International

  • August 12, 2024

    Romania Seen Jumping The Gun On EU's Disclosure Law

    Romania's early implementation of the European Union's public tax disclosure law is imposing public reporting on companies without giving them sufficient time to know how data should be shared, tax specialists complained.

  • August 12, 2024

    VAT Fraudster In Austria Sentenced To 15 Months In Prison

    A 55-year-old was convicted of value-added tax fraud while trading in protective masks, Austria's Finance Ministry said in a news release.

  • August 10, 2024

    Kyocera Targets Treasury TCJA Reg, Seeking $7M Tax Refund

    The Treasury Department acted outside its bounds by issuing a regulation changing the effective date of the 2017 tax overhaul, electronics maker Kyocera argued as it urged a South Carolina federal court to void the regulation and approve the company's claim for $7 million tax refund.

  • August 09, 2024

    Partnership Clarity Expected In First Offshore Profits Rules

    Tax attorneys anticipate answers to several questions about how partnerships should properly track, report and attribute foreign income previously taxed in the U.S. when the first round of long-awaited proposed rules is published.

  • August 09, 2024

    IRS Wrongly Penalizes For Unreported Inheritance, Court Told

    The Internal Revenue Service violated the constitutional rights of a California woman when penalizing her $92,000 for failing to report inheriting $350,000 from a parent who had lived in the U.K., the woman told a federal court.

  • August 09, 2024

    Israel Resident Says She Was Never Notified Of $9M Tax Debt

    The daughter of a dead Brooklyn rabbi was a permanent resident of Israel in the early years of this century and never received IRS notices about $9.2 million in taxes and penalties, she told a New York court Friday in arguing that she doesn't owe the money.

  • August 09, 2024

    AI Helped Uncover €185M In Austrian Tax Revenue In 2023

    A special unit in Austria's Ministry of Finance used an artificial intelligence tool to help discover tax fraud cases, generating roughly €185 million ($202 million) in tax revenue in 2023, the ministry said Friday.

  • August 09, 2024

    Bermuda Seeks Comments On Administration Of Minimum Tax

    Bermuda is looking for comments on proposed administrative changes that would accompany its implementation of the OECD's 15% global corporate minimum tax on large multinational entities, including how in-scope businesses will register with the country's new Corporate Income Tax Agency.

  • August 09, 2024

    3 Indicted On Charges Of Leading €93M VAT Fraud Scheme

    Three people suspected of heading a criminal scheme that carried out €93 million ($102 million) in value-added tax fraud involving primarily Apple AirPods have been indicted in Germany, the European Public Prosecutor's Office said Friday.

  • August 09, 2024

    Australia Seeks To Take Pepsi Royalty Tax Fight To Top Court

    The Australian Taxation Office asked the country's top court for permission to appeal a decision that payments between PepsiCo subsidiaries did not qualify for royalty withholding tax or diverted profits tax, according to a news release Friday.

  • August 09, 2024

    What Books Tax Pros Recommend For This Summer

    As practitioners monitor the tax implications of the U.S. presidential election as well as what might come out of the next European Commission, they may want to take a break with a good book. Here, Law360 takes a look at tax specialists' summer reading recommendations.

  • August 09, 2024

    Taxation With Representation: Latham, Freshfields, Wachtell

    In this week's Taxation With Representation, Quantum Capital Group agrees to a roughly $3 billion deal for Cogentrix Energy, Apax Partners LLP is acquiring Thoughtworks for roughly $1.75 billion, and Mallinckrodt inks a $925 million deal for Therakos.

  • August 08, 2024

    Cayman Co. Owes Tax On Partners' Income, Tax Court Says

    A Cayman Islands partnership is liable for withholding taxes on the share of about $24.8 million in income from its U.S. operations that was allocated to its foreign partners through special purpose vehicles, the U.S. Tax Court said Thursday.

  • August 08, 2024

    Judge In HMRC Case Won't Step Aside Over 'Scurrilous' Claim

    A London judge has refused to recuse himself from litigation involving HM Revenue & Customs because of apparent bias and institutional corruption owing to his former connection to the department, finding some of the allegations "frankly scurrilous."

  • August 08, 2024

    Nixon Peabody Hires Community Development Counsel In DC

    When Steven Feenstra, the newest member of Nixon Peabody LLP's the community development finance practice, visited a client's office some 25 years ago, the photos of the community housing projects the client had helped develop made a lasting impression on him, he told Law360 Pulse in an interview Thursday.

  • August 08, 2024

    UK, Ecuador Agree To Double-Tax Treaty

    HM Revenue & Customs published a newly agreed-upon treaty to prevent double taxation between the U.K. and Ecuador on Thursday, which would come into force after approval by both countries' legislatures.

  • August 08, 2024

    Italy Doubles Flat Tax On Nondomiciled To €200K

    Individuals who transfer their tax residence to Italy will now pay a €200,000 ($218,000) flat tax in lieu of other taxes on their foreign income instead of €100,000, the Italian government announced.

  • August 08, 2024

    EU Commission Will Visit Nations To Discuss Capital Markets

    European Commission officials plan to visit member countries beginning in the fall to discuss integrating the European Union's capital markets, which could involve tax law changes, the commission said Thursday.

  • August 08, 2024

    UK Gov't Refunds £57M In Pension Freedoms Overtaxation

    The government has been forced to repay £59.6 million ($75.5 million) in the three months between April and June to people who overpaid tax after they tapped into their pensions for the first time, according to HM Revenue and Customs.

  • August 07, 2024

    Weak Link Doomed $690M Whistleblower Claim, DC Circ. Says

    A whistleblower could not get up to $690 million, or 30% of the $2.3 billion collected in an Internal Revenue Service offshore voluntary disclosure program, because the connection between his actions and the program was weak, the D.C. Circuit said Wednesday.

  • August 07, 2024

    EU Seeking Members For Financial Advisory Board

    The European Commission put out a call Wednesday for applications from experts interested in taking over roles on the five-person European Fiscal Board, which advises the commission on certain European Union fiscal operations.

  • August 07, 2024

    Pension Plans' Expert Testimony Limited In $2B Tax Fraud Suit

    A New York federal court decided to exclude portions of an expert's testimony on behalf of pension plans that are accused of seeking to defraud Denmark's tax agency in a $2.1 billion tax refund fraud scheme.

  • August 07, 2024

    UN Economists Want Tax Talks To Address Transparency

    Governments should make tax transparency a top priority for the United Nations framework convention on international tax cooperation and create systems that benefit all countries, the organization's economists said Wednesday.

  • August 07, 2024

    Tax Court's Economic Substance Foray May Clarify Limits

    A U.S. Tax Court judge plans to address an ill-defined provision governing the relevance of the economic substance doctrine in a microcaptive insurance case, offering the courts another chance to clarify an anti-abuse tool the IRS has been deploying more often.

  • August 07, 2024

    Tripling UK's DST Would Cost US Cos. $4.4B, Report Says

    The Liberal Democrats' proposal to raise the U.K.'s digital services tax rate to 6% from 2% would cost U.S. companies up to $4.4 billion a year when accounting for the impact of passing on the costs, a business group said.

Expert Analysis

  • Parsing New Int'l Tax Reporting Rules For Pass-Throughs

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    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.

  • A Look At Global Tax Enforcement Developments: Part 2

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    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.

  • A Look At Global Tax Enforcement Developments: Part 1

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    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.

  • EU Climate Plan Should Involve Taxing Pollution, Not Borders

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    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.

  • Prepare For Global Tax Regime's New Biz Dispute Risks

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    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.

  • Prepare For More Audits Of Tax Info And Withholding Filings

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    Financial institutions and other corporate taxpayers should focus compliance efforts on tax information reporting and withholding, given recent indications from the Biden administration that the IRS will increase enforcement, and the administration's need to fund its infrastructure plan and other costly initiatives, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.

  • Anti-Boycott Compliance Still Key In UAE Business Dealings

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    Notwithstanding recent amendments to U.S. anti-boycott laws that reflect the United Arab Emirates' withdrawal from the Arab boycott of Israel, companies doing business in the UAE and elsewhere still need to maintain effective anti-boycott compliance programs to avoid reporting violations or penalties, says Howard Weissman at Miller Canfield.

  • 9th Circ. Adds Pressure To Reject Substance Over Form

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    The Ninth Circuit’s recent decision rejecting taxes on a family's Roth IRA payments that were made through a foreign sales corporation represents a refreshing trend among federal appeals courts to reject substance-over-form principles and instead look to congressional intent, say Lawrence Hill and Caitlin Tharp at Steptoe & Johnson.

  • Will The OECD Plan Fix International Taxation?

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    Lilian Faulhaber at Georgetown Law breaks down the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s plan for international tax reform, recently joined by 130 countries, and whether it will solve the problems it was designed to address, including the need for multinational companies to pay their fair share of taxes in the digitized world economy.

  • What Biden's Tax Proposals May Mean For Int'l Private Clients

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    Jennifer Wioncek and Paul D’Alessandro at Bilzin Sumberg discuss the U.S. Department of the Treasury's recently released explanation of the Biden administration's tax proposals and how the changes would affect income and wealth transfer planning for international private clients.

  • What Crypto Holders Can Learn From Early-2000s Tax Scandal

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    The Internal Revenue Service’s recent push to gather information about cryptocurrency accounts is similar to its Swiss bank account investigations of the early 2000s, which should prompt taxpayers to consider voluntarily disclosing transactions before they are individually targeted for enforcement, say Timothy Wagner and Thomas Barnard at Baker Donelson.

  • International Tax Reform's Implications For Transfer Pricing

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    As the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development overhauls the global tax rules on base erosion and profit shifting, and the Biden administration rolls out new U.S. tax proposals, multinational enterprises need to prepare for the effects of these tax changes on their transfer pricing structures, say Mandy Li and Shuang Feng at MGO.

  • Justices' Preemptive Tax Challenge Ruling Shows Divisions

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision in CIC Services v. Internal Revenue Service reveals divisions among the justices about when potentially burdensome tax regulations can be challenged, making the holding less clear and less valuable, say George Isaacson and David Swetnam-Burland at Brann & Isaacson.

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