International

  • March 28, 2024

    2nd Circ. Urged To Uphold Dual Citizen's FBAR Penalties

    A New York federal court correctly upheld tax penalties against a dual French citizen for hiding millions of dollars in six foreign accounts, the U.S. government told the Second Circuit, urging it to reject the woman's claims that American authorities violated the Hague Convention in pursuing her.

  • March 28, 2024

    Nev. Estate Owes Over $3.8M In FBAR Penalties, Court Rules

    The estate of a Nevada entrepreneur must pay over $3.8 million in penalties and interest for willfully failing to report his foreign bank accounts in Belize, the Bahamas and Panama, a federal district court ruled.

  • March 28, 2024

    New Zealand Parliament Passes Global Minimum Tax

    The New Zealand Parliament has passed a wide-ranging tax bill that includes establishing the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's global corporate minimum tax.

  • March 28, 2024

    EU VAT Draft Draws Flak Over Cost For Online Platforms

    A proposed overhaul of the European Union's value-added tax rules to make them fit for the digital age faces questions about how the draft law treats platform companies in transportation, such as Uber or EU-based Bolt, when it comes to charging VAT.

  • March 28, 2024

    EU Justice Head To Step Aside To Run For Rights Group Post

    The European Union's president granted the bloc's justice commissioner leave to pursue a leadership role with a European human rights organization, the European Commission said.

  • March 28, 2024

    EU States OK Duty-Free Imports From Ukraine To June 2025

    European Union countries have overcome objections and backed the suspension for another year of customs duties and quotas on Ukrainian imports but only after tightening caps on some agricultural products. 

  • March 27, 2024

    Australian Senate OKs Amended Thin Capitalization Rules

    Australia's upper house passed a bill Wednesday amending the country's thin capitalization rules to limit the amount of debt deductions that multinational entities can claim in an income year.

  • March 27, 2024

    PwC Hiding Key Details Of Tax Scandal, Aussie Senate Says

    PwC is hiding key details from investigators about its partners marketing confidential drafts of tax laws to top U.S. firms, waited years to review the matter internally and does not appear capable of making substantive reforms, an Australian Senate committee said Wednesday.

  • March 27, 2024

    Czech Transfer Pricing Audits Boost Tax Base By $248M

    An increased focus by the Czech Republic on transfer pricing audits on arrangements to relicense intangible assets and the reselling of advertising services increased the country's tax base by 5.8 billion Czech koruna ($248 million) in 2023, the country's Financial Administration said Wednesday.

  • March 27, 2024

    Treasury Urged To Adjust Shift To Foreign Currency Rules

    The U.S. Treasury Department should let corporations take an aggregate approach regarding certain affiliates that conduct business in foreign currencies when transitioning to new rules for determining taxable income or loss, the American Bar Association's Tax Section recommended.

  • March 27, 2024

    Irish Corp. Tax Revenue Growing, With Risks, Report Says

    While Ireland's corporate tax receipts increased an average of 23% a year since 2014 before stabilizing in 2023, the country should be wary of overrelying on what could be a volatile revenue source, the Parliamentary Budget Office said.

  • March 27, 2024

    VAT Applies To UK Insurer's Prior Service Pact, Court Rules

    Value-added taxes apply to performance fees invoiced to a U.K.-based insurance company by an investment management firm as part of service agreements, a London court said, because those payments occurred outside the duration of the arrangement.

  • March 27, 2024

    Chile Finance Ministry Plans Capital Gains, Dividend Taxes

    The Chilean Finance Ministry and representatives of the country's political parties crafted a proposal during a pre-legislative session that would introduce a 13% capital gains tax as well as a 7% tax on dividends, the ministry said.

  • March 26, 2024

    Adjusting To Amount B's Rules May Bring Growing Pains

    Countries designed a new tax framework known as Amount B to streamline the pricing of certain cross-border operations, but the criteria for determining whether transactions qualify for the regime, which negotiators recently made optional, may complicate the goal of simplicity.

  • March 26, 2024

    German Legislators OK Tax Changes That May Save $3.5B

    Tax changes in Germany will result in as much as €3.2 billion ($3.5 billion) in savings for taxpayers under a bill passed via a compromise in the country's bicameral legislature, its upper house said.

  • March 26, 2024

    Italians Bust €260M Fuel VAT Fraud Ring In Sting

    Authorities in Italy used a sting to bust a crime ring suspected of causing an estimated €260 million ($282 million) in value-added tax damages by using a chain of missing traders to import fuel, the European Public Prosecutor's Office said Tuesday.

  • March 26, 2024

    Ex-Glencore Exec Owes Income Tax On £150M In Dispersals

    Glencore's former head of oil is liable for income tax on nearly £150 million ($189 million) in distributions he received as a profit participation shareholder in the Jersey company because they're considered dividends under U.K. law, according to an Upper Tribunal decision.

  • March 26, 2024

    US EV Subsidies Discriminatory, China Tells WTO

    Domestic production rules for U.S. electric vehicles to qualify for subsidies under the Inflation Reduction Act are discriminatory, the Chinese Ministry of Commerce said Tuesday, announcing it had filed a complaint with the World Trade Organization.

  • March 26, 2024

    Decision Postponed On EU Withholding Tax Proposal

    An attempt by European Union finance ministers to agree on a new withholding tax refund law has been postponed from their meeting on April 12, an agenda published Tuesday showed.

  • March 25, 2024

    Philippines Plastic Bag Tax Would Generate $560M, Gov't Says

    A proposed weight-based tax on single-use plastic bags would catch the Philippines up with major economies and generate an estimated 31.52 billion Philippine pesos ($560 million) in its first three years, the country's Department of Finance said Monday.

  • March 25, 2024

    Nigeria Charges Binance With Tax Evasion, Says Exec Fled

    Nigeria's tax authority filed criminal tax evasion charges against Binance, one of the world's largest cryptocurrency exchanges, and two of its executives, one of whom escaped custody Monday, according to state-owned media.

  • March 25, 2024

    €92M Cross-Border Fuel VAT Fraud Case Under Investigation

    Authorities are investigating three Italian citizens based around the world for their roles in a value-added tax fraud scheme involving oil sales that led to an estimated €92 million ($99.7 million) in damages, the European Public Prosecutor's Office said Monday.

  • March 25, 2024

    Offshore Payments Aren't Taxable Services, UK Court Rules

    Two U.K. residents aren't liable for taxes tied to certain payments from an affiliated offshore company to a third-party foreign corporation, a British appeals court ruled Monday, finding the underlying transactions didn't amount to services that would trigger taxation.

  • March 25, 2024

    EU Court Asked To Rule On VAT On Transfer Pricing Payment

    A Romanian appellate court asked the European Union's Court of Justice to rule on whether payments to a Belgian parent company from a Romanian associated company to align profits under OECD transfer pricing guidelines fall within the scope of value-added tax, a document published Monday showed.

  • March 25, 2024

    PwC Australia Hires New Chief People Officer Amid Scandal

    PwC Australia hired a new chief people officer as part of the firm's plan to rebuild trust following its scandal involving the leak of Australian government documents, the firm announced Monday.

Expert Analysis

  • Long Road Ahead For Biden's Individual Tax Hike Proposal

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    Dustin Stamper at Grant Thornton provides insight into President Joe Biden's recently proposed individual tax increases to pay for his American Families Plan, and explains how competing interests among congressional Democrats and Republicans may shape the final provisions and prolong their implementation.

  • What Value-Added Tax Might Look Like In The US

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    Christiaan Van Der Valk and Charles Maniace at Sovos consider the value-added tax, a primary source of revenue for many countries, and what it might mean for the U.S. were it implemented to raise funds for large-scale federal initiatives such as President Joe Biden's infrastructure plan.

  • US Needs Better, Nonpunitive Approach To Greening Trade

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    Instead of imposing tariffs on goods produced where foreign governments have assisted in cleaning up the environment, the U.S. should make trade policy green by helping industries reduce their environmental impact and encouraging every foreign government to do the same, say Elliot Feldman and Michael Snarr at BakerHostetler.

  • What OECD Scrutiny Means For Anti-Corruption In Brazil

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    Attorneys at Paul Hastings examine how an unprecedented standing subgroup recently created by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development to monitor Brazil's anti-corruption efforts reflects significant uncertainty regarding the country's commitment to enforcement, and what companies can do to address foreign bribery risk and strengthen compliance programs.

  • The International Outlook For US Border Carbon Adjustments

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    The Biden administration may see enacting a border carbon adjustment system as a good way to advance climate goals and protect domestic industries and jobs, but any such plan must take into account the need to respect existing international trade agreements, say attorneys at Akin Gump.

  • The Domestic Landscape For US Border Carbon Adjustments

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    With the Biden administration possibly eyeing border carbon adjustments on imported goods as a means to mitigate climate change, attorneys at Akin Gump discuss such policies' potential benefits to domestic businesses, and the political and technical challenges to their enactment in the U.S.

  • Prepare For Global Collaboration In Crypto Tax Enforcement

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    Recent Internal Revenue Service victories involving John Doe summonses served on cryptocurrency exchanges — and statements by the Joint Chiefs of Global Tax Enforcement about global collaboration in cryptocurrency-related tax investigations — should prompt assessment of prior virtual currency transactions and remediation before an enforcement agency shows up at the door, say attorneys at McDermott.

  • 10 Things to Know About US Competent Authority Assistance

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    Taxpayers should consider seeking U.S. competent authority assistance to help eliminate double taxation from a transfer pricing adjustment, especially now that the competent authorities are resolving cases virtually and more quickly, say attorneys at Thompson & Knight.

  • US Advance Pricing Agreements, Amid COVID And Before

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    Steptoe & Johnson's Matthew Frank, former director of the U.S. Advance Pricing Agreement Program, shares insights from an Internal Revenue Service report revealing an uptick in APA completions amid the pandemic, discusses trends over the program's 30-year history, and suggests ways taxpayers and the IRS could bolster program participation.

  • Choosing A Branch Or Subsidiary For Overseas Expansion

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    Samuel Pollack and Naoko Watanabe at Baker McKenzie examine the corporate and U.S. tax law considerations involved in deciding whether a branch or subsidiary is the most efficient way to expand operations overseas, now that recent Treasury regulations clarified the complicated international tax regime created by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

  • Key Tax Concerns For Foreign Investors In US Private Equity

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    Paul D'Alessandro at Bilzin Sumberg examines important tax questions foreigners interested in U.S. private equity investments should ask in advance, including whether the investment will produce active or passive income, be subject to gains tax, and have U.S. estate tax consequences.

  • Surveying Global Tax Updates For Sovereign Wealth Investors

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    As the market transitions to a post-pandemic phase, sovereign wealth fund and other foreign institutional investors must evaluate how recent U.S., EU and U.K. tax changes may affect their private fund investments, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • Coke, 3M Tax Cases May Not Settle Blocked Income Debate

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    Even if the challenged U.S. Department of the Treasury regulation on blocked income is struck down by the U.S. Tax Court in the pending Coca-Cola and 3M cases, the obligations of a taxpayer that had, but failed to avail itself of, alternative means to secure payment will remain an open question, say Matthew Frank and Amanda Varma at Steptoe & Johnson.

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