International
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September 03, 2024
11th Circ. Trims $12.6M FBAR Fine In 8th Amendment Split
Some of the $12.6 million in penalties the IRS on imposed a man for willfully failing to report foreign bank accounts were in violation of the Eighth Amendment's bar on excessive fines, the Eleventh Circuit ruled, creating an apparent circuit split.
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September 03, 2024
Bahrain Adopting Global Minimum Tax In 2025
Multinational corporations making more than €750 million ($828 million) annually operating in Bahrain will be subject to the OECD's 15% global minimum corporate income tax starting in 2025, the country's tax agency said.
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September 03, 2024
UN Tax Rule On Payments Best For Many Gov'ts, Group Says
Developing countries should seek to add the United Nations' version of a minimum tax rule on payments to their bilateral tax treaties and to adopt corresponding laws domestically while approaching the OECD's more restrictive multilateral version with caution, an advocacy group said Tuesday.
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September 03, 2024
Ex-Defense Contractor Arrested In $350M Tax Evasion Case
A former defense contractor who, with his wife, is facing a 30-count indictment alleging they were involved in a decades-long scheme to defraud the U.S. government and avoid taxes on more than $350 million in income was arrested Tuesday.
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September 03, 2024
NZ Ratifies Slovakia Tax Agreement, Amends Austria Treaty
New Zealand government ratified a new treaty to avoid double taxation with Slovakia as well as amendments to a previous treaty with Austria, the country's tax agency said.
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September 03, 2024
Non-EU Cos. Need Clarity On Public Tax Reporting, Firms Say
The European Union should clarify how multinational corporations headquartered outside the bloc need to format tax data they report under new public disclosure rules, global accounting firms said.
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September 03, 2024
Higher UK Windfall Tax Will Cut Revenue, Says Industry Group
The U.K. government's plan to raise the energy windfall tax in November may cost HM Treasury around £12 billion ($15.7 billion) in tax revenue, according to an industry group.
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September 03, 2024
Norway Seeks Input On Beneficial Ownership Register Access
Norway's Ministry of Finance is seeking comments on a proposal laying out rules regarding access to the country's beneficial ownership register, the ministry said Tuesday.
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September 03, 2024
IRS Issues More Edits For Foreign Currency Accounting Regs
The Internal Revenue Service issued further corrections Tuesday to proposed rules that would adjust the timing for when companies can use certain accounting methods for gains or losses that arise from foreign currency transactions.
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August 30, 2024
Alvarez & Marsal Appoints Tax Experts As Managing Directors
Alvarez & Marsal Tax LLC appointed tax experts from Anderson and Deloitte as its new managing directors, the firm announced.
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August 30, 2024
Danish Gov't Pledges No Ponzi Analogies At $2.1B Tax Trial
The Danish tax authority won't compare pension funds, investors and attorneys it has accused of defrauding Denmark in a $2.1 billion tax refund scheme to a Ponzi scheme or infamous perpetrator Bernie Madoff, it said Friday in New York federal court.
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August 30, 2024
US Seeks Trade Talks In Dispute Over Canada's Digital Tax
The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative announced Friday that it has requested dispute settlement discussions with Canada regarding the country's recently enacted digital services tax, which the USTR claims discriminates against U.S. companies.
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August 30, 2024
Whistleblower Seeks 2nd Bid At $690M Claim In DC Circ.
A whistleblower denied up to $690 million, or 30%, of the $2.3 billion collected in an Internal Revenue Service offshore voluntary disclosure program asked for a D.C. Circuit panel to rehear his case Friday, saying its original opinion included numerous mistakes and misunderstandings.
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August 30, 2024
UK's Labour Gov't Urged To Raise Capital Gains Tax
The Labour government is facing calls to raise the capital gains tax despite financial firms advising investors to sell off their assets or even leave the United Kingdom over the possible tax hike.
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August 30, 2024
IRS Corrects Proposed Rules To Address Pillar 2 Losses
The Internal Revenue Service issued corrections Friday to proposed rules that outline when foreign taxes under the Pillar Two international minimum tax agreement could trigger long-standing U.S. rules that aim to prevent companies from what is known as double-dipping the same economic loss.
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August 30, 2024
Taxation With Representation: Kirkland, Paul Weiss, Squire
In this week's Taxation With Representation, Oneok reaches two agreements with energy infrastructure companies worth a total $5.9 billion, McKesson inks a $2.49 billion deal for a cancer center, and First Busey and CrossFirst Bankshares agree to a $917 million merger.
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August 30, 2024
Neb. Justices Affirm Nix Of Berkshire Unit's Tax Deduction Bid
A Nebraska tax deduction for certain dividends doesn't apply to income repatriated under the 2017 federal tax overhaul, the state Supreme Court affirmed Friday in rejecting arguments from a Berkshire Hathaway entity that the state's tax system excluded the foreign earnings from tax.
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August 29, 2024
Tax Court Rejects Bid To Change Ruling Post-Chevron
The U.S. Supreme Court's recent overturning of the Chevron standard of judicial deference to agencies when interpreting statutes does not justify reconsidering a Cayman Islands partnership's tax liability, the U.S. Tax Court ruled.
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August 29, 2024
4th Circ. Won't Revive Whistleblower's Credit Suisse Tax Suit
The Fourth Circuit upheld the dismissal of a former Credit Suisse employee's whistleblower case that alleged the Swiss bank continued to help clients evade taxes after it made a related plea deal with the U.S., saying a 2023 U.S. Supreme Court decision on the False Claims Act could not save the case.
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August 29, 2024
Tax Admins Advised To Tailor Structures To Needs Over Time
Tax administrations must tailor their organization structures to their specific challenges and environments to adapt to modern problems, not just reshuffle organization charts, several international tax groups said Thursday.
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August 29, 2024
Day Pitney Lands Former Reuters Tax Counsel In Conn.
Day Pitney LLP continued its recent growth in its tax practice in Connecticut with the addition of an experienced tax attorney from Thomson Reuters.
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August 29, 2024
EU Should Ensure Public Understands Tax Data, Execs Say
The European Union should specify that its disclosure requirements for corporate tax information don't reflect multinational companies' overall operations, a group representing in-house tax practitioners said in comments published Thursday, saying the public could otherwise misunderstand the data.
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August 29, 2024
Brazil Seeks Comments On Transfer Pricing Guidelines
Brazil is seeking public comments on proposed regulations related to its 2023 adoption of new transfer pricing rules, including the application of the international arm's-length standard, the country's revenue agency said Thursday.
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August 29, 2024
UK Reports £300M Rise In Tax Relief To Creative Industries
Creative industries received £2.2 billion ($2.9 billion) in tax relief from the U.K. in the 2022-23 tax year, an increase of £300 million over the prior year largely driven by more claims from high-end TV and theater productions, HM Revenue & Customs said Thursday.
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August 29, 2024
Sky Sports Rugby Pundit Loses Bid To Duck £700K Tax Bill
Rugby commentator Stuart Barnes has lost his attempt to escape a tax bill of almost £700,000 ($921,000) as a tribunal ruled that he owed the money because a contract between his company and Sky was equivalent to an employer-employee relationship.
Expert Analysis
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Lessons From IRS For A New HMRC Whistleblowing Model
Andrew Park at Andersen considers whether the public interest would be better served in allowing the U.K.'s tax enforcers, HM Revenue & Customs, to offer larger and more certain cash incentives to people blowing the whistle on tax misdemeanors — similar to the IRS model for whistleblowers.
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The Benefits Of Competent Authority In Int'l Tax Disputes
Multinational enterprises seeking relief from double taxation in a changing international tax landscape should consider utilizing the competent authority process, which provides both taxpayers and domestic tax regulators an efficient and effective means of dispute resolution, say David Farhat and Eman Cuyler at Skadden.
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How OECD Transfer Tax Initiative Affects Smaller Businesses
Small and midsize enterprises with cross-border transactions need to consider redefining tax strategies and operational models in light of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's base erosion and profit shifting initiative, even though the agency's new tax guidelines are aimed at large multinational enterprises, says Ganesh Ramaswamy at Kreston Rangamani.
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What The New OECD Double-Tax Procedure Statistics Tell Us
Monique van Herksen and Clive Jie-A-Joen at Simmons & Simmons consider the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s recent report on double taxation cases resolved in 2020 under the mutual agreement procedure process, and examine whether the process has improved dispute resolution mechanisms since its implementation five years ago.
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Navigating FCPA Risks Of Minority-Owned Joint Ventures
The U.S. Department of Justice and U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission will likely continue to focus on third-party risks under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, so companies with minority-owned joint ventures should take several steps to mitigate related compliance challenges, say Ben Kimberley at The Clorox Company and Addison Thompson at Covington.
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Questions To Ask If Doing Business In A Corruption Hot Spot
Businesses facing new scrutiny after the U.S. Department of Justice's recently announced task force for combating human trafficking in Central America, the release of the Pandora Papers and continuing fallout from 2019's Panama Papers, should address compliance risks by having employees ask three questions about every transaction, say attorneys at White & Case.
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How The Global Tax Agreement Could Backfire For Biden
If the $3.5 trillion spending package fails, the federal tax code will not conform to the recent 15% global minimum tax agreement spearheaded by the U.S., which would embarrass the Biden administration and could lead to retaliatory tax measures by other nations, says Alex Parker at Capitol Counsel.
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Pandora Papers Reveal Need For Greater Tax Enforcement
The recent Pandora Papers leak is a reminder of the importance of transparency laws and proper funding for enforcement efforts against tax evasion as bad actors increasingly operate in the shadows, says Daren Firestone and Kevin Crenny at Levy Firestone.
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Parsing New Int'l Tax Reporting Rules For Pass-Throughs
Attorneys at Grant Thornton unpack the Internal Revenue Service’s new pass-through entity reporting requirements for international tax matters and the accompanying guidance for penalty relief, and suggest how companies should prepare for what may be the most significant change to the partnership compliance function in decades.
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A Look At Global Tax Enforcement Developments: Part 2
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
Sean Craig at LexisNexis examines recent investigations by the Joint Chiefs of Global Tax Enforcement and their impact on U.S. taxpayers, as well as the growing significance of transfer pricing disputes and policies for future enforcement.
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A Look At Global Tax Enforcement Developments: Part 1
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
Sean Craig at LexisNexis looks at how international initiatives, such as the Joint Chiefs of Global Tax Enforcement, are addressing cryptocurrency-related tax evasion, and how the COVID-19 pandemic and increasing demands for governmental welfare programs are driving global tax policy.
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EU Climate Plan Should Involve Taxing Pollution, Not Borders
In order to crack down on greenhouse gas emissions, the European Union proposes to levy carbon emissions at its borders and to overhaul its long-standing energy tax framework, but the latter would hold polluters directly accountable, giving it the better chance for success, says Rebecca Christie at Bruegel.
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Prepare For Global Tax Regime's New Biz Dispute Risks
Companies should take steps to mitigate the business dispute risks of the new international tax framework, which over a hundred countries agreed to in July, as implementing the new regime will be expensive and require substantial organizational restructuring efforts, says Tim McCarthy at Dykema.