International

  • March 18, 2024

    Polish Senate Committee Objects To EU BEFIT Proposal

    A Polish Senate committee has objected to a new legislative proposal for corporate taxation in the European Union because it said it may lead to a loss of tax income and weaken the country's investment support programs.

  • March 15, 2024

    UAE Seeks Public Input On Global Minimum Tax

    The United Arab Emirates is seeking public comments on implementing the global minimum tax under the OECD's tax reform plan, along with other tax issues, the country's Ministry of Finance announced Friday.

  • March 15, 2024

    France's Green Energy Investment Tax Credit Now In Effect

    Companies operating in France's wind power sector and other clean energy industries will now be able to use the country's new green investment tax credit, the French finance ministry said Friday.

  • March 15, 2024

    Bechtel's Appeal Tossed In $8.5M Australian Tax Case

    Bechtel Corp. must pay taxes of AU$13 million ($8.5 million) on costs of transporting employees to a worksite because the travel did not occur in the course of producing income, a Federal Court of Australia panel said Friday.

  • March 15, 2024

    The Tax Angle: House GOP Plots TCJA Renewal Strategy

    House Republicans left Washington this week for their annual two-day legislative issues conference, hoping to expand their control of the chamber in the upcoming November elections and planning their strategy for renewal of their historic 2017 tax overhaul law.

  • March 15, 2024

    Tax Foundation Says UN Should Avoid Duplicating Tax Efforts

    The United Nations should only create global tax rules in areas where it can effectively reduce uncertainty and should avoid duplicating negotiations underway elsewhere, the Tax Foundation said Friday in a response to the organization.

  • March 15, 2024

    Netherlands Enters Tax Treaty Talks With 3 More Countries

    The Netherlands government announced plans to negotiate 13 tax treaties this year, including work on agreements with three new countries.

  • March 15, 2024

    Direct Hit On Tax Regs Unlikely If Justices Ditch Chevron

    A decision from the U.S. Supreme Court later this year on two cases challenging the so-called Chevron doctrine, which gives federal agencies wide latitude to interpret ambiguous laws, isn't likely to immediately affect tax regulations.

  • March 15, 2024

    Colombia, Norway Aim To Harmonize UN And OECD Tax Work

    Colombia and Norway are aiming to bring the best aspects of the OECD's tax work into negotiations at the United Nations while drafting a framework convention on global tax cooperation, officials said Friday during a conference in Paris.

  • March 15, 2024

    Taxation With Representation: Freshfields, Kirkland

    In this week's Taxation with Representation, AstraZeneca acquires Amolyt Pharma, XCF Global Capital goes public and EQT Corp. merges with Equitrans Midstream Corp.

  • March 15, 2024

    Swiss Senate Votes Not To Consider Tonnage Tax

    The upper house of the Swiss legislature has decided not to consider a tonnage tax proposal, choosing instead to follow the recommendation of a committee that last month recommended not taking up the measure.

  • March 14, 2024

    Taiwanese Gov't Proposes Filing Of Electronic Invoicing

    The Taiwan government's executive branch approved a draft amendment to the island's Value-added and Non-value-added Business Tax Act that would require businesses to file electronic invoices on an open database, the Ministry of Finance announced Thursday.

  • March 14, 2024

    Economists Suggest UN Tackle CFC Rules, Other Tax Policies

    Governments should look at coordinating globally on controlled foreign corporation rules, economic substance requirements, financial transparency, excess profits taxes, inheritance taxes and wealth taxes in negotiations on the nascent United Nations tax convention, economists said Thursday at a conference in Paris.

  • March 14, 2024

    Wealth Tax, Stiff Biz Tax Could Fund Climate Fight, Study Says

    Governments could generate the $500 billion experts think developing countries would need annually to fund the fight against climate change with a 2% global minimum tax on billionaires and a 20% global minimum tax on corporations with no exclusions, the EU Tax Observatory said Thursday.

  • March 14, 2024

    New Zealand Proposes 12% Tax On Overseas Online Casinos

    The New Zealand tax agency proposed Thursday to target the profits of offshore online gambling companies with a 12% tax that would bring in an expected NZ$35 million ($21.5 million) a year.   

  • March 14, 2024

    Israel Tax Authority Claims Owner Of US Biz Underpaid Tax

    A Jerusalem man is suspected of failing to report 50 million Israeli new shekels ($13.7 million) of his income from companies in Israel and abroad, the Israel Tax Authority said Thursday.

  • March 14, 2024

    Brazil Turns To Central Region In Farm Tax Fraud Probe

    Brazil's tax authority is focusing on the country's central region in the next phase of an investigation into a tax avoidance scheme that led it to more than 550 million real ($110.2 million) in uncollected revenue from rural farmers.

  • March 14, 2024

    Nine In 10 Finnish Cos. Report Positive Attitude To Taxation

    Nine of 10 Finnish companies have a positive attitude toward taxation, according to a survey announced Thursday by Finland's Tax Administration.

  • March 14, 2024

    IRS' Signals On Economic Substance Doctrine Draw Scrutiny

    The Internal Revenue Service's recent legal success asserting a doctrine to invalidate transactions in tax law enforcement matters may embolden the government to broaden that argument's reach, and lawyers are concerned it doesn't properly apply to transfer pricing matters.

  • March 14, 2024

    EU Law No Hindrance To Interest Rule, Says ECJ Adviser

    European Union law does not preclude national legislation restricting the ability of taxpayers to deduct interest on a loan that is taken out for non-commercial reasons, an adviser to the bloc's Court of Justice found Thursday.

  • March 13, 2024

    Disney, IBM Seeking Tax Loophole, NY High Court Judge Says

    Disney and IBM's attempt to take New York tax deductions on royalties received from foreign affiliates is "the biggest loophole" that could be created under a former tax statute, a New York high court judge said Wednesday during oral arguments in disputes involving both companies.

  • March 13, 2024

    Siemens Asks Tax Court To Toss $1.2B IRS Bill

    A U.S. subsidiary of German technology company Siemens is pushing the U.S. Tax Court to throw out $1.16 billion in tax deficiencies and penalties the IRS has imposed, saying the agency relied on invalid rules in denying a deduction.

  • March 13, 2024

    JCT Indicates Pillar 1 Is Bad Deal For US, GOP Lawmakers Say

    An analysis of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's Pillar One taxing rights overhaul by congressional scorekeepers makes clear the plan should not receive U.S. support because it would disadvantage U.S. multinationals and federal tax revenue, Republican leaders of Congress' taxwriting committees said Wednesday.

  • March 13, 2024

    Longtime Stradley Ronon Tax Partner Joins Grant Thornton

    Following more than a quarter-century practicing law with Stradley Ronon Stevens & Young LLP, longtime tax attorney Chris Scarpa decided to change career paths, joining accounting firm Grant Thornton LLP.

  • March 13, 2024

    EU Seeks Comments On Double-Tax Dispute Framework

    The European Commission is asking businesses and citizens to weigh in on the European Union's framework for resolving cross-border disputes within the bloc regarding double taxation, the commission said Wednesday.

Expert Analysis

  • Mentorship Is Key To Fixing Drop-Off Of Women In Law

    Author Photo

    It falls to senior male attorneys to recognize the crisis female attorneys face as the pandemic amplifies an already unequal system and to offer their knowledge, experience and counsel to build a better future for women in law, says James Meadows at Culhane Meadows.

  • 5 Ways Firms Can Avoid Female Atty Exodus During Pandemic

    Author Photo

    The pandemic's disproportionate impact on women presents law firms with a unique opportunity to devise innovative policies that will address the increasing home life demands female lawyers face and help retain them long after COVID-19 is over, say Roberta Liebenberg at Fine Kaplan and Stephanie Scharf at Scharf Banks.

  • IRS Real Estate Push Should Wake Up Foreign Investors

    Author Photo

    Two recently announced Internal Revenue Service audit campaigns targeting nonresident alien investment in U.S. real estate should prompt foreign investors to prepare for greater scrutiny as the agency works to improve tax compliance around such transactions, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.

  • CFTC Climate Change Report Highlights Costs Of Inaction

    Author Photo

    The Commodity Futures Trading Commission's recent report on climate change and financial markets makes it clear that while government regulation of carbon dioxide pollution may have negative consequences, letting greenhouse gas emissions go unaddressed could harm investors, asset managers and financial institutions, says Nicholas Fox at Goldberg Segalla.

  • Dems' Int'l Tax Policy Comes With Unintended Consequences

    Author Photo

    Former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris’ "Made in America" tax policy overstates the importance of revenue raising, which may encourage foreign ownership of global activity and disadvantage U.S.-based companies, says George Callas at Steptoe & Johnson.

  • How Cos. Can Respond To Growing Crypto Tax Enforcement

    Author Photo

    As the U.S. Department of Justice and the Internal Revenue Service remain laser-focused on abusive cryptocurrency schemes, companies operating in this high-risk industry should review their compliance measures in areas such as data analysis, employee oversight and industry benchmarking, say attorneys at Norton Rose.

  • Trump's Tax Tactics May Be Criminal

    Author Photo

    Apologists who defend President Donald Trump as having shrewdly exploited legal loopholes by deducting dubious consulting fees from his taxes are ignoring major badges of fraud that would have led the Internal Revenue Service to investigate any other taxpayer, says Daren Firestone at Levy Firestone.

  • Why Cum-Ex Tax Fraud Probes Are On The Rise

    Author Photo

    ​​​​​​​Neil Williams at Rahman Ravelli outlines why European regulatory investigations into cum-ex — a 1990s-era dividend arbitrage trading practice involving tax rebate claims worth tens of billions of euros — are gaining momentum years after the activities that sparked them, and who should be concerned.

  • Managing New IRS Global High-Wealth Audits

    Author Photo

    Global high-wealth individuals on the receiving end of an audit letter under the Internal Revenue Service Large Business and International Division's new program should prepare for a thorough examination process that includes their entire network of persons and affiliated entities, say attorneys at MoFo.

  • Employers Should Act Now To Mitigate Remote Work Tax Risk

    Author Photo

    Where employees have been overseas since the start of COVID-19 and are nearing the 183-day tax threshold, there is little time left for U.S. employers to incorporate tax planning into policies to ensure more flexible working arrangements do not create tax complexities and risks, says Richard Tonge at Grant Thornton.

  • Pros And Cons Of State Transfer Pricing Program Participation

    Author Photo

    A company's decision to settle a transfer pricing dispute through a state program — such as those recently announced by North Carolina and Indiana — will turn on the quality of its documentation, its willingness to pay for certainty and the perceived level of aggressiveness of the state's revenue department, say attorneys at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • BigLaw Cannot Reap Diversity Rewards Without Inclusion

    Author Photo

    BigLaw firms often focus on increasing their diversity numbers, but without much attention to equity and inclusion, minority lawyers face substantial barriers after they get their foot in the door, says Patricia Brown Holmes, managing partner at Riley Safer.

  • Ideas For Closing BigLaw's Diversity Gap

    Author Photo

    If enough law firms undertake some universal diversity best practices, such as connecting minority lawyers to key client relationships and establishing accountability for those charged with spearheading progress, the legal industry could look a lot different in the foreseeable future, says Frederick Nance, global managing partner at Squire Patton.

Can't find the article you're looking for? Click here to search the Tax Authority International archive.