International

  • April 29, 2024

    OECD-UN Initiative Lands Developing Countries $2.3B In Tax

    A joint initiative between the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and the United Nations to help developing countries boost tax revenues said Monday that it has generated $2.3 billion in additional revenues and $6.05 billion in additional tax assessments since its 2015 formation.

  • April 29, 2024

    Ex-Man City Player Benjamin Mendy Pays £710K Tax Debt

    Former Manchester City footballer Benjamin Mendy avoided bankruptcy on Monday after paying a £710,000 ($892,000) tax bill minutes before a court hearing to determine whether an order should be made.

  • April 29, 2024

    US Expatriations Plummet In 1st Quarter, IRS Says

    The number of people who expatriated from the U.S. fell nearly 70% during the first quarter of 2024 compared with the previous quarter, the Internal Revenue Service said in a notice published Monday.

  • April 29, 2024

    EU Official Wants Progress On New Revenue Streams

    The budget commissioner of the European Union said Monday that the bloc must make progress toward agreeing on new revenue streams that would give it more diversified sources of income.

  • April 26, 2024

    4 Goals For Gov'ts To Pursue In The UN Tax Convention

    The United Nations' framework convention on international tax cooperation should resolve digital taxation, incorporate tax transparency conventions, seek consensus on tax allocation issues but adopt best practices by simple majority, and help fund development goals, officials and experts told Law360 as governments began negotiations Friday.

  • April 26, 2024

    FedEx Calls Gov't Arguments On Tax Credits Contradictory

    The federal government advanced contradictory arguments in FedEx's $84.6 million foreign tax credits dispute with the Internal Revenue Service, the package delivery giant said in a filing in Tennessee federal court.

  • April 26, 2024

    Ireland Received Nearly €24B In Corp. Taxes In 2023

    Corporations paid Ireland €23.8 billion ($25.5 billion) in taxes in 2023, a 5.3% increase over 2022, making corporate tax receipts the second-largest tax revenue generator in the country, according to the Irish revenue department.

  • April 26, 2024

    PwC Australia Appoints 6 Partners To Guide Scandal Rebound

    PwC Australia announced that it has elected six partners to its governance board as the firm continues to attempt to rebound in the wake of its scandal involving the leak of Australian government documents.

  • April 26, 2024

    HMRC Says Tax Digitalization Plan Will Generate £6.4B

    HM Revenue & Customs said its program to modernize U.K. tax filing is expected to generate £6.38 billion ($7.97 billion) in additional revenue through 2034 after projections last year put it at £3.9 billion.

  • April 26, 2024

    Poland Seeks Input On Bill To Enact Minimum Tax

    Poland, one of a handful of European Union countries that have delayed implementing the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's Pillar Two global minimum tax plan, introduced a proposal for public comment that would enact the regime.

  • April 26, 2024

    Abbott Labs' $417M IRS Bill Isn't Wrong, Tax Court Told

    The Internal Revenue Service denied allegations by Abbott Laboratories that it incorrectly increased the global healthcare giant's income, resulting in a $417 million tax bill, in answering Abbott's lawsuit filed with the U.S. Tax Court.

  • April 26, 2024

    Top EU Judge Sees Lower Court Becoming Like Tax Court

    The lower court of the European Union, the General Court, will over time become a venue that specializes in some tax matters after a reform is put into place, the EU's top judge has said.

  • April 26, 2024

    HSBC Beats Investors' £1.3B Disney Film Scheme Fraud Case

    HSBC fended off on Friday a £1.3 billion ($1.6 billion) fraud claim brought by hundreds of investors who alleged the bank misled them into financing a Disney movie tax relief scheme it developed which turned out to be worthless.

  • April 25, 2024

    Romanian Sanctions On Fuel Violate EU Law, Court Says

    A Romanian law imposing sanctions of €77,000 ($83,000) — 21 times the usual rate of taxation — on fuel placed back into storage is so extreme it violates European Union law, the EU's top court said Thursday.

  • April 25, 2024

    Dutch Tax Authority Aiming To Beef Up Data Security

    The Netherlands' tax authority is introducing more data protection measures based on suggestions from a KPMG report commissioned after signs of possible security threats within the tax administration, it said Thursday.

  • April 25, 2024

    Workers' Effective Tax Rates In OECD Countries Rise Again

    The effective tax rates on labor income in the majority of Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development member countries rose for the second year in a row in 2023, thanks in part to continued inflation, the OECD said Thursday.

  • April 25, 2024

    OECD Says Latvia Must Shift Tax Burden, Limit Fuel Subsidies

    Latvia needs to shift its tax burden off labor and onto other forms of income such as property, and to eliminate harmful subsidies and tax practices around fossil fuels, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said Thursday.

  • April 25, 2024

    OECD Consolidates Past Pillar 2 Guidance Into Single Doc

    The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development published administrative guidance Thursday that consolidates past publications on the interpretation and application of the international minimum tax agreement known as Pillar Two, which countries began implementing this year.

  • April 25, 2024

    EU Parliament Gives Final Approval To AML Package

    The European Parliament has given the final go-ahead to a package of laws to fight money laundering and terrorist financing, creating a single rule book and establishing a dedicated agency for the bloc.

  • April 25, 2024

    Ministers From 4 Countries Back Billionaire Tax

    Government ministers from Germany, Spain, South Africa and Brazil said Thursday that they have backed a global plan to ensure that billionaires pay a minimum amount of tax, arguing that the move is necessary to make the tax system more equitable.

  • April 24, 2024

    EU Court Won't Disturb Spanish Tax Break Rulings

    A Spanish company on Wednesday lost its attempt to legitimize a tax scheme declared illegal by the European Commission when the European Union's General Court rejected its appeal, refusing to disturb prior decisions in the long-running dispute.

  • April 24, 2024

    GOP Reps Seek IRS Nonprofit Info After China Reports

    House Ways and Means Republicans asked the Internal Revenue Service to provide information about how it monitors tax-exempt organizations for possible violations of their status after reports China may be funding and improperly influencing nonprofits, according to a letter sent Wednesday.

  • April 24, 2024

    Treasury Limits Reach Of Look-Through Rule In Final Regs

    The U.S. Treasury Department finalized regulations Wednesday that retain but narrow the scope of a proposal to, in a manner of speaking, look through the corporate owners of real estate investment entities to determine whether they are domestically controlled.

  • April 24, 2024

    Tax Pros Suggest How HMRC Can Assess Digitalization Effort

    HM Revenue & Customs should abide by a set of benchmarks when evaluating tests of its digitalization program for income tax self-assessment forms, two groups representing U.K. tax professionals said.

  • April 24, 2024

    Ex-England Footballer Banned As Director For Unpaid Tax

    Former England football international John Barnes has been banned from being a company director after his business failed to pay more than £190,000 ($236,000) in tax, a U.K. government agency announced on Wednesday.

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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