council at a date to be determined.
ABA Journal, ABA Legal Ed Council Rejects Golden Gate University's Plan to End its JD Program:
December 2, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
STEAM: Should Accounting Be Added To STEM To Reinvigorate And Diversify The Profession?
Bloomberg, Official STEM Designation Would Strengthen Accounting Profession:
Technology has reshaped accountants’ day-to-day responsibilities so much so that not only are they learning and leveraging cutting-edge tools, but they’re also developing and innovating mechanisms to help clients make informed decisions and improve services.
But ask a typical high school student what accountants do, and it’s clear there’s a gap between perception and reality. Most younger people aren’t aware that digital technology tools are automating and improving many old accounting tasks, opening up avenues for more creative work such as data analysis, advising on business decisions, and hunting down fraud.
That perception problem is contributing to a decline of accounting graduates as well as the lack of diversity in the pipeline.
Charlie Adelson Spent 35 Hours On Prison Phone With His Mother Donna In The Week Between His Conviction And Her Arrest In Dan Markel's Murder
Tallahassee Democrat, Dan Markel Murder: Charlie Adelson Spent 35 Hours on Phone With Mom in Week of Her Arrest:
A locked-up Charlie Adelson spent an astonishing amount of time on the phone with his mom — and perhaps others using her cell — in the roughly week-long span between his conviction and her arrest in the murder of their former in-law, Dan Markel.
Adelson, a Fort Lauderdale periodontist, was found guilty Nov. 6 after an eight-day trial in Leon Circuit Court for first-degree murder, conspiracy and solicitation in Markel's 2014 death. His mom, Donna Adelson, was arrested Nov. 13 on the same charges after she and her husband tried to board a flight out of Miami with one-way tickets to Vietnam, which has no extradition treaty with the United States.
Charlie Adelson’s call log from the Leon County Detention Facility, obtained by the Tallahassee Democrat through a public records request, shows he racked up 2,118 minutes — more than 35 hours — in jail calls during that fateful week. He made a total of 86 phone calls, though some were not completed, all to the same phone number, which according to court records belongs to Donna Adelson.
The sheer volume of calls — which are monitored and recorded and fair game for prosecutors to use against defendants — was breathtaking for a case with so much evidence involving wire taps and incriminating conversations between members of the Adelson family and others.
December 2, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
Friday, December 1, 2023
BigLaw Associate Compensation Soars To $240k for 1st Years, $550k For 8th Years
Here is the latest associate compensation at Cravath and at least 27 other law firms:
Year | Salary | Bonus | Total |
1st | 225,000 | 15,000 | 240,000 |
2nd | 235,000 | 20,000 | 255,000 |
3rd | 260,000 | 30,000 | 290,000 |
4th | 310,000 | 57,500 | 367,500 |
5th | 365,000 | 75,000 | 440,000 |
6th | 390,000 | 90,000 | 480,000 |
7th | 420,000 | 105,000 | 525,000 |
8th | 435,000 | 115,000 | 550,000 |
According to Law.com and Above the Law, Akin Gump, Baker Botts, Baker McKenzie, Cleary Gottlieb, Covington & Burling, Davis Polk, Debevoise, Dechert, Fried Frank, Gibson Dunn, Hogan Lovells, Holwell Shuster, Kirkland, Mayer Brown, McDermott, Will & Emery, Norton Rose Fulbright, O’Melveny, Paul Hastings, Paul Weiss, Proskauer, Simpson Thacher, Skadden, Sidley Austin, Wachtell, Vinson & Elkins, Willkie Farr, and Yetter Coleman have matched Cravath.
Bloomberg Law, Cravath Salary Raises Pressure Rivals Who Can’t Afford Match:
December 1, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
Weekly SSRN Tax Article Review And Roundup: Kim Reviews Cui’s The Mirage Of Mobile Capital
This week, Young Ran (Christine) Kim (Cardozo; Google Scholar) reviews Wei Cui (British Columbia; Google Scholar), The Mirage of Mobile Capital (May 7, 2023).
Over two years have passed since more than 140 countries signed the OECD's global tax deal, consisting of two Pillars, in October 2021. Pillar One is focused on expanding source country taxing rights on the income of large multinational enterprises (MNEs). It targets digital companies such as Facebook or Google that can extract profits from a source jurisdiction without a physical presence. The implementation of Pillar One remains uncertain. Nonetheless, the global minimum tax in Pillar Two is expected to be implemented globally soon. A popular narrative about Pillar Two endorsed by many scholars, including myself here, is as follows: Pillar Two and its global minimum tax embrace the ideal of corporate tax harmonization to combat the tax competition that has dominated international taxation since the advent of globalization in the 1980s.
December 1, 2023 in Christine Kim, Scholarship, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax Scholarship, Weekly SSRN Roundup, Weekly Tax Roundup | Permalink
Weekly Legal Education Roundup
Bloomberg Law, UC Berkeley, Law School Sued Over ‘Unchecked’ Antisemitism
- David Brooks (New York Times Op-Ed), Universities Are Failing at Inclusion
- Paul Caron (Dean, Pepperdine), BigLaw Associate Compensation Soars To $240k for 1st Years, $550k For 8th Years
- Paul Caron (Dean, Pepperdine), Kristin Hickman Will Not Join The Texas Faculty In January 2024 And Will Remain At Minnesota
- Paul Caron (Dean, Pepperdine), One-Third Through Fall 2024 Law School Admissions Season: Black (+3%), Hispanic (+2%) & Asian (+1%) Applicants Are Up; White (-3%) & 170-180 LSAT (-8%) Applicants Are Down
- CBC, Former Manitoba Law School Dean Can't Be Trusted as Lawyer and Should Be Disbarred, Law Society Lawyer Says
December 1, 2023 in Legal Education, Scott Fruehwald, Weekly Legal Ed Roundup | Permalink
Tax Policy In The Biden Administration
Bloomberg, All IRS Employees Should Work During a Shutdown, CPA Group Says
- Bloomberg, ‘Billionaires Tax’ Pitched Ahead of Key Supreme Court Case
- Bloomberg, Business Giants Go Big on Billboards, TV in Last-Ditch Tax Plea
- Bloomberg, Democrats Keep Up Tax-the-Rich Messaging for 2024 and Beyond
- Bloomberg, EV Tax Credits Are Heading for a Cliff Again
December 1, 2023 in Tax, Tax Daily, Tax News, Tax Policy in the Biden Administration | Permalink
Next Week’s Tax Workshop
Thursday, December 7: Andrew Hayashi (Virginia; Google Scholar) will present The Federal Architecture of Income Inequality as part of the Columbia Davis Polk & Wardwell Tax Policy Colloquium. If you would like to attend, please contact Michael Love.
December 1, 2023 in Colloquia, Legal Education, Scholarship, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax Scholarship, Tax Workshops | Permalink
Golden Gate Will Terminate Its JD Program In May 2024; 1Ls And 2Ls Can Complete Their Degrees At Other Law Schools
Update: ABA Rejects Golden Gate Law School's Plan To Terminate Its JD Program
Golden Gate University Newsroom, Update on Golden Gate University JD Program:
After months of discussions with numerous stakeholders and a thorough review of data, the Golden Gate University Board of Trustees voted to discontinue the University’s American Bar Association-accredited Juris Doctor degree and offer a teach-out option to current JD students. We will not admit additional students to the JD program.
To be clear, this decision applies to one program in the Law School. While the JD program will sunset, the Law School will continue serving students with standout legal education, as it has since its founding in 1901. GGU Law will continue to offer degrees at the graduate [Master of Law Studies (MLS), Master of Laws in Environmental Law (LLM), Master of Laws in Estate Planning (LLM), Master of Laws in Intellectual Property Law (LLM), Master of Laws in International Legal Studies (LLM), Master of Laws in Taxation Law (LLM), Master of Laws in US Legal Studies (LLM), SJD in International Legal Studies (LLM)] and undergraduate [BA in Law] levels.
The University is committed to ensuring that our current GGU Law students in the JD program will be able to complete their ABA-accredited degrees through arrangements with partnering institutions. Current JD students who choose to continue their education with these partnering institutions will earn an ABA-accredited degree from GGU and will pay the same tuition rate they currently pay. ...
December 1, 2023 in Legal Education | Permalink
Thursday, November 30, 2023
Osofsky Reviews The Inflation Reduction Act's Impact On Tax Compliance—And Fiscal Sustainability, By Sarin & Mazur
Leigh Osofsky (North Carolina; Google Scholar), Estimating the Return on Investment in the IRS (JOTWELL) (reviewing Natasha Sarin (Yale; Google Scholar; Former Counselor on Tax Policy, U.S. Treasury Department) & Mark Mazur (Former Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy, U.S. Treasury Department), The Inflation Reduction Act's Impact on Tax Compliance—and Fiscal Sustainability (2023):
In the Inflation Reduction Act, Congress made a monumental investment in the IRS, reversing a decades-long trend of inadequate funding. A critical question is: how much was this investment worth? Government scorekeepers came up with a number of about $200 billion (yielding a $120 billion net amount, after taking into account the cost of the increased funding). But, in a new paper, The Inflation Reduction Act’s Impact on Tax Compliance—and Fiscal Sustainability, Natasha Sarin and Mark Mazur argue that these official estimates significantly understate the return on investment in the IRS. They estimate that the funding would enable the IRS to raise at least $560 billion ($480 billion, net) over the next ten years, and that, depending on taxpayers’ behavioral response, it is possible the return may actually be closer to $1 trillion.
November 30, 2023 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax Scholarship | Permalink
A Blueprint To Reclaim Legal Education From U.S. News
Scott Rempell (South Texas), A Blueprint to Reclaim Legal Education from U.S. News:
The U.S. News & World Report (“U.S. News”) law school rankings impact the perceptions and behaviors of everyone in the rankings ecosystem, from law school administrators and law professors to prospective students and legal employers. Despite decades of near universal condemnation, these ordinal rankings continue to significantly influence the legal education market, often in highly detrimental ways.
This Article presents a blueprint for how the law school community can reclaim legal education from U.S. News. The blueprint concerns the features of an alternative product that would deliver substantial value in an efficient manner. Regulators like the ABA would have to play a role because they can mandate the types and forms of data that law schools produce. The alternative product should include data categories that consumers would find helpful based on the reasons why various constituencies assess information about law schools to begin with. A comprehensive set of relevant data points is necessary, but not sufficient. The relevant information must be presented through an easy-to-navigate interface that allows consumers to efficiently acquire, arrange, and internalize the data to meet their objectives.
November 30, 2023 in Legal Ed Scholarship, Legal Education, Scholarship | Permalink
Changes In The Distribution Of Black And White Wealth Since The Civil War
Ellora Derenoncourt (Princeton University), Chi Hyun Kim (University of Bonn), Moritz Kuhn (University of Mannheim) & Moritz Schularick (Sciences Po Paris), Changes in the Distribution of Black and White Wealth since the US Civil War, 37 J. Econ. Persp. 71 (2023):
The difference in the average wealth of Black and white Americans narrowed in the first century after the Civil War, but remained large and even widened again after 1980. Given high levels of wealth concentration both historically and today, dynamics at the average may not capture important heterogeneity in racial wealth gaps across the distribution.
This paper looks into the historical evolution of the Black and white wealth distributions since Emancipation. The picture that emerges is an even starker one than racial wealth inequality at the mean. Tracing, for the first time, the evolution of wealth of the median Black household and the gap between the typical Black and white household over time, we estimate that the majority of Black households only began to dispose of measurable wealth around World War II. While the civil rights era brought substantial wealth gains for the median Black household, the gap between Black and white wealth at the median has not changed much since the 1970s. The top and the bottom of the wealth distribution show even greater persistence, with Black households consistently over-represented in the bottom half of the wealth distribution and under-represented in the top-10 percent over the past seven decades.
November 30, 2023 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Scholarship | Permalink
SSRN Tax Professor Rankings
SSRN has updated its monthly ranking of 750 American and international law school faculties and 3,000 law professors by (among other things) the number of paper downloads from the SSRN database. Here is the new list (through November 1, 2023) of the Top 25 U.S. Tax Professors in two of the SSRN categories: all-time downloads and recent downloads (within the past 12 months):
All-Time | Recent | ||||
1 | Reuven Avi-Yonah (Michigan) | 226,070 | 1 | Jonathan Choi (USC) | 23,226 |
2 | Daniel Hemel (NYU) | 131,630 | 2 | Kristin Hickman (Minnesota) | 14,591 |
3 | Dan Shaviro (NYU) | 127,622 | 3 | Amy Monahan (Minnesota) | 13,483 |
4 | Lily Batchelder (NYU) | 127,324 | 4 | Reuven Avi-Yonah (Michigan) | 11,588 |
5 | David Gamage (Indiana-Maurer) | 126,793 | 5 | David Gamage (Indiana-Maurer) | 4,336 |
6 | Darien Shanske (UC-Davis) | 118,839 | 6 | Bridget Crawford (Pace) | 4,225 |
7 | David Kamin (NYU) | 114,326 | 7 | Daniel Hemel (NYU) | 4,021 |
8 | Cliff Fleming (BYU) | 108,470 | 8 | Louis Kaplow (Harvard) | 3,777 |
9 | Manoj Viswanathan (UC-SF) | 104,876 | 9 | Kyle Rozema (Northwestern) | 3,765 |
10 | Ari Glogower (Northwestern) | 104,363 | 10 | D. Dharmapala (UC-Berkeley) | 3,470 |
11 | Rebecca Kysar (Fordham) | 103,932 | 11 | Steve Black (Texas Tech) | 3,435 |
12 | D. Dharmapala (UC-Berkeley) | 51,828 | 12 | Darien Shanske (UC-Davis) | 3,307 |
13 | Michael Simkovic (USC) | 48,652 | 13 | Ruth Mason (Virginia) | 3,305 |
14 | Louis Kaplow (Harvard) | 41,632 | 14 | Kim Clausing (UCLA) | 3,263 |
15 | Paul Caron (Pepperdine) | 41,584 | 15 | Robert Sitkoff (Harvard) | 3,085 |
16 | Richard Ainsworth (Boston University) | 38,832 | 16 | Zachary Liscow (Yale) | 2,987 |
17 | Bridget Crawford (Pace) | 37,867 | 17 | Brad Borden (Brooklyn) | 2,907 |
18 | Robert Sitkoff (Harvard) | 33,292 | 18 | Richard Ainsworth (Boston University) | 2,873 |
19 | Brad Borden (Brooklyn) | 31,702 | 19 | Brian Galle (Georgetown) | 2,490 |
20 | Ruth Mason (Virginia) | 30,891 | 20 | Young Ran (Christine) Kim (Cardozo) | 2,446 |
21 | Vic Fleischer (UC-Irvine) | 30,312 | 21 | Ellen Aprill (Loyola-L.A.) | 2,361 |
22 | Ed Kleinbard (USC) | 29,821 | 22 | Dan Shaviro (NYU) | 2,280 |
23 | Jim Hines (Michigan) | 28,559 | 23 | Lily Batchelder (NYU) | 2,134 |
24 | Kim Clausing (UCLA) | 27,939 | 24 | John R. Brooks (Fordham) | 2,094 |
25 | Richard Kaplan (Illinois) | 27,476 | 25 | David Weisbach (Chicago) | 2,071 |
November 30, 2023 in Legal Education, Scholarship, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax Prof Rankings | Permalink
ABA Selects DePaul Dean Jennifer Rosato Perea As New Managing Director Of Legal Education
Press Release, ABA Selects DePaul Law Dean as New Managing Director of Legal Education:
Jennifer Rosato Perea, who has served as dean of DePaul University College of Law since 2015, will be the new managing director of accreditation and legal education for the American Bar Association effective June 1, 2024.
Rosato Perea, a nationally recognized leader in legal education, is in her second term at DePaul and 16th year as a law dean. A longtime advocate of student engagement and professionalism, Rosato Perea is one of only a small number of Latina law school deans in the nation, and she would become the first Latina to serve as head of ABA legal education, which includes the Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar, its governing council and an ABA program that approves paralegal programs.
She will replace Bill Adams, who has served as managing director for accreditation and legal education since spring 2020 and who managed through the pandemic, which forced most law schools to adopt online coursework among other changes.
November 30, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
Wednesday, November 29, 2023
Satterthwaite Reviews Bearer-Friend's Colorblind Tax Enforcement
Emily Satterthwaite (Georgetown; Google Scholar), Beyond Audits: Investigating the Role of Race in Various Tax Enforcement Settings (JOTWELL) (reviewing Jeremy Bearer-Friend (George Washington; Google Scholar), Colorblind Tax Enforcement, 97 NYU L. Rev. 1 (2022)):
Following the January release of a groundbreaking study by Hadi Elzayn, Robin Fisher, Jacob Goldin, Thomas Hertz, Daniel E. Ho, Arun Ramesh, and Evelyn Smith and the resulting media, Congressional, and IRS attention, it is now well-known that Black taxpayers are audited at rates three to five times the rates of non-Black taxpayers. The audit study is a landmark both for its results (which contradict past IRS statements) and also for its novel methodology, which uses individually-estimated taxpayer race probabilities to obtain informative bounds on the racial audit rate disparity. In addition to illuminating problematic patterns in current IRS audit selection procedures, the study’s methodology offers promise for the future in investigating other race-based patterns in tax enforcement.
In what non-audit enforcement areas might such patterns arise? Here is where the prescient work of Jeremy Bearer-Friend (as cited in the audit study, P. 41) comes in, building on the work of other scholars working at the intersection of race and tax. In “Colorblind Tax Enforcement,” Bearer-Friend refutes on first principles the now-debunked claim that because the IRS does not collect race data, it cannot discriminate by race when enforcing tax laws. He points out that, for IRS agents, making inferences about the race of a taxpayer on the basis of the information provided on the return (names of taxpayer, spouse, and children, address including zip code, family structure, and occupation) is plausible and probable: “[e]ach of these datapoints can lead to inferences of racial identity in the mind of the relevant IRS personnel, with the combination of data points creating a stronger likelihood of inference” (P. 19). Moreover, at many points in the enforcement process there are telephonic or in-person conferences that allow for further racial inferences. ...
November 29, 2023 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax Scholarship | Permalink
Kristin Hickman Will Not Join The Texas Faculty In January 2024 And Will Remain At Minnesota
Following up on my previous post, Kristin Hickman Leaves Minnesota For Texas (Effective January 2024): Brian Leiter (Chicago) reports that Kristin Hickman will not be leaving Minnesota for Texas in January 2024, as previously announced by Texas. Kristin is #9 in the 2023 Google Scholar Tax Prof Rankings (H-Index Since 2018) and #16 in the 2023 Google Scholar Tax Prof Rankings (H-Index All.
November 29, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax News, Tax Prof Moves | Permalink | Comments (0)
Tax Law Just Doesn’t Pay Like It Used To
Steven Chung (Tax Attorney, Los Angeles), Potential Client Wants To Pay A Tax Lawyer $50 To Answer Unlimited Questions For 6 Weeks:
Last night, as I was scrolling through Twitter/X looking for the post that would change my life, a colleague shared a post from someone seeking a tax attorney with intermediate experience.
Saw this on Facebook. You interested @ForemanTaxLaw? pic.twitter.com/hgpG9voS8e
— Matt Metras 🍕 cryptotaxpro.eth (@EmDeeEm) November 17, 2023
Most people responded to the potential client’s post with ridicule. But I wonder how many of them did the same thing. How many of them called their professional friends to ask a simple question which turned into a 20-minute conversation?
58% Of Prospective Law Students Want To Attend A School With Classmates Of The Same Political Views
Law.com, Prospective Law Students Want to Attend School With 'Like-Minded Individuals,' Study Finds:
A majority of pre-law students reported that they would prefer attending a law school where classmates hold similar political views, according to a recent survey.
Kaplan recently reported that 58% of pre-law students say that “it’s important for them to attend a law school where their fellow students generally hold the same political/social views as they do.” ...
The last time Kaplan released a survey on this issue in January 2020, only 46% said this issue was important.
November 29, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
Avi-Yonah Posts Two International Tax Papers On SSRN
Reuven Avi-Yonah (Michigan; Google Scholar) has posted two international tax papers on SSRN:
The First US Tax Treaty and Its Influence:
This paper discusses the first US tax treaty concluded with France in 1932 and ratified in 1935. This treaty is interesting because it follows the League of Nations model of 1928 but with significant differences. It is also a treaty between a global jurisdiction and (at the time) a purely territorial one. This meant that while reductions in French taxes benefited the US fisc because they resulted in lower foreign tax credits (but the overall tax level was the same), French investors into the US could derive some types of income (e.g., royalties) without any tax being imposed by either country. This may also explain why the treaty was more limited in scope than the League of Nations model. But the main importance of the treaty is because it is the first ever appearance of the Arms Length Principle in international tax, which had a profound influence.
The UTPR Reconsidered: A Response to Fadi Shaheen:
In a letter to the editor [Much Ado: Why the United States Should Calm Down About DSTs], 181 Tax Notes Fed. 1235 (Nov. 13, 2023)], Reuven S. Avi-Yonah rebuts criticism of the UTPR that Fadi Shaheen made in a recent article [Is the UTPR a 100 Percent Tax on a Deemed Distribution?, 181 Tax Notes Fed. 481 (Oct. 16, 2023)].
November 29, 2023 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Analysts, Tax Daily, Tax Scholarship | Permalink
Fall Out From Antisemitism At NYU And UC-Berkeley Law Schools
New York Law Journal, 60% of 1,176 NYU Law Students Vote to Oust Ryna Workman From Student Bar:
Ryna Workman has officially been ousted from their position as president of the Student Bar Association at New York University School of Law amid controversy over comments made about the Israel-Palestine conflict.
A voting link was sent to 2,070 students and 1,176 votes were received with 707 students (60%) voting that Workman should not remain in office, according to an X (formerly Twitter) post showing an image of an email sent from Student Affairs. ...
On Oct. 10, Workman posted an emailed message, saying that Israel’s “regime of state-sanctioned violence created the conditions that made resistance necessary,” in Workman’s capacity as NYU Law SBA president.
Along with being ousted from the SBA, Winston & Strawn rescinded its job offer to Workman, who had previously worked for the firm as a summer associate.
November 29, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
Tuesday, November 28, 2023
Fox Presents Who Benefits From Corporate Tax Cuts?: Evidence From Banks And Credit Unions Around The TCJA At NYU And Columbia This Week
Edward Fox (Michigan; Google Scholar) presents Who Benefits from Corporate Tax Cuts?: Evidence from Banks and Credit Unions around the TCJA (with Benjamin Pyle (Boston University; Google Scholar)) at NYU today as part of its Tax Policy and Public Finance Colloquium hosted by Daniel Shaviro and at Columbia on Thursday as part of its Davis Polk & Wardwell Tax Policy Colloquium hosted by Michael Love::
The TCJA of 2017 made large changes to the taxation of corporate and pass-through businesses in the U.S. Understanding the effects of these changes is complicated by the difficulty of finding control firms whose taxation was not altered by the Act. We study the effect of the TCJA on small and medium size banks using credit unions—which compete with these banks for deposits and in making loans—as a novel control group. Credit unions were not taxed both before and after the Act. Using a difference-in-difference framework, we find that an important fraction of the incidence of the tax cut goes to depositors. We find little evidence that employees or borrowers from banks receive a share of the tax cut in the form of higher wages or lower interest rates on loans or that banks increase their investment in fixed assets as a result of the Act.
November 28, 2023 in Colloquia, Scholarship, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax Scholarship, Tax Workshops | Permalink
Straight White Male NYU 1L May Proceed Anonymously In Law Review Discrimination Case
Following up on my previous post, Lawsuit Claims NYU Law Review Discriminates Against Straight White Men In Selection Of Student Editors: Reuters, Plaintiff in NYU Law Review Discrimination Case May Remain Anonymous:
A white, heterosexual, male law student who sued New York University claiming that its law school's flagship law review gives preference to women and minorities in violation of U.S. law may proceed with his case anonymously, at least for now, a Manhattan federal judge has ruled.
U.S. District Judge Victor Marrero did not explain his reasoning in his Tuesday order, but noted that NYU may seek to disclose the plaintiff's identity once the case is assigned to a judge.
The plaintiff — listed as John Doe in court papers — is in his first year at the NYU School of Law and intends to apply for a spot on the NYU Law Review in the summer of 2024, according to his October lawsuit. ...
Doe’s suit is the first legal challenge to law review diversity policies following the U.S. Supreme Court’s June decision that prohibited race-conscious college and university admissions.
Eugene Volokh (UCLA; Google Scholar), Challenge to NYU Law Review's Race and Sex Preferences May Proceed Pseudonymously, at Least for Now:
November 28, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
Jeff Bezos Will Save Billions In Taxes By Moving To Miami
The Messenger, Jeff Bezos Will Save Billions on His Tax Bills by Moving to Miami:
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is escaping more than Seattle’s gloomy weather with his cross-country move to sunny Miami.
The world’s third-richest person, worth roughly $161 billion according to Forbes, will also ditch Washington State’s hefty taxes, likely saving him billions of dollars over the long term, according to securities filings, tax lawyers and accounting experts.
Aaron Johnson, a tax lawyer at law firm Lane Powell in Seattle, told The Messenger that Bezos “stands to benefit from significant tax savings if he changes his domicile.”
On the immediate front, The Washington Post newspaper owner will avoid Washington State’s controversial new 7% tax on investment profits, which residents began paying this year.
Later, Bezos will dodge the Pacific Northwest state’s long-standing top estate tax of 20%, the highest in the nation.
Robert Willens, an independent tax and accounting expert in New York, told The Messenger that Bezos will “adroitly sidestep Washington's estate tax levies, which, in his case, could easily amount to upwards of $32 billion” based on his current net worth. The tax, which is in addition to the top federal estate tax of 40%, hits fortunes starting at just over $2.1 million. ...
One lure he didn’t mention in his announcement: massive tax savings.
Last but not least, Bezos will remove himself from the crosshairs of state lawmakers’ efforts to impose a 1% “extreme wealth tax” on the worldwide holdings of the very richest residents. If passed into law, the levy would hit billionaires on the paper value of their assets, regardless of whether or not they’ve been sold.
When the 59-year-old announced Nov. 2 on Instagram that he was leaving his Seattle home base of three decades for Florida, he said the impetus for the move had come from a desire to be closer to his parents, who he said recently relocated back to Miami from Seattle. He also said the operations of his Blue Origins rocket company were “increasingly shifting” to Cape Canaveral, Fla., a three and a half hour drive 190 miles north of Miami.
November 28, 2023 in Celebrity Tax Lore, Tax, Tax News | Permalink
NY Times Op-Ed: Universities (And Law Schools) Are Failing At Inclusion
New York Times Op-Ed: Universities Are Failing at Inclusion, by David Brooks:
Universities are supposed to be centers of inquiry and curiosity — places where people are tolerant of difference and learn about other points of view. Instead, too many have become brutalizing ideological war zones, so today the most hostile place to be an American Jew is not at some formerly restricted country club but on a college campus.
How on earth did this happen? I’ve been teaching on college campuses off and on for 25 years. It’s become increasingly evident to me that American adolescence and young adulthood — especially for those who wind up at elite schools — now happen within a specific kind of ideological atmosphere.
It centers on a hard-edged ideological framework that has been spreading in high school and college, on social media, in diversity training seminars and in popular culture. The framework doesn’t have a good name yet. It draws on the thinking of intellectuals ranging from the French philosopher Michel Foucault to the critical race theorist Derrick Bell. (For a good intellectual history, I recommend Yascha Mounk’s recent book, “The Identity Trap.”)
The common ideas associated with this ideology are by now pretty familiar:
November 28, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
Thorndike: Moores Lean On 1916 Tax Expert To Argue No Realization Means No Income
Joseph J. Thorndike (Tax Analysts), Tax History: Moores Lean on 1916 Tax Expert to Argue No Realization Means No Income, 181 Tax Notes Fed. 1356 (Nov. 20, 2023):
Apparently, Charles G. Moore and Kathleen F. Moore are in thrall to a certain Columbia University economist from the early 20th century. Edwin R.A. Seligman is a big player in Moore v. United States, No. 22-800 — no small feat for a scholar who’s been moldering in a Brooklyn cemetery these past 84 years.
Still, Seligman’s prominence in the Moore case is worthy of note, even if Keynes would have found it predictable. The petitioners have cited Seligman repeatedly, using him to support their claim that unrealized income is not really income at all — at least not as far as the 16th Amendment is concerned.
As well they should: The Moores could hardly have asked for a better historical champion. If you’re trying to argue that the original meaning of the 16th Amendment hinges on the concept of realization, then Seligman is your man.
November 28, 2023 in New Cases, Scholarship, Tax, Tax Analysts, Tax Daily, Tax Scholarship | Permalink
UC-San Francisco Law Prof Sues City After His Service Dog Was Denied Entry Into Library
San Francisco Standard, San Francisco Man Sues City After Dog Denied Entry Into Library:
A San Francisco law professor said his service dog was denied entry to a city library, putting him at risk of injury due to his unique medical condition, a lawsuit alleges.
The complaint, which was filed in federal court against the city Monday, alleges violations of the Americans With Disabilities Act and California Disabled Persons Act and is seeking damages for emotional distress and payment of attorney fees.
Clark Freshman, who filed the lawsuit, said he has a heart condition called an aortic aneurysm, which can cause his aorta to rupture if his blood pressure gets too high. Freshman says his service dog can detect if his blood pressure gets too high so he can take medication to lower his blood pressure quickly.
November 28, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
Monday, November 27, 2023
Kleiman, Sarkar & Satterthwaite Present Towards An Understanding Of Nannies' Tax Experiences And Preferences Today At Loyola-L.A.
Ariel Jurow Kleiman (Loyola-L.A.; Google Scholar), Shayak Sarkar (UC-Davis; Google Scholar), and Emily Satterthwaite (Georgetown; Google Scholar) present Towards an Understanding of Nannies' Tax Experiences and Preferences at Loyola-L.A. today as part of its Tax Policy Colloquium hosted by Katie Pratt:
Despite their indispensable work, nannies in the U.S. often work long hours for low wages and fear retaliation if they complain about work or pay conditions. Exacerbating this precarity is the fact that many nannies work “off the books” and thus must keep their work secret not only from state and federal tax agencies, but from employment and labor agencies as well. This Article investigates nannies’ preferences for or against formal employment and tax reporting, the reasons behind such preferences, and how such preferences correspond to nannies’ relationships with their employers and with society more broadly.
November 27, 2023 in Colloquia, Scholarship, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax Scholarship, Tax Workshops | Permalink
Legal Ed News Roundup
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Travels Shaped New Bowen Law School Dean’s Career
- Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Brooklyn Law School Takes Stand Against Antisemitism, Islamophobia, and Other Forms of Hate
- Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Brooklyn Law School's New Era: Dean Meyer on Leadership and Legal Education
- Chronicle of Higher Education, Tobacco-Settlement Lawyer Joe Rice Gives $30 Million for Law School Scholarships
- Gonzaga Bulletin, Third-year, Gonzaga University Law School Student Dies Unexpectedly
- Jacksonville Daily Record, Workscapes Moving to the Rail Yard District to Make Way For Law School
- Jax Today, JU Law School Will Move to Permanent Home Downtown
- Law.com, 'If You Cry, It's OK': How to Pick Yourself Up and Try Again After Failing the Bar Exam
- Minnesota Daily, New Law School Study Says Students Who Use Generative AI Finish Work Quicker
- National Review, How a Law School Could Begin Restoring Its Reputation for Integrity
November 27, 2023 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink
WSJ: Does The IRS Have Authority To Circumvent Congressional Tax Policy With Tax Cuts By Administrative Fiat?
Wall Street Journal, IRS Delays Tax Deadlines Set by Congress. It Could Cost $8 Billion.:
Congress set strict enforcement deadlines when it created new tax requirements for e-commerce platforms, older 401(k) savers and cryptocurrency brokers.
The Internal Revenue Service has now postponed them all for two years—which could cost the Treasury more than $8 billion. ...
The IRS decisions help the affected taxpayers avoid burdensome requirements. Millions of people selling goods on eBay or reselling tickets on StubHub won’t get confusing tax forms in January. High-income workers age 50 and up can still make their full retirement contributions in pretax dollars next year instead of posttax accounts. And crypto brokers don’t yet have to report transactions that could lead to eight billion information returns going to the IRS each year.
At least in the short run, however, the tax agency’s moves frustrate lawmakers’ attempts to raise revenue and plug gaps in tax compliance.
They are symptomatic of a phenomenon in which administrations of both parties take action without the oversight or cost analysis required by legislation. The tax delays aren’t as headline-grabbing as President Biden’s student-loan relief or former President Donald Trump’s border-wall construction. But they allow the IRS to deliver what are, in a sense, tax breaks without congressional approval.
November 27, 2023 in IRS News, Tax, Tax Daily, Tax News | Permalink
One-Third Through Fall 2024 Law School Admissions Season: Black (+3%), Hispanic (+2%) & Asian (+1%) Applicants Are Up; White (-3%) & 170-180 LSAT (-8%) Applicants Are Down
We are now 33% of the way through Fall 2024 law school admissions season. The number of law school applicants reported by LSAC is down -0.1% compared to last year at this time:
119 of the 196 law schools are experiencing a decrease in applications. Applications are down -10% or more at 78 law schools:
Applicants are down the most in Northeast (-5.3%), New England (-5.0%), and Midwest (-4.6%); and are up in Other (+15.2%), Mountain West (+4.6%), and Midsouth (+0.8%):
Applicants' LSAT scores are down -8.0% in the 170-180 band, -0.7% in the 160-169 band, -3.5% in the 150-159 band, and -0.5% in the 120-149 band:
November 27, 2023 in Legal Education | Permalink