International

  • May 06, 2024

    Man's FBAR Filing Makes Challenge Moot, 7th Circ. Says

    The Seventh Circuit upheld Monday the dismissal of a man's challenge to the constitutionality of filing reports of foreign accounts because after filing the suit, the man reported his bank account, making the case moot.

  • May 06, 2024

    Japan Floats Top Seat For Small Islands At UN Tax Convention

    The United Nations committee responsible for negotiating a framework convention on tax should have a co-chair for small island states in a subgroup that leads drafting of proposals, Japan's government said Monday.

  • May 06, 2024

    Marcum Expands Into Mich. By Adding Croskey Lanni

    Accounting and advisory firm Marcum LLP acquired Detroit-based Croskey Lanni PC, adding six partners and more than 50 associates, Marcum announced Monday.

  • May 06, 2024

    Austrian Tax Investigations Collected €49M In 2023

    Austrian tax investigators carried out 210 investigations in 2023, securing a total of €48.86 million ($52.6 million) in back taxes, with perpetrators possibly owing as much as €100 million in fines, the country's finance ministry said Monday.

  • May 06, 2024

    EU Court Asked To Rule On Italian Nix Of Biz Tax Deductions

    The European Union's highest court was asked to rule on Italy's policy denying Italian parent companies certain tax deductions of corporate taxes paid by their subsidiaries in other EU countries, a question arising from an Italian bank's court challenge, a document published Monday showed.

  • May 06, 2024

    Macron-Backed Group Backs G20 Wealth Tax In Election Pitch

    A group campaigning in the European Parliament elections that is backed by French President Emmanuel Macron supports a wealth tax in the world's largest economies, according to a campaign platform published Monday.

  • May 04, 2024

    IRS Seeks More Info On Purpose Test In Buyback Tax Regs

    The IRS is seeking more information on fine-tuning a test in proposed rules on the stock buyback tax meant to assess whether the principal purpose of a U.S. subsidiary's funding purchase of its foreign parent's stock is to avoid the tax, an agency attorney said Saturday.  

  • May 03, 2024

    US Resisting More Scoping On Amount B, Economist Says

    In negotiations over the streamlined transfer pricing approach for baseline marketing and distribution functions known as Amount B, the U.S. has resisted calls for additional scoping criteria that would exclude more companies from the safe harbor, a former U.S. Treasury economist said Friday.

  • May 03, 2024

    Foreign Trust Reporting Rules Coming Soon, IRS Official Says

    The Internal Revenue Service is about to issue proposed regulations that will provide guidance on the reporting obligations for individuals who have transactions with foreign trusts, an agency official said Friday.

  • May 03, 2024

    HMRC Director Rejoins KPMG To Boost Tax Dispute Offering

    A former deputy director at HM Revenue & Customs has returned to KPMG as director of KPMG Law's tax disputes teams, the firm has announced.

  • May 03, 2024

    Africa Seeks Early UN Reform On Transfer Pricing, Exchanges

    Legally binding protocols that reform transfer pricing and exchange of information to the benefit of all countries where multinational corporations operate should be developed simultaneously with the U.N. framework convention on global tax, the U.N.'s African bloc, India and others said Friday.

  • May 03, 2024

    Estonia Implements 2 EU Tax Laws After Delays

    Estonia officially enacted two European Union-wide tax measures that it was late putting into national law, both relating to the OECD's standards for global minimum taxation of large companies.

  • May 03, 2024

    Aussie Treasury Seeks Input On Powers After PwC Scandal

    With investigations into PwC Australia's leak of classified tax plan documents ongoing, the Australian government is asking the public whether it thinks its regulatory powers over tax and accounting firms are sufficient, its Treasury announced Friday.

  • May 03, 2024

    New Fiscal Rules Force EU Countries To Limit Deficits

    New European Union fiscal rules that recently kicked in will force EU countries to restrict public budget deficits by better balancing tax revenues with government spending, the European Commission said Thursday.

  • May 03, 2024

    US Trade Position Seen Contradicting Stance In Pillar 1 Talks

    The U.S. trade representative's withdrawal of support for digital trade proposals has caused tax policy observers to worry that the U.S. position on trade is undermining that of U.S. Treasury Department officials negotiating a taxing rights overhaul at the OECD known as Pillar One.

  • May 03, 2024

    Finland's Stance On Swiss Treaty Recalls Ended Portugal Deal

    Finland's plan to renegotiate its tax treaty with Switzerland in response to concerns about pension tax avoidance has some observers worried that the country will cancel that accord as it did a treaty with Portugal in recent years.

  • May 03, 2024

    Taxation With Representation: Skadden, Wachtell, Davis Polk

    In this week's Taxation With Representation, L'Occitane International said its executive director and chair is leading an offer to buy the company's shares he doesn't already own, UMB Financial agreed to purchase Heartland Financial USA, Medline said it agreed to acquire Ecolab's global surgical solutions business and The Mosaic Co. said it agreed to sell its stake in a phosphate production joint venture.

  • May 03, 2024

    IRS Can Assess Foreign Info Disclosure Penalty, DC Circ. Says

    The D.C. Circuit on Friday overturned a major U.S. Tax Court ruling that had struck down the Internal Revenue Service's authority to assess and administratively collect penalties from taxpayers for failing to file an information return on their interests in a foreign corporation.

  • May 03, 2024

    Final EV Tax Credit Regs Add New Battery Tracing Test

    The U.S. Treasury Department unveiled final regulations Friday for the up to $7,500 electric vehicle tax credit that include a more detailed process for automakers to trace the battery supply chain to qualify for the credit's domestic content requirements.

  • May 03, 2024

    German's Austrian Ski Holiday Ends With Arrest In VAT Probe

    A German citizen on a skiing holiday in Austria was arrested over a large-scale value-added tax fraud scheme, the Finance Ministry in Vienna said in a statement on Friday.

  • May 02, 2024

    Claimed Panama Papers Leaker Fights To Hide ID In €5M Suit

    A person claiming to be the Panama Papers leaker told a federal court they would fear for their life if the court made them disclose their identity in a €5 million ($6.3 million) suit against Germany, protesting a magistrate judge's suggestion that the suit be tossed because the person wouldn't identify themselves.

  • May 02, 2024

    IRS To Boost Audit Rates By 50% On Wealthy, Werfel Says

    The Internal Revenue Service plans to nearly triple audit rates on corporations with assets over $250 million and increase audit rates by more than 50% on wealthy taxpayers with more than $10 million in total positive income by 2026, Commissioner Daniel Werfel said Thursday.

  • May 02, 2024

    Latest Stock Buyback Tax Rules May Still Have Wide Reach

    The U.S. Treasury Department recently floated regulations that narrow an earlier proposal aimed at preventing foreign-parented corporations from circumventing a new excise tax on stock buybacks, but the regulations still characterize avoidance in ways that could include routine intercompany transactions.

  • May 02, 2024

    HMRC Asked To Investigate Firm On Dodging Sanctions

    HM Revenue & Customs should investigate a German-owned garage door manufacturer for violating sanctions by importing products from Belarus into the U.K., but instead authorities brushed off the case and now the company might receive a license, a U.K. lawmaker said.

  • May 02, 2024

    Canada Budget Seeks To Establish Corp. Min. Tax Standards

    Budget proposals submitted to Canada's Parliament by the finance minister would implement the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's global corporate minimum tax standards as part of the country's overarching budget plans.

Expert Analysis

  • 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.

  • Foreign Tax Credit Proposal Is Some Help, But More Is Needed

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    New foreign tax credit regulations proposed by the U.S. Treasury Department provided some measure of relief on cost recovery and royalty withholding, two of the most troublesome aspects of the 2021 final foreign tax credit regulations, but the final regulations are still harmful to many taxpayers, making litigation inevitable, say attorneys at Fenwick.

  • IRS' Tax Gap Statistics Don't Paint A Full Compliance Picture

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    The Internal Revenue Service's recent report indicating a widening tax gap sheds important light on tax compliance, underlines key pressure points and provides insights into how tax administration could be improved; but tax gap estimates also have their limits, says Joyce Beebe at Rice University.

  • How High Court Could Change FBAR Penalty Landscape

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    On Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear Bittner v. U.S., a case that will affect many people penalized for failing to file a Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts, and there are important procedural implications should the government's position be reversed, say Reuben Muller and Andreas Apostolides at Cole Schotz.

  • IRS Memo May Change IP Royalty Tax Prepayment Planning

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    A recent Internal Revenue Service advice memorandum finding a taxpayer was not permitted to prepay tax on contingent royalties after contributing intellectual property offshore is a noteworthy departure from earlier guidance that highlights potential differences between actual and deemed licenses, says William Skinner at Fenwick.

  • What IRS Funding Increase Means For Taxpayers

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    The Internal Revenue Service will first use the influx of funding from the Inflation Reduction Act to address customer support and personnel issues, but with over half the money allocated to enforcement, corporations and high-net-worth individuals will face increased scrutiny, say Patrick McCann Jr. and Jasen Hanson at Chamberlain Hrdlicka.

  • 6 Tax Considerations For Life Sciences Collaboration Deals

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    Given recent IRS guidance and changes to certain tax rates and deductions, biotech and life sciences companies entering into collaboration agreements should assess several unique taxation issues affecting matters ranging from research and development expenditures to profit-sharing terms, say attorneys at Orrick and Andersen Tax.

  • Rushed Multilateral Negotiations Caused Two-Pillar Tax Mess

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    Cracks appearing in the two pillars of the 2021 global tax plan stem from a multilateral tax policy process that rushed to issue rules without first resolving fundamental differences between countries or ensuring that the U.S., a key player, could implement them, says Jefferson VanderWolk at Squire Patton.

  • Key Considerations For Seeking Relief From Double Taxation

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    Caroline Setliffe and E. Miller Williams at Eversheds Sutherland lay out the Organization for International Cooperation and Development’s mutual agreement procedure for settling double-taxation disputes, and discuss six factors U.S. taxpayers doing business in multiple countries should consider when determining the most advantageous form of relief.

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