International
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August 12, 2024
US Seeks To Omit Fair Split Of Tax Rights From UN Tax Pact
The U.S. government proposed on Monday dropping the fair allocation of taxing rights as a principle to guide negotiators on the United Nations framework convention on international tax cooperation, saying that the agenda risks duplication, but the organization's African bloc and others opposed its move.
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August 12, 2024
UN Eyes Two Early Changes For Tax Pact In Latest Draft
Diplomats would draft two legally binding protocols under the United Nations framework convention on international tax cooperation while creating the convention itself under the latest draft guidance for negotiators after they select from a shortlist of possible topics, including the digital economy and wealth taxation.
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August 12, 2024
UK Railway Project Forced To Pay £6.2M Tax Bill
A public agency building a high-speed railway in the U.K. had to pay a £6.2 million ($8 million) tax bill for failing to comply with "off-payroll rules" for the contracted employees it engages, according to the agency's annual report.
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August 12, 2024
FedEx Misreads Chevron Ruling In $85M Tax Dispute, US Says
FedEx wrongly believes the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision overturning the Chevron doctrine precludes the U.S. Treasury Department from promulgating regulations to stop tax cheats and prevent FedEx from claiming $84.6 million in tax credits, the U.S. government told a Tennessee federal court.
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August 12, 2024
2 Experts OK'd For Danish Tax Agency In $2.1B Fraud Case
Two experts will be allowed to testify in support of a suit by Denmark's tax agency accusing U.S. pension plans of participating in a $2.1 billion tax refund fraud scheme, a New York federal district court said, overruling the pension plans' objections.
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August 12, 2024
OECD Publishes Transfer Pricing Framework For Lithium
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development published a framework Monday to help multinational corporations price intercompany cross-border transactions involving lithium, including how to identify key economic factors that could influence pricing.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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."
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
Expert Analysis
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What Biden's Tax Proposals May Mean For Int'l Private Clients
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.
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What Crypto Holders Can Learn From Early-2000s Tax Scandal
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.
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International Tax Reform's Implications For Transfer Pricing
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.
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Justices' Preemptive Tax Challenge Ruling Shows Divisions
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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Takeaways From 2 New FBAR Rulings
In light of two recent California federal court decisions, capping penalties for nonwillful violations of foreign bank account reporting but broadening the willfulness standard, U.S. taxpayers must be vigilant about understanding their reporting obligations, and prepare for the Internal Revenue Service to target willful conduct, which yields much higher penalties, say Friedemann Thomma and Marianna Felshtiner at Venable.
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El Salvador's Use Of Bitcoin Complicates US Commercial Law
El Salvador recently became the first country to recognize Bitcoin as currency, presenting significant implications for U.S. commercial law as the development will likely trigger the cryptocurrency to now fall within the definition of "money" under the Uniform Commercial Code, say Joe Carlasare and Eric Fogel at SmithAmundsen.
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Justices' Nod To Preemptive Tax Challenges May Caution IRS
The U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision in CIC Services v. Internal Revenue Service, allowing pre-enforcement challenges of tax reporting rules despite the Anti-Injunction Act, is likely to make the U.S. Department of the Treasury more careful about its own compliance obligations under the Administrative Procedure Act, says Robert Carney at Caplin & Drysdale.
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Let's End The Offshoring Of US Patents
Congress should work toward removing the loophole that allows companies to avoid U.S. taxes by moving their patents offshore, and ensure profits are taxed where the sales take place, says Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.
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Long Road Ahead For Biden's Individual Tax Hike Proposal
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.
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What Value-Added Tax Might Look Like In The US
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.
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US Needs Better, Nonpunitive Approach To Greening Trade
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.
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What OECD Scrutiny Means For Anti-Corruption In Brazil
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.
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The International Outlook For US Border Carbon Adjustments
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.