Taxation of Expatriates For Northrop Grumman Employees

The HEART of the Matter

As a multinational Northrop Grumman employee, it is imperative to understand what the HEART act is, and whether it is applicable to you or your loved ones. The Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax Act of 2008 (the HEART, or 'Heroes' Act), enacted on June 17, 2008, applies new tax rules both to certain U.S. citizens who relinquish their U.S. citizenship and to certain long-term U.S. residents who terminate their U.S. residency.

Relinquishing Citizenship

If you are a Northrop Grumman employee contemplating relinquishing citizenship, you may want to consider how an individual who has relinquished U.S. citizenship is only recognized as having done so on the earliest of four possible dates:

  1. The date that he or she renounces U.S. nationality before a diplomatic or consular officer of the United States (provided that the voluntary relinquishment is later confirmed by the issuance of a certificate of loss of nationality);
  2. The date that he or she furnishes to the State Department a signed statement of voluntary relinquishment of U.S. nationality confirming the performance of an expatriating act (again, provided that the voluntary relinquishment is later confirmed by the issuance of a certificate of loss of nationality);
  3. The date that the State Department issues a certificate of loss of nationality; or
  4. the date that a U.S. court cancels a naturalized citizen's certificate of naturalization.

Caution: Relinquishment may occur earlier under Treasury regulations with respect to an individual who became at birth both a citizen of the United States and of another country.

Terminating U.S. Residency

An individual is considered to terminate long-term U.S. residency when he or she ceases to be a lawful permanent resident of the United States (i.e., loses his or her green card status through revocation or has been administratively or judicially determined to have abandoned such status). Under the HEART Act, however, an individual ceases to be treated as a lawful permanent resident of the United States for all tax purposes if he or she commences to be treated as a resident of a foreign country under a tax treaty between the United States and such foreign country, does not waive the benefits of the treaty applicable to residents of such foreign country, and notifies the Secretary of the commencement of such treatment. If you are a Northrop Grumman employee looking to terminate your residency, this information may be applicable when planning your future taxes and having a better idea of the laws regarding this subject.

Individuals Covered

The new tax rules apply to any U.S. citizen who relinquishes citizenship and any long-term resident who terminates U.S. residency, if such individual:

  1. Has an average annual net income tax liability for the five preceding years ending before the date of the loss of U.S. citizenship or residency termination that exceeds $171,000 (in 2020, $168,000 in 2019);
  2. Has a net worth of $2 million or more on such date; or
  3. Fails to certify under penalties of perjury that he or she has complied with all U.S. Federal tax obligations for the preceding five years or fails to submit such evidence of compliance as the Secretary may require.

Exceptions (these exceptions do not apply to an individual who fails to certify under penalties of perjury that he or she has complied with all U.S. Federal tax obligations for the preceding five years or fails to submit such evidence of compliance as the Secretary may require):

  • An individual who was born with citizenship both in the United States and in another country; provided that (1) as of the expatriation date he or she continues to be a citizen of, and is taxed as a resident of, such other country, and (2) he or she has been a resident of the United States (under the substantial presence test of IRC Section 7701(b)(1)(A)(ii)) for not more than 10 taxable years during the 15-year taxable year period ending with the taxable year of expatriation.
  • A U.S. citizen who relinquishes U.S. citizenship before reaching age 18½, provided that he or she was a resident of the United States (under the substantial presence test of section 7701(b)(1)(A)(ii)) for no more than 10 taxable years before such relinquishment.

The Changes of HEART

In General

The HEART Act imposes the following new tax rules on those individuals affected:

  • Such individuals are subject to income tax on the net unrealized gain in their property as if the property had been sold for its fair market value on the day before the expatriation or residency termination ('mark-to-market tax').
  • Gain from the deemed sale is taken into account at that time without regard to other Internal Revenue Code (IRC) provisions.
  • Any loss from the deemed sale generally is taken into account to the extent otherwise provided in the IRC, except that the wash sale rules of Section 1091 do not apply.
  • Any net gain on the deemed sale is recognized to the extent that it exceeds $737,000 (in 2020, up from $725,000 in 2019).
  • Any gains or losses subsequently realized are to be adjusted for gains and losses taken into account under the deemed sale rules, without regard to the exemption.
  • Deferred compensation items, interests in nongrantor trusts, and specified tax deferred accounts are excepted from the mark-to-market tax but are subject to special rules, as noted below.
  • A transfer tax is imposed on certain transfers to U.S. persons from certain U.S. citizens who relinquished their U.S. citizenship and certain long-term U.S. residents who terminated their U.S. residency, or from their estates.

Deferring Payment of Tax

Under the HEART Act, those employed in Northrop Grumman may elect to defer payment of the tax imposed on the deemed sale of property. Interest is charged for the period the tax is deferred at the rate normally applicable to individual underpayments. The election is irrevocable and is made on a property-by-property basis. Under the election, the deferred tax attributable to a particular property is due when the return is due for the taxable year in which the property is disposed (or, if the property is disposed of in a transaction in which gain is not recognized in whole or in part, at such other time as the Secretary may prescribe). For those eligible to participate in the HEART Act, and also employed in a Northrop Grumman company, this information is certainly worthy to consider when planning tax deferrals.

The deferred tax attributable to a particular property is a prorated portion of the total mark-to-market tax (calculated according to the ratio of gain attributable to the property to the total gain taken into account for the mark-to-market tax). For Northrop Grumman employees, the deferral of the mark-to-market tax may not be extended beyond the due date of the return for the taxable year which includes the individual's death.

In order to elect deferral of the mark-to-market tax, the individual is required to furnish a bond to the Secretary. The individual is also required to consent to the waiver of any treaty rights that would preclude the assessment or collection of the tax.

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Special Transfer Tax on Gifts and Bequests

Under the HEART Act, a special transfer tax applies to certain 'covered gifts or bequests' received by a U.S. citizen or resident. For Northrop Grumman employees, a covered gift or bequest is any property acquired:

  1. By gift directly or indirectly from an individual who is a covered expatriate at the time of such acquisition, or
  2. Directly or indirectly by reason of the death of an individual who was a covered expatriate immediately before death.

A covered gift or bequest, however, does not include any property:

  1. Shown as a taxable gift on a timely filed gift tax return by the covered expatriate,
  2. Included in the gross estate of the covered expatriate for estate tax purposes and shown on a timely filed estate tax return of the estate of the covered expatriate, and
  3. With respect to which a deduction would be allowed under Section 2055, 2056, 2522, or 2523, whichever is appropriate (these sections allow deductions for transfers for charitable purposes or to spouses, for purposes of determining estate and gift taxes).

The tax is calculated at the highest marginal estate tax rate or, if greater, the highest marginal gift tax rate, both as in effect on the date of receipt of the covered gift or bequest. For those employed in a Northrop Grumman company, the tax is imposed upon the recipient of the covered gift or bequest and is imposed on a calendar-year basis. The tax applies to a recipient of a covered gift or bequest only to the extent that the total value of covered gifts and bequests received by such recipient during a calendar year exceeds the annual exclusion amount in effect under section 2503(b) for that calendar year (currently $15,000). The tax on covered gifts and bequests is reduced by the amount of any gift or estate tax paid to a foreign country with respect to such covered gift or bequest.

Special rules apply to the tax on covered gifts or bequests made to domestic or foreign trusts. In the case of a covered gift or bequest made to a domestic trust, the tax applies as if the trust is a U.S. citizen, and the trust is required to pay the tax. In the case of a covered gift or bequest made to a foreign trust, the tax applies to any distribution from such trust (whether from income or corpus) attributable to such covered gift or bequest to a recipient that is a U.S. citizen or resident, in the same manner as if such distribution were a covered gift or bequest. Such a recipient is entitled to deduct the amount of such tax for income tax purposes to the extent such tax is imposed on the portion of such distribution that is included in the gross income of the recipient.

For purposes of these rules, a foreign trust may elect to be treated as a domestic trust. The election may not be revoked without the Secretary's consent.

Other Special Rules

  •  For deferred compensation items (including qualified plans, 403(b) plans, 457(b) plans, SIMPLE retirement plans, and any interest in a foreign pension plan or retirement arrangement), two rules apply:
  1. If the payer is a U.S. person (or a non-U.S. person who elects to be treated as a U.S. person for purposes of withholding and who meet the requirements prescribed by the Secretary to ensure compliance with the withholding requirements), and the covered expatriate notifies the payor of his status as a covered expatriate and irrevocably waives any claim of withholding reduction under any treaty with the United States, the payer must deduct and withhold from any 'taxable payment' a tax equal to 30 percent of such taxable payment. A taxable payment is subject to withholding to the extent it would be included in the gross income of a citizen or resident of the United States. A deferred compensation item that is subject to the 30 percent withholding requirement is subject to tax under IRC Section 871.
  1. Otherwise, an amount equal to the present value of the covered expatriate's deferred compensation item is treated as having been received on the day before the expatriation date. In the case of a deferred compensation item that is subject to IRC Section 83, the item is treated as becoming transferable and no longer subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture on the day before the expatriation date. Appropriate adjustments shall be made to subsequent distributions.

These deemed distributions are not subject to early distribution tax.

  • For 'specified tax deferred accounts' (IRAs, 529 plans, Coverdell ESAs, HSAs, and Archer MSAs), a covered expatriate is treated as receiving a distribution of his entire interest in these accounts on the day before his or her expatriation date. Appropriate adjustments are made for subsequent distributions to take into account this treatment. As with deferred compensation items, these deemed distributions are not subject to early distribution tax.
  • For the portion of any trust for which the covered expatriate is treated as the owner under the grantor trust provisions of the IRC (determined immediately before the expatriation date) the assets held by that portion of the trust are subject to the mark-to-market tax. If a trust that is a grantor trust immediately before the expatriation date subsequently becomes a nongrantor trust, such trust remains a grantor trust for purposes of the provision.

  • For trusts ('nongrantor trusts') with respect to which the covered expatriate is a beneficiary on the day before the expatriation date, the trustee must deduct and withhold from any direct or indirect distribution to a covered expatriate an amount equal to 30 percent of the portion of the distribution which would be includable in the gross income of the covered expatriate if the covered expatriate continued to be subject to tax as a citizen or resident of the United States. The portion of the distribution that is subject to the 30 percent withholding requirement is subject to tax under IRC Section 871. The covered expatriate is treated as having waived any right to claim any reduction in withholding under any treaty with the United States. If the trust distributes appreciated property to a covered expatriate, the trust must recognize gain as if the property were sold to the covered expatriate at its fair market value. If a trust that is a non-grantor trust immediately before the expatriation date subsequently becomes a grantor trust of which a covered expatriate is treated as the owner, directly or indirectly, such conversion is treated as a distribution to the extent of the portion of the trust of which the covered expatriate is treated as the owner.
    • Any period for acquiring property which results in the reduction of gain recognized with respect to property disposed of by the taxpayer terminates on the day before the expatriation date. This rule applies to certain incomplete transactions such as deferred like-kind exchanges and involuntary conversions.
    • Any extension of time for payment of tax ceases to apply on the day before relinquishment of citizenship or termination of residency, and the unpaid portion of such tax becomes due and payable at the time and in the manner prescribed by the Secretary.
    • For purposes of determining the tax imposed under the mark-to-market tax, property that was held by an individual on the date that such individual first became a resident of the United States is treated as having a basis on such date of not less than the fair market value of such property on such date. An individual may make an irrevocable election not to have this rule apply.

    How can Northrop Grumman employees effectively maximize their retirement income, and what role do pension plans and personal investments play in this strategy? It's important for employees to understand how components like the Pension Plan Benefits, Savings Plan Benefits, and Social Security Benefits collectively provide a robust retirement framework. This question invites a detailed exploration of how Northrop Grumman's various programs interact, and what actions employees can take to ensure they are optimizing their retirement savings.

    Maximizing Retirement Income at Northrop Grumman: Northrop Grumman employees can maximize their retirement income by effectively leveraging the combination of Pension Plan Benefits, Savings Plan Benefits, Social Security Benefits, and Personal Savings and Investments. Each component plays a crucial role: the pension plan provides a defined benefit based on salary and years of service, the savings plan offers a vehicle for tax-advantaged growth through employee and employer contributions, and social security offers a baseline of income adjusted for inflation. Employees should aim to maximize their contributions, particularly to the 401(k) plan, and manage their investments according to their individual retirement timelines and risk tolerance.

    What are the different types of retirement benefits available to Northrop Grumman employees, and how do these benefits impact retirement planning? Employees should be aware of the distinctions between defined benefit plans, like the Heritage TRW, and defined contribution plans, such as the 401(k) Savings Plan. This question will allow an in-depth examination of how these benefits function and their significance in the context of Northrop Grumman's overall compensation structure.

    Types of Retirement Benefits: Northrop Grumman offers both defined benefit and defined contribution retirement plans. The Heritage TRW Pension Plan, a defined benefit plan, bases pensions on final average earnings and years of service. The 401(k) Savings Plan, a defined contribution plan, allows employees to save and invest with tax advantages, with contributions from both the employee and employer. Understanding these plans' structures and benefits is essential for employees to plan effectively for retirement.

    In what ways have recent changes to the Northrop Grumman Pension Program affected employees who are planning to retire in the near future? Understanding the specifics of benefit adjustments or freezing final average earnings will be pivotal for employees' retirement planning. This inquiry will encourage discussion around how these changes influence both current and future retirees regarding their readiness for retirement and their financial planning.

    Impact of Recent Changes to Pension Program: Recent changes to the Northrop Grumman Pension Program, such as the freezing of the final average earnings calculation as of December 31, 2014, affect employees planning to retire soon. These changes may alter the expected retirement benefits for some employees, making it crucial for near-retirees to reassess their projected pension benefits under the new rules and plan accordingly to meet their retirement goals.

    How do Northrop Grumman employees qualify for early retirement under the current pension plan, and what benefits can they expect? This question should delve into the eligibility criteria for early retirement based on age and years of service, as well as highlight the benefits associated with this option. It provides an opportunity to explore the trade-offs and advantages of opting for early retirement versus working longer.

    Early Retirement Qualifications and Benefits: Northrop Grumman employees can qualify for early retirement if they are at least 55 years old with 10 years of vesting service, receiving benefits reduced based on early retirement factors. Understanding these factors and the impact on the retirement benefits can help employees decide the best age to retire to maximize their pension benefits while considering their personal and financial circumstances.

    What essential steps should Northrop Grumman employees take to prepare for retirement, including understanding their pension plan and social security benefits? This question can explore the various resources available, such as tools and calculators provided by Northrop Grumman, and the importance of proactive planning. Employees should consider how their decisions today will influence their retirement lifestyle, including the necessity of accumulating both pension and social security benefits.

    Preparation Steps for Retirement: Employees should take proactive steps such as utilizing Northrop Grumman’s retirement calculators, attending planning seminars, and consulting with financial advisors available through the Northrop Grumman Benefits Center. It's also important for employees to understand how their pension benefits interact with Social Security and personal savings to create a comprehensive retirement strategy.

    What options do Northrop Grumman employees have for managing their savings after retirement, and how can they choose the best strategy for their individual needs? Discussion here can encompass the different methods for drawing down retirement accounts, the importance of balancing withdrawals with ongoing expenses, and considerations for managing longevity risk. It is crucial for retirees to think about how they will provide for themselves throughout their retirement years.

    Post-Retirement Savings Management: After retirement, Northrop Grumman employees need to manage their withdrawals from savings plans carefully to sustain their income throughout retirement. Considering factors like withdrawal rates, tax implications, and investment risk will help in maintaining a stable financial status in the retirement years.

    How does Northrop Grumman determine the final average earnings (FAE) used in calculating pensions, and what factors should employees consider to impact this calculation positively? This question could lead to a discussion about the significance of high-earning years, the concept that only the top five consecutive earning years count, and how employees can strategically plan their careers to boost their FAE for retirement.

    Determining Final Average Earnings (FAE): Northrop Grumman calculates FAE for pension benefits based on the highest five consecutive years of earnings. Employees should aim to maximize their earnings during these peak years, as this will directly increase the pension benefits they receive upon retirement.

    What are the specific vesting requirements for Northrop Grumman's pension plans, and why is understanding these concepts critical for employees? As employees may leave the company at various stages of their careers, grasping how vesting works can significantly affect their financial security. This question allows for a detailed discussion on how years of service translate into non-forfeitable benefits.

    Understanding Vesting Requirements: Vesting in Northrop Grumman's pension plans requires completing three years of service, after which the benefits earned become non-forfeitable. Employees should be aware of their vesting status, especially if considering changing jobs, as it impacts their eligibility for pension benefits.

    How can Northrop Grumman employees effectively utilize the resources available through the Northrop Grumman Benefits Center for their retirement planning needs? This question invites exploration of what tools and guidance are obtainable through the Benefits Center, including contact methods, online resources, and personalized retirement evaluations, allowing employees to make informed decisions about their retirement.

    Utilizing Northrop Grumman Benefits Center Resources: The Northrop Grumman Benefits Center offers tools, resources, and support for retirement planning. Employees should frequently use these resources, such as the retirement income calculator and personalized consultations, to plan effectively for their retirement.

    How can Northrop Grumman employees find additional information regarding their retirement options and resources, including the most effective ways to contact the Northrop Grumman Benefits Center? With a focus on how to access support and information, this question emphasizes the role of company resources in assisting employees with their retirement strategies.【4:4†source】

    Finding Retirement Information and Support: Additional information about retirement options and resources can be accessed through Northrop Grumman's Benefits Online portal and the Benefits Center. Employees are encouraged to actively use these channels for up-to-date information and personalized support to navigate their retirement planning effectively.

    With the current political climate we are in it is important to keep up with current news and remain knowledgeable about your benefits.
    Northrop Grumman provides a defined benefit pension plan with a cash balance formula. The plan includes separate accounts for health benefits. Employees accrue benefits based on years of service and earnings, with options for lump-sum or monthly payments.
    Restructuring and Layoffs: Northrop Grumman is laying off around 1,500 employees as part of a restructuring plan to improve operational efficiency (Source: Defense News). Strategic Adjustments: The company is focusing on its core defense and aerospace businesses. Financial Performance: Northrop Grumman reported a 6% increase in net sales for Q4 2023, driven by strong demand for its defense products (Source: Northrop Grumman).
    Northrop Grumman grants RSUs that vest over several years, giving employees shares of the company. Additionally, stock options are provided, allowing employees to purchase shares at a set price.