International

  • October 29, 2024

    Croatia, Australia Reach Double Tax Treaty Agreement

    Croatia and Australia have agreed on a treaty to avoid double taxation that will take effect when passed by the respective legislatures, the Croatian Ministry of Finance said.

  • October 29, 2024

    States Should Cede Profit-Shifting Fight To OECD, Atty Says

    States should shy away from using mandatory worldwide combined reporting to address profit shifting and instead allow the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development to police tax avoidance from multinational corporations, a business trade group attorney said Tuesday.

  • October 29, 2024

    Switzerland Amends Double Tax Treaty With Kuwait

    Switzerland said Tuesday it has ratified changes to its double taxation treaty with Kuwait that are due to take effect early next year.

  • October 29, 2024

    US, Taiwan To Begin Talks On Double-Tax Agreement

    The U.S. and Taiwan announced Tuesday that they will begin a first round of negotiations to craft a double-tax avoidance agreement that would provide certain treaty-like benefits.

  • October 28, 2024

    Russia Says High Court Case May Help Nix $5B Award Suit

    Russia has told a D.C. federal court that a case recently accepted for review by the U.S. Supreme Court may provide it a path to argue that the court lacks jurisdiction to decide a case brought against the country by a Yukos Oil Co. unit.

  • October 28, 2024

    Latin America, Caribbean Must Up Tobacco Taxes, OECD Says

    Latin American and Caribbean countries must increase their tobacco excise tax levels, among other changes, to reduce the overall affordability of tobacco products to drive people to quit using them, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said Monday.

  • October 28, 2024

    UK Construction Co. Due £3.2M In R&D Credits, Refunds

    A construction contractor is entitled to tax credits and refunds totaling over £3.2 million ($4.2 million) after the U.K.'s First-tier Tribunal ruled that its expenditures for research and development were not subsidized or contracted out by another party.

  • October 28, 2024

    European Commission Backs Simplified Minimum Tax Filing

    Multinational corporations could file returns for the 15% global minimum tax with a single country in the European Union that they would share with the others only where necessary under a proposal approved Monday by the bloc's executive branch, according to officials.

  • October 28, 2024

    Labour Budget Expected To Target Taxes At Biz, Investors

    The U.K. government is set to unveil its budget statement Wednesday after months of hinting at higher taxes, and experts say businesses and investors are bracing to bear the brunt of the possible tax changes, such as through increases to capital gains and payroll taxes.

  • October 28, 2024

    Chile Provides Guidance For Voluntary Disclosure Program

    Chile's tax agency provided guidance Monday for taxpayers interested in voluntarily disclosing their previously undeclared foreign assets in order to take advantage of a temporarily available tax rate.

  • October 28, 2024

    IRS Extends Relief For FATCA Filings Without ID Numbers

    Foreign financial institutions that report information on U.S. account holders to the Internal Revenue Service without including the taxpayer identification numbers associated with those accounts won't be flagged for noncompliance for the next three years, the agency said Monday.

  • October 28, 2024

    Wise Boss Hit With FCA Fine For Not Disclosing Tax Penalty

    The finance regulator said on Monday that it has fined the chief executive of a money transfer company £350,000 ($454,500) for his failure to tell the watchdog he had been penalized by HM Revenues and Customs for not paying his taxes.

  • October 28, 2024

    US Expatriations Tick Up In 3rd Quarter, IRS Says

    The number of people who expatriated from the U.S. rose during the third quarter of the year compared with the previous quarter, the Internal Revenue Service said Monday.

  • October 25, 2024

    German Drug Co. Due £21.5M VAT Refund, UK Tribunal Finds

    A German pharmaceutical provider is entitled to a refund of almost £21.5 million ($27.9 million) for the value-added tax it paid on the rebated portion of products supplied to the U.K.'s National Health Service, the British First-tier Tribunal ruled.

  • October 25, 2024

    Lebanon, Angola, Others Added To Financial Crime Watch List

    An intergovernmental task force on financial crimes added Lebanon, Angola, Algeria and the Ivory Coast to a watch list of countries with weak protections against money laundering and financing for armed groups, the group said Friday.

  • October 25, 2024

    Argentina Formally Shutters, Replaces Tax Agency

    Argentina's president formally dissolved the country's tax agency, the Federal Public Revenue Administration, and established a new agency, following through on an announcement two days earlier to end what he characterized as an oversize entity.

  • October 25, 2024

    Authorities Bust €113M VAT Fraud Ring Between Italy, China

    A sting carried out Friday by the European Public Prosecutor's Office busted a crime ring involving the import of clothing and accessories from China to Italy that hid the goods' origins in order to evade €113 million ($122 million) in value-added taxes, the EPPO said.

  • October 25, 2024

    Taxation With Representation: Davis Polk, Skadden, Kirkland

    In this week's Taxation With Representation, Atlantic Union Bankshares Corp. absorbs Sandy Spring Bancorp, Sophos and Secureworks merge, Wendel Group takes a stake in Monroe Capital LLC, and Acuity Brands Inc. buys QSC LLC.

  • October 25, 2024

    MVP: Wachtell's Tijana J. Dvornic

    Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz's Tijana J. Dvornic led the firm's tax team in representing Lumen Technologies in the largest liability management transaction outside of bankruptcy protections, including addressing over $15 billion of existing debt, earning her a spot as one of the 2024 Law360 Tax MVPs.

  • October 25, 2024

    Germany's Expected Tax Take For 5 Years Drops €58B

    Germany expects to raise €58.2 billion ($63 billion) less in revenue through 2028 than what was forecast in May, according to the country's finance minister, who said that the government allowing employers to pay tax-free bonuses caused uncertainties regarding income tax collections.

  • October 24, 2024

    IRS To End Automatic Foreign Gift Reporting Penalty

    Internal Revenue Service Commissioner Danny Werfel told the UCLA Tax Controversy Conference audience on Thursday that the agency will no longer automatically assess penalties for the late reporting of large foreign gifts, with the announcement eliciting applause from the audience of several hundred tax attorneys and tax professionals.

  • October 24, 2024

    IRS Forming Transfer Pricing Team To Aid Real-Time Audits

    The Internal Revenue Service is establishing a dedicated team to tackle transfer pricing issues that arise in real-time audits of companies participating in its compliance assurance process program, which should allow those issues to be handled more efficiently, an agency official said Thursday.

  • October 24, 2024

    Nigeria Frees Binance Exec Detained Over Money Laundering

    Nigeria's government released a top executive at cryptocurrency exchange Binance whom the government had been holding liable for money laundering charges against the company, the U.S. government and the exchange's CEO said Thursday.

  • October 24, 2024

    Wyden's Pharma Probe Could Build Case For Int'l Tax Reforms

    Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden's investigation into the tax planning of major U.S. pharmaceutical companies could help fuel an effort to revamp U.S. international tax laws next year when Congress addresses expiring provisions of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

  • October 24, 2024

    Politics Blocking Amount B Consensus, OECD Tells G20

    Continued delays of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's transfer pricing plan for certain baseline marketing and distribution activities known as Amount B of Pillar One are due to "primarily political" issues as opposed to technical problems, the organization told the Group of 20 on Thursday.

Expert Analysis

  • Biden Admin. Proposals Both Encourage And Thwart EV Adoption

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    While the Biden administration has been aggressively focused on promoting electric vehicles from the start, its recently issued guidance on EV tax credits and its restrictive new auto emissions proposal create a sense of implementation whiplash that may frustrate manufacturers and consumers, says Levi McAllister at Morgan Lewis.

  • The Key Issues Keeping Transfer Pricing A Top Tax Concern

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    Several challenges preventing a global economic reemergence from the pandemic era are making practitioners reevaluate commonly used transfer pricing models, and embrace new technologies and ways of doing business, say Farnaz Amini and Sophia Castro Jurado at Marcum.

  • Curtailing Offshore Tax-Advantaged Investment In China

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    The U.S. government's plans to establish a new outbound investment regime hold the potential to arrest Chinese companies' increasing use of offshore, tax-advantaged locations to raise capital, says David Plotinsky at Morgan Lewis.

  • Cos. May Want To Wait Out US-EU Green Incentives Fight

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    As the European Union considers measures to compete with the Inflation Reduction Act's incentives for U.S. production of clean tech, and EU and U.S. officials discuss a possible compromise, companies in the green sector should consider taking a wait-and-see approach to investment decisions, says Todd Thacker at Goldberg Segalla.

  • India's Budget Proposals May Ease Entry For Certain Sectors

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    India’s recently released budget includes proposals to facilitate doing business in Gujarat International Finance Tec-City and moderate thousands of compliance requirements, opening up new opportunities for foreign businesses in the digital infrastructure, manufacturing and renewable energy sectors, say Mukesh Butani and Seema Kejriwal at BMR Legal.

  • High Court Ax Of Atty-Client Privilege Case Deepens Split

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's recent dismissal of In re: Grand Jury as improvidently granted maintains a three-way circuit split on the application of attorney-client privilege to multipurpose communications, although the justices have at least shown a desire to address it, say Trey Bourn and Thomas DiStanislao at Butler Snow.

  • US-India Advance Pricing Resolutions Should Reassure Cos.

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    The United States' and India's tax authorities' recent resolution of a significant number of pending advance pricing agreements should reduce taxpayer uncertainty, reassure companies of the nations' good working relationship and improve India's investment environment, say Miller Williams and Caroline Setliffe at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • Stock Buyback Excise Tax Guidance A Mixed Bag For SPACs

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    Recent IRS guidance on the new stock repurchase excise tax includes a welcome exception for publicly traded special-purpose acquisition companies but does not exclude redemptions in connection with a de-SPAC transaction, and further guidance is needed to clarify ambiguities around the exception's application, say Olga Bogush and Evgeny Magidenko at ArentFox Schiff.

  • The IRS' APA Rulemaking Journey: There And Back Again

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    Attorneys at Dentons examine recent challenges in which taxpayers successfully argued Internal Revenue Service rulemaking was invalid under the Administrative Procedure Act, how tax exceptionalism and U.S. Supreme Court regulatory deference prompted such challenges, and similar challenges the agency will likely face following this line of cases.

  • ECJ Fiat Ruling Sets Clear Boundaries For EU State Aid Law

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    The European Court of Justice's recent landmark decision in Fiat v. Commission limiting the commission’s attempts to circumvent the lack of EU powers in the area of tax law has important implications in EU state aid law and beyond, say Andreas Reindl and Pietro Stella at Van Bael.

  • Unpacking The Interim Guidance On New Stock Buyback Tax

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    The U.S. Department of the Treasury and Internal Revenue Service's recent notice on applying the newly effective excise tax on stock repurchases provides much-needed clarity on the tax's scope, which is much broader than anticipated given its underlying policy rationale, say attorneys at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • IRS Will Use New Resources To Increase Scrutiny In 2023

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    The new year promises to be a busy one for the Internal Revenue Service, which is poised to apply the boost in funding provided by the Inflation Reduction Act to bolster and expand its enforcement capability, and there are four areas to watch, say attorneys at Skadden.

  • How Japan's Implementation May Change The Pillar 2 Debate

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    Japan’s outline of proposed legislation adopting a primary component of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's 15% global minimum tax will increase pressure on countries — including the U.S. — that have not committed to adopting Pillar Two, says Takato Masuda of Nishimura & Asahi.

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