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Corporate America’s Growing Quest for Tariff Refunds
This article examines corporate litigation seeking refunds of tariffs imposed under executive authority later overturned by the Supreme Court. The reporting highlights the fiscal and legal consequences of invalidated cross-border levies, including potential revenue exposure for the federal government and broader implications for the treatment of trade-based revenue measures in international economic policy.
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EU Tax Omnibus Expected to Be Neutral for Companies
The European Commission launched a consultation on a proposed “tax omnibus” package aimed at simplifying key EU direct tax directives, including the parent-subsidiary, interest and royalties, merger, ATAD, and dispute resolution directives. Officials emphasized that the initiative is intended to reduce compliance burdens while remaining broadly revenue-neutral across member states. Potential reforms, such as aligning CFC rules with pillar 2 and revisiting interest limitation provisions, reflect an effort to streamline EU corporate tax architecture without redistributing taxing rights.
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The Awkward Implications of an Undertaxed Profits Rule
The article explores the potential awkward legal outcomes of adopting the UTPR as an income tax, which could allow countries to tax activities they do not control or have authorized. The article considers alternative approaches to implementing the UTPR, such as civil penalty regimes or taxing deductible payments, to avoid these inconsistencies. It also examines the practical application of UTPR under the OECD's GLOBE rules and discusses its implications for multinational enterprises, particularly in cases like India, Australia, and Kenya.
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The $130 Billion Race for Companies to Get Their Tariff Money Back
This article examines widespread corporate litigation seeking refunds of tariffs imposed under executive authority later curtailed by the Supreme Court. The piece highlights the fiscal exposure facing the federal government and explores how invalidated cross-border levies functioned as de facto revenue measures with significant implications for international trade taxation.
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U.S. Focusing on OECD Guidance for Pillar 2 Side-by-Side Package
The U.S. is prioritizing guidance related to the OECD's Pillar 2 side-by-side package to ensure efficient global implementation of the GLOBE rules. Treasury official Isaac Wood highlighted the need for clarity in resolving technical gaps, such as those concerning intragroup financing and the side-by-side safe harbor. The U.S. remains heavily engaged in the technical aspects of Pillar 2 to address issues impacting U.S.-headquartered multinational enterprises and ensure alignment with domestic tax laws.
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The Side-by-Side Agreement Reshapes US Canadian Subsidiaries’ Tax
October 8, 2021, marked the beginning of the Pillar Two era, when 137 countries (known as the Inclusive Framework and led by the OECD) signed a political agreement to domestically legislate a 15% minimum tax on all profits of multinationals that annually have at least €750 million of gross revenue. On January 5, 2026, the IF (now up to around 150 countries) signed another political agreement (the side-by-side (Sbs) agreement) that should serve to dissolve US objections that had been holding up full international adoption of Pillar Two. This article focuses on how the Sbs agreement affects US multinationals with Canadian subsidiaries.
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Trump’s New Land Port Maintenance Tax Shouldn’t Be Tariff Plan B
The Trump administration’s newly floated 0.125% “land port maintenance tax,” pitched as a fix to align shippers using land ports with those subject to the Harbor Maintenance Fee, looks less like infrastructure policy and more like contingency planning now that the US Supreme Court has struck down the administration’s tariff program under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.
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I.R.S. Tactics Against Meta Open a New Front in the Corporate Tax Fight
This article examines the I.R.S.’s use of real-world profit data to challenge how Meta values offshore intellectual property for tax purposes. The piece highlights a significant shift in transfer pricing enforcement, with implications for cross-border income allocation, valuation of intangibles, and the taxation of multinational enterprises’ foreign earnings.
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Is the EU Tax List Creating a Competitiveness Problem?
Business representatives questioned whether the EU’s tax blacklist and the defensive measures it triggers undermine the bloc’s competitiveness, particularly following Vietnam’s addition to the list. The article examines how denial of deductions, withholding consequences, and treaty interactions create uneven compliance burdens across member states. It also explores the interaction between the blacklist regime and OECD Pillar 2, with companies increasingly using the global minimum tax framework to define low-tax jurisdictions.
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Trump’s Trade Gamble Will Continue, Despite Supreme Court Rebuke
This article analyzes the administration’s response to the Supreme Court’s ruling striking down core elements of its tariff program. Despite the legal setback, the president signals an intent to maintain aggressive trade measures through alternative mechanisms. The piece evaluates the economic rationale behind the administration’s trade strategy, the legal constraints imposed by the Court’s decision, and the potential consequences for global supply chains and U.S. trading partners.
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Global Trade Confusion Returns as Trump Shifts Tariff Tools (1)
The Supreme Court’s nixing of US President Donald Trump’s “reciprocal” tariffs is throwing fresh confusion over the raft of trade deals negotiated by global partners as the inescapable reality of ongoing levies remains a threat.
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EU Set to Halt US Trade Deal Approval Over Trump Tariff Risk (1)
The European Union is poised to freeze the ratification process of its trade deal with the US and is seeking more details from President Donald Trump’s administration on its new tariff program.
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What’s Happened Since the Supreme Court’s Tariff Ruling
This article reviews the legal and structural fallout following the Supreme Court’s invalidation of key Trump tariffs. It discusses the administration’s attempt to rely on alternative statutory authority and considers the broader institutional consequences for U.S. trade powers, global supply chains, and the stability of cross-border fiscal measures affecting international commerce.
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Key Takeaways From the Supreme Court’s Tariff Ruling
This article analyzes the Supreme Court’s decision limiting President Trump’s use of emergency tariff authority and examines the structural implications for executive power over cross-border fiscal measures. The ruling reshapes the allocation of economic authority between Congress and the president, with consequences for the future design of tariff-based revenue tools affecting international commerce.
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End Is in Sight for Multinationals' TCJA Transition Tax Payments
Eight years after enactment of the TCJA, U.S. multinationals are completing final installment payments on the section 965 transition tax imposed on previously untaxed offshore earnings. Approximately 1,750 companies elected the eight-year installment plan, deferring over $126 billion in liabilities, with some firms still making multibillion-dollar payments in 2026. The wind-down of section 965 payments marks the closing chapter of a central TCJA international reform, even as related Tax Court disputes continue to shape liability calculations.
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U.S. Tariff Ruling Brings Uncertainty Just as Europe Hoped to Move On
This article focuses on the European response to the Supreme Court’s decision invalidating portions of the U.S. tariff regime. European officials had anticipated stabilization in transatlantic trade relations, but the ruling introduces new uncertainty regarding future U.S. trade policy. The piece examines the broader implications for EU–U.S. economic coordination, trade negotiations, and geopolitical dynamics amid ongoing tensions with China and other major economies.
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Trump’s new flat-rate tariff is a boost for China and Brazil
This article analyzes the global impact of President Trump’s newly announced flat-rate tariff following the Supreme Court ruling on earlier levies. It examines how major trading partners—including China, Brazil, the EU and Japan—may be differentially affected, highlighting cross-border trade flows, retaliatory risks, and the broader implications for international economic alignment and global supply chains.
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US Tells Partners to Honor Tariff Deals as Trump Regroups (1)
Senior US officials said President Donald Trump’s tariff defeat at the Supreme Court won’t unravel deals negotiated with US partners as they sought to defend the administration’s assertive trade policies.
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China, India Among Winners After US Court Blocked Trump Tariffs
In a swift reversal of fortunes, countries that had been hardest hit by US President Donald Trump’s tariffs have emerged as the biggest winners from the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down his emergency levies.
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Bessent dodges questions about tariff refunds
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent dodged questions about refunds after the Supreme Court struck the vast majority of President Trump’s tariffs down.
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What Happens to All These Trade Deals Now?
This article examines the international fallout from the Supreme Court’s decision invalidating key components of President Trump’s tariff program. The ruling raises significant uncertainty for bilateral and regional trade agreements negotiated under tariff pressure, including arrangements with major U.S. trading partners. The piece analyzes how governments and firms may reassess commitments made in response to threatened or imposed tariffs, and considers the broader implications for trade diplomacy and cross-border economic stability.
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The Trade Statutes Trump Will Use to Keep Imposing Tariffs
Following the Supreme Court’s rejection of the administration’s use of emergency powers to impose sweeping tariffs, this article explores the alternative statutory authorities available to the executive branch. It outlines the legal frameworks under U.S. trade law—including national security and unfair trade practice provisions—that may serve as the basis for continued tariff actions. The piece situates the ruling within the broader separation-of-powers debate and highlights the ongoing legal and economic uncertainty facing international trade partners.
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Republicans breathe sigh of relief as Supreme Court axes Trump tariffs
The Supreme Court’s ruling that struck down the sweeping global tariffs at the heart of President Trump’s economic policies has produced enormous cracks in the GOP’s outward show of party unity.
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O’Leary says Supreme Court ’caused a nightmare’ with tariff decision
Millionaire investor Kevin O’Leary warned of a “major compliance cost” for business owners in the wake of the Supreme Court’s ruling that blocks President Trump from using emergency powers to impose sweeping tariffs.
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Tariff Ruling Sets Off Scramble to Figure Out What Comes Next
Following the Supreme Court’s decision striking down President Trump’s use of emergency powers to impose global tariffs, companies are scrambling to determine whether they can recover billions in paid duties and how to respond to the administration’s newly announced 10% global tariff under a different legal authority. The article examines the legal uncertainty surrounding tariff authority and the practical consequences for multinational businesses and trade flows.
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Tariff Refunds Would Present Tax, Transfer Pricing Issues (1)
The Supreme Court’s decision to nullify a large swath of the Trump administration’s tariffs cleared the way for companies to seek refunds of tariffs already paid, which could come with a slew of transfer pricing issues for them to navigate.
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Trump’s Options After Supreme Court Said His Tariffs Are Illegal
President Donald Trump can lean on alternative legislation to try to rebuild his tariff wall, after the US Supreme Court ruled that he can’t use a 1977 emergency law to impose import taxes.
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Trump Signs 10% Global Tariff in Bid to Salvage Trade Agenda (2)
President Donald Trump imposed a 10% global tariff on foreign goods, moving quickly to preserve his trade agenda after the US Supreme Court struck down many of the levies he imposed last year.
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Perfection as the Enemy of the Good — Redux: Pillar 2 After Side-by-Side
Lebovitz defends the OECD inclusive framework’s side-by-side pillar 2 package as a pragmatic compromise that accommodates U.S. international tax rules while preserving global minimum tax objectives. He argues that recognition of the U.S. GILTI/NCTI regime and related anti-base-erosion measures reduces conflict and encourages broader adoption of qualified domestic minimum top-up taxes. The piece frames the package as stabilizing the BEPS architecture, addressing developing country concerns, and setting the stage for the 2029 review.
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U.S. Treasury Officials Declare Death of OECD Pillar 1
U.S. Treasury officials declared OECD pillar 1 effectively defunct, reopening debate over digital economy taxation and market-based allocation of taxing rights. While pillar 2 continues through the side-by-side agreement, Treasury signaled that amount A lacked domestic political viability and must be reconsidered in its entirety. The announcement marks a major inflection point in global tax reform and injects renewed uncertainty into multilateral negotiations over cross-border profit allocation.
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Where’s the Business Participation in the U.N. Tax Convention?
This viewpoint critiques the limited participation of business stakeholders in negotiations over the U.N. Framework Convention on International Tax Cooperation and its early protocols. It highlights debates over new nexus standards, gross-basis withholding taxes, significant economic presence concepts, and alternatives to OECD amount B, emphasizing concerns about certainty and administrability. The article raises broader governance questions about transparency, neutrality, and structured engagement in the evolving U.N. tax architecture.
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Tiger by the Tail: Indian Supreme Court Takes On Treaties
The Indian Supreme Court held that a Mauritius tax residency certificate is necessary but not sufficient for treaty benefits, permitting scrutiny of effective management and substance under GAAR principles. The decision suggests treaty relief may be denied when gains are not taxed in the residence jurisdiction, effectively introducing a subject-to-tax dimension into the India–Mauritius treaty. The ruling signals a more anti-avoidance-driven approach to treaty interpretation that could significantly affect inbound investment structures into India.
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OECD Releases New Tools for ‘Amount B’ Transfer Pricing Method
The OECD launched new tools and frequently asked questions for the simplified transfer pricing method known as Amount B, as countries around the world ponder whether the new method is a good fit for them.
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Transfer Pricing in the Pillar 2 Era: Pressure Points and Key Interactions
Majdowski and Smoleń examine how pillar 2’s GloBE regime links transfer pricing outcomes directly to jurisdictional effective tax rate and top-up tax calculations, heightening the consequences of pricing design. They highlight Article 3.2.3 of the model rules as a symmetry mechanism addressing unilateral adjustments, APAs, and post-filing true-ups, and assess how misstatements may trigger pillar 2 exposure under jurisdictional blending and transitional safe harbors. The authors argue that pillar 2 elevates transfer pricing from a bilateral controversy issue to a core component of the global minimum tax compliance strategy.
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What’s Next for Congress on International Tax Reform?
Wolski and Yen assess potential legislative refinements following enactment of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, focusing on structural tensions in the NCTI regime and the base erosion and anti-abuse tax. They propose changes to foreign tax credit basket design, haircut limitations, carryforwards, and branch-CFC alignment to mitigate double taxation and improve administrability. The article frames international tax reform as ongoing, with competitiveness and systemic coherence likely to shape the next phase of congressional action.
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Groups Warn IRS That Foreign Government Rules May Chill Investment
Commenters cautioned that proposed section 892 regulations expanding the definition of “effective control” could disrupt established sovereign investment structures. They argue that broadening control to include certain managerial and veto rights may narrow the exemption for qualified U.S. investments and create uncertainty for minority sovereign investors. The debate highlights the tension between anti-avoidance safeguards and maintaining the United States’ attractiveness to inbound sovereign capital.
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Ireland's R&D Tax Credit Compass Outlines Potential Development
Ireland’s Department of Finance released a “compass” report evaluating the structure and future direction of its R&D tax credit regime. The review identifies potential reforms to enhance competitiveness, refine qualifying expenditure rules, and reconsider capital treatment while streamlining administration. The initiative reflects broader policy recalibration as Ireland balances fiscal cost, EU considerations, and multinational investment incentives.
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Pillar 2 Will Yield Limited Revenue Gains in Italy
Italian practitioners expect pillar 2 to generate limited new revenue in higher-tax jurisdictions like Italy, viewing it primarily as a structural backstop against low-tax outcomes rather than a revenue raiser. Commentary highlights compliance burdens, including duplication between GloBE reporting and domestic filings, complex jurisdiction-level ETR calculations, and M&A complications. The OECD’s side-by-side safe harbor is not expected to materially reduce obligations for Italian subsidiaries of U.S.-parented groups because domestic top-up and reporting requirements remain.
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Singapore to Raise More Corporate Tax With Pillar 2 Top-Up Tax
Singapore projects increased corporate tax revenue from the fiscal year 2027 as it implements the OECD pillar 2 regime through an MNE top-up tax and a domestic top-up tax. Officials emphasized that while the 15% minimum rate will boost collections, Singapore must expand targeted incentives to remain competitive in a reshoring environment. The 2026 budget pairs minimum-tax compliance with measures such as a 40% corporate income tax rebate and enhanced internationalization and innovation incentives.
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Poland Consults on Digital Services Tax, Faces Critical Next Step
Poland is consulting on a proposed 3% digital services tax targeting large multinationals with significant global and Polish revenue thresholds. Stakeholders raised concerns about competitiveness, administrative complexity, enforceability, and possible U.S. retaliation, while the finance ministry reportedly remains cautious about alignment with international tax commitments. Inclusion in the government’s legislative agenda will determine whether the DST advances toward parliamentary debate in 2026.
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Nations Back Launch of Transfer Pricing Task Force at UN Talks
A United Nations committee will form a task force to look at why developing nations can’t access transfer pricing databases, after hearing support for the move from a large group of countries as part of negotiations for a new UN tax treaty.
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Global Fund Critiques Proposed Regs on U.S. Investments by Foreign Governments
The New Zealand Superannuation Fund contends that proposed section 892 regulations depart from longstanding interpretations by reversing the presumption that debt investments are non-commercial and expanding the effective control standard. The submission argues that routine creditor protections and minority governance rights could inadvertently trigger commercial activity or tainting under the revised framework. It urges the Treasury to restore the non-commercial presumption, clarify safe harbors, and provide grandfathering relief for existing sovereign investments.
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Digital Services Taxes and the WTO
The authors argue the U.S. refusal to restore a functioning WTO appellate system amid DST disputes is a rational response to asymmetric litigation risk, not hypocrisy. They contend that any U.S. challenge to foreign DSTs could invite counterclaims targeting U.S. tax provisions such as FDII and IC-DISC as prohibited export subsidies, which are easier to attack under WTO doctrine than DSTs. The piece frames DST conflict as a structural tax-trade mismatch, in which U.S. corporate tax incentives may be more legally vulnerable than the DSTs the United States opposes.
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OECD Notes Progress on Addressing Harmful Tax Practices
The OECD’s Forum on Harmful Tax Practices released updated peer review findings under BEPS Action 5, assessing preferential regimes and substantial activity requirements. Ireland and Peru were found not to have harmful regimes, while Fiji abolished two incentive regimes, and Anguilla and the Turks and Caicos Islands were flagged for follow-up. The report reflects ongoing multilateral monitoring and pressure to align domestic regimes with substance and transparency standards.
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Tax Bill Slashes MNE Manufacturing Tax Rates, Report Says
A new Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center report finds that international provisions in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, including revisions to the net controlled foreign corporations tested income regime, substantially reduce effective marginal tax rates on new export-oriented investments. The analysis indicates that outbound manufacturing activity benefits disproportionately, potentially altering location decisions for U.S.-parented multinationals. The findings raise broader policy questions about competitiveness, base erosion, and the long-term trajectory of the post-TCJA international tax framework.
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PwC Warns Dutch Lawmakers of Corporate Exodus Amid Pillar 2 Deal
PwC told Dutch lawmakers that the pillar 2 “side-by-side” safe harbor could prompt multinationals to shift their headquarters, R&D, or other high-value functions out of the Netherlands, thereby threatening the corporate tax base. It urged policymakers to consider competitiveness responses, such as lowering the corporate rate, redesigning innovation box incentives to align with the substance-based safe harbor, or using Article 11 of the EU Pillar 2 directive to opt out of the domestic top-up tax. The warning reflects broader EU tensions between minimum-tax coordination and national competitiveness strategies, as pillar 2 begins to influence location decisions.
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Lawmakers Announce Bill to Stop Corporate Inversions
Senate Democrats introduced the Stop Corporate Inversions Act to restrict further transactions that move a company’s tax residence abroad through acquisitions of smaller foreign corporations. The proposal signals renewed appetite to tighten the inversion rules and reinforce §7874-style constraints as part of a broader anti-base-erosion agenda. If enacted, it could narrow viable outbound restructuring paths and increase the tax friction of cross-border M&A involving U.S.-parented groups.
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Nathaniel Moran Announces Foreign Tech Deterrence Bill
Rep. Moran’s proposal would deny major federal business tax incentives to companies that use technology controlled by foreign entities of concern, tying tax eligibility to national security and data-risk considerations. The bill would effectively convert credits and incentives into a compliance lever for supply chain and technology governance, potentially affecting planning in manufacturing and tech-heavy sectors. It reflects a broader trend of using tax policy to advance geopolitical and cybersecurity goals, adding another layer of constraints to incentive-driven investment decisions.
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An End to Double Taxation
This opinion piece by the former chairman of the House Ways & Means committee discusses the administration’s agreement advancing a new global minimum tax framework aimed at reducing double taxation across jurisdictions. The article situates the proposal within broader OECD-led efforts to coordinate corporate tax rules and reallocate taxing rights internationally. It highlights ongoing political and policy debates surrounding implementation and sovereignty concerns. For international tax practitioners, the piece reflects the continuing evolution of multilateral tax coordination and the policy tensions surrounding global minimum tax enforcement.
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Tax Treaty Override Issue Has Nations Squaring Off in UN Talks
Countries with large tax treaty networks said that a prospective United Nations tax agreement on cross-border services would see far less uptake if it required an automatic override of existing treaties.