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Sources of Complexity

Present law allows taxpayers with an appreciated business or investment asset to dispose of the asset and acquire another like-kind business or investment asset without incurring a tax if the taxpayer complies with a series of complicated rules treating the entire transaction as an exchange. These rules elevate the form of the transaction over its substance. Taxpayers incur additional costs complying with these rules with no resulting non-tax benefit (other than the fees received by the facilitators of the transaction).

Recommendation for Simplification

The Joint Committee staff recommends that a taxpayer should be permitted to elect to "roll over" gain from the disposition of appreciated business or investment property described in section 1031, if like-kind property is acquired by the taxpayer within 180 days before or after the date of disposition (but not later than the due date of the taxpayer's income tax return). The determination of whether properties are considered to be of a like kind would be the same as under present law.

The recommendation would reduce complexity by allowing taxpayers wishing to reinvest the proceeds from the sale of business or investment property into other like-kind property to do so directly without engaging in complicated "exchanges" designed to meet the statutory and regulatory rules regarding deferred exchanges.

Although this recommendation would permit a taxpayer to receive the funds for the period of time between the sale of the property and the purchase of the replacement property or to acquire the replacement property prior to the disposition of the relinquished property, the substance is not significantly different than using a "qualified intermediary" or "qualified exchange accommodation arrangement" in accordance with the rules under the regulations or revenue procedure. Eliminating these intermediary arrangements will permit taxpayers to simplify these transactions and to reduce transaction costs.

Under the recommendation, gain would be recognized to the extent any proceeds are not reinvested in eligible replacement property. For example, assume a calendar year taxpayer on December 1, 2001, sells for $100,000 investment land A with a basis of $40,000, and purchases investment land B for $90,000 on February 1, 2002. The taxpayer would be required to recognize $10,000 of gain on December 1, 2001. The remaining $50,000 of gain would be deferred until the taxpayer disposes of land B in a taxable sale or exchange.

Although present-law section 1031 does not permit the taxpayer to receive sales proceeds without the recognition of taxable gain, other provisions do permit such receipt, while deferring gain recognition, if qualified replacement property is acquired during the required time frame. For example, both section 1033, regarding involuntary conversions, and section 1034 (prior to its repeal), regarding rollover gain on sale of a principal residence, permitted the deferral of gain recognition upon the receipt of sales proceeds, without the complexity of "intermediaries." In addition, recently-enacted sections 1044 and 1045, regarding rollover of publicly traded securities gain into specialized small business investment companies, and rollover of gain from (NEXT PAGE)

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