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Int'l Tax News

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Testimony of Stephen E. Shay Prefessor of Practice Harvard Law School

  • By Senate.gov

by Senate.gov

There is no normative reason to privilege foreign business income beyond allowing a credit for foreign income taxes, Stephen Shay of Harvard Law School said at a March 17 Senate Finance Committee hearing atwhich he recommended taxing foreign business income broadlywhile allowing a foreign tax credit, alongwith other international tax reforms.

For the testimony, go here.

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Testimony of Anthony Smith Vice President of Tax and Treasurer Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc

  • By Senate.gov

Anthony H. Smith of Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. at a March 17 Senate Finance Committee hearing suggested several specific areas Congress should prioritizewhen considering U.S. international tax system reform,which he said should be designed to end the uncertainly that currently pervades the tax system for U.S. companieswith global operations.

For the testimony, go here.

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Combatting corporate tax avoidance: Commission presents Tax Transparency Package

  • By European Commission

The European Commission today presented a package of tax transparency measures as part of its ambitious agendato tackle corporate tax avoidance and harmful tax competition in the EU. A key element of this Tax Transparency Package is a proposal to introduce the automatic exchange of information between Member States on their tax rulings.

For the release, go here.

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Statement of Pamela F. Olson to the Senate Finance Committee on Building a Competitive US International Tax System

  • By Senate.gov

The U.S. international tax system has fallen behind other countries' efforts to attract investment and promote growth, and it is time for Congress to enact tax reform that reduces the U.S. rate, broadens the base, and increases U.S. competitiveness, Pamela Olson of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP said at a March 17 Senate Finance Committee hearing.

For the testimony, go here.

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Osborne Unveils Tax Breaks In U.K. During Pre-Election Pitch


U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne announced an array of tax cuts, higher economic growth, and help for the North Sea oil industry in a push for a Conservative victory in May's general election.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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BEPS Patent Box Nexus Should Serve as Wake-Up Call for U.S.


The OECD's nexus approach toward patent boxes under the base erosion and profit-shifting project should serve as awake-up call for the United States if itwishes to keep research and developmentwithin its borders, Senate Finance Committee member Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., said at a March 17 committee hearing.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Executive Planning Tax Rate Under 3% Says U.S. Code Hurts


The treasurer of a U.S. company that is projecting a global tax rate of less than 3 percent this year said the country's tax system makes it difficult to compete in overseas markets.

For the story, go here.

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Breakout of International Tax Overhaul Unlikely, Practitioner, Senator Say


The notion of moving an overhaul of international taxes on a separate track than a business tax code rewrite may have the approval of some in the businessworld, but policy makers and practitioners say it isn't likely.

During a March 17 Senate Finance Committee hearing on making international tax law more competitive, Sen. Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) asked awitnesswhether splitting off an international tax revamp to curb base erosion and profit shifting aswell as corporate inversionswas preferable towaiting for a broader tax code overhaul.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Critics say Obama has set off a fire sale of US firms to foreign buyers. So far, theyre wrong


When the Obama administration changed the rulesto make it harder for US companies to move their headquartersÔøΩand their taxable profitsÔøΩoverseas through the reverse mergers called tax inversions, it put the kibosh on at least one such deal. But now critics of the move say rules have made it easier for foreign companies to scoop up USfirms.

For the story, go here.

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Fifth Circuit Reverses Tax Court in BMC,' Says Company Never Agreed to Indebtedness


The Internal Revenue Service erred in partially disallowing taxpayer BMC Software Inc.'s repatriated dividends tax deduction under tax code Section 965, a federal appeals court held (BMC Software, Inc. v. Commissioner, 5th Cir., No. 13-60684, 3/13/15.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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U.K. Launches Radical' Push To Modernize Business Tax System

  • By Bureau of National Affairs

The U.K. treasury agency has launched a "radical" review of the country's business rates system in an effort to modernize it and change theway domestic businesses pay the tax, aiming to make it fairer to smaller businesses.

Announcing the review March 16, Chief Treasury Secretary Danny Alexander said the 30-year-old system needs to better reflect changes in property values.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Switzerland Focus 2015 now available

  • By International Tax Review

by International Tax Review

Articles on the impact of BEPS on Switzerland's overhaul of its corporate tax system; the Swiss VAT treatment of financial services; andwhat steps Switzerland is taking to adapt to exchange of information are among the articles in this year's edition of the popular country focus.

For the stories, go here.

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Present Law And Selected Policy Issues In The U.S. Taxation Of Cross-Border Income

  • By The Joint Committee on Taxation

by Joint Committee on Taxation

The Senate Committee on Finance has scheduled a public hearing on March 17, 2015, titled "Building a Competitive U.S. International Tax System." This document, prepared by the staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation, covers a number of topics related to the U.S. taxation of cross-border income.

For the report, go here.

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Joint Committee on Taxation Outlines International Policy for Senate Hearing


by Marc Heller (Burear of National Affairs)

The congressional Joint Committee on Taxation summarized U.S. international tax policy, including implications of corporate inversions, in a report to the Senate Finance Committee.

Among other features, the report (JCX-51-15), released March 16, lists inversions completed or proposed from 2009 to Nov. 15, 2014, ofwhich therewere at least 30, the JCT said. The committee prepared the report in advance of a March 17 hearing on international tax issues.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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The Truthiness of 'Lockout': A Review of What We Know


Stephen E. Shay challenges the assertion that lockout is a primary reason to exempt multinational corporations' foreign dividends from active business income.

For the viewpoint, go here. (subscription required)

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News Analysis: Inversions or Not: Cross-Border Deals and International Tax Rules


In news analysis, Mindy Herzfeld examines how recent trends in cross-border deal-making illustrate the importance of U.S. international tax reform, beyond current efforts to halt corporate inversions.

For the article, go here. (subscription required)

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Economic Analysis: Untangling Corporate Effective Tax Rates


In economic analysis, Martin A. Sullivan looks at various studies that have calculated the corporate effective rate for the United States and its major economic competitors.

For the article, go here. (subscription required)

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Tax inversion curb turns tables on US


by David Crew, James Fontanella-Khan and Megan Murphy (Financial Times)

A crackdown by the Obama administration on "tax inversion" deals,which allowed US companies to slash their tax bills, has had the perverse effect of prompting a sharp increase in foreign takeovers of American groups.

In September the US Treasury all but stamped out tax inversions,which enabled a US company to pay less tax by acquiring a rival from a jurisdictionwith a lower corporate tax rate, such as Ireland or the UK, and moving the combined group's domicile to that country.

For the story, go here.

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French Report Recommends Sharing' Digital Firms' Profits Among Jurisdictions


Countries should consider jointly developing a special rule to allow tax administrations to "share" corporate profits of giant multinational Internet companies, as a replacement for today's "obsolete" rules for transfer pricing and territory-based taxation, according to a French government report.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Cut U.S. Rates, Launch Territorial Tax System, Reports Contend

  • By Katz. David M.

Reducing corporate tax rates and introducing a territorial tax system should be centerpieces of reform andwould help U.S. competitiveness. studies suggest.
For the story, go here.

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Jumping the Gate on BEPS: Unilateral Actions Weaken OECD's Plan


The OECD's base erosion and profit-shifting project has yielded numerous unilateral actions that have been roundly criticized as undermining the very initiatives that inspired them, but according to one OECD official, there's a silver lining.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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10% VAT in Korea to hit top e-commerce companies on July 1


Korea is targeting global online retailers in its expanded VAT legislation,whichwill tax the non-resident distributors of digital content to Korea customers. From July 1 2015 electronic service providerswill be charged 10% VAT on all sales made to Korean consumers, regardless ofwhether they have a Korean presence.
For the story, go here.

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New Study: Uncompetitive Tax Code Contributing to Foreign Acquisitions of U.S. Companies

  • By Lift America

A report released today by Business Roundtable reveals that the competitive disadvantage caused by an outdated tax code led to a $179 billion net loss of American companies and business assets to foreign buyers from 2003-2013. Thestudyalso finds that a 25 percent U.S. corporate tax ratewould have prevented foreign purchases of 1,300 companies during that same period.

For the release, go here.

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Buying and Selling: Cross-border mergers and acquisitions and the US corporate income tax

  • By Business Roundtable

Business Roundtable

The United States' high statutory corporate income tax rate andworldwide system of taxation have disadvantaged U.S. businesses in the global market for cross-border mergers and acquisitions,which could have long-lasting effects on U.S. productivity,wages, and living standards, EY said in a March 10 report prepared for the Business Roundtable.
For the report, go here.

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Stakeholders Seek Flexibility in OECD IP Nexus Approach


OECD guidance on the application of the nexus approach for preferential intellectual property regimes should be flexible on the definition of qualifying IP assets, scope of qualifying research and development expenditures, and procedures for tracking and tracing of expenditures, stakeholders say.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Change to Ireland's general anti-avoidance regime


The Finance Act 2014 introduced substantial changes to Ireland's general anti-avoidance rule (New GAAR).

Fro the story, go here.

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U.S. Tax System Encourages Foreign Takeovers, Business Roundtable Study Says


Big businesses are gearing up to make the case for overhauling the U.S. tax system, armedwith a new study arguing that it is encouraging foreign takeovers of American firms.

For the story, go here.

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Egypt to Cut Top Tax Rate Ahead of Conference on Foreign Investment


Egypt said itwill cut its top rate of income tax, three days before the start of a conference to boost investment in North Africa's largest economy.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Investment Industry Group Seeks More Time To Implement Section 871(m) Dividend Rules


The Investment Industry Association of Canada is adding its voice to a growing chorus of financial groups asking for extensions of time to implement rules intended to stop foreign investors from skirting the U.S.withholding tax on dividends.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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JP Morgan Report: Foreign-Profits Tax Break Unlikely to Boost U.S. Business Investment


Giving U.S. companies a tax incentive to bring home overseas earnings may do more to spur growth in dividends and stock repurchases than business investment, according to a JPMorgan Chase & Co. analysis.

A one-time tax break thatwas adopted in 2004 had relatively little effect on the pace of capital spending, according to data compiled by the Federal Reserve and the Commerce Department.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Building a Competitive U.S. International Tax System

  • By Finance Senate

The Senate Finance Committeewill hold a hearing on improving the international tax system and improving U.S. competitiveness on March 17, at 10 a.m., in Room 215 of the Dirksen Senate Office Building, Chair Orrin G. Hatch, R-Utah, announced in a March 10 release.

For the release, go here.

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European Commission challenges France's 3% tax on dividend distributions

  • By PwC

The European Commission has launched an infringement procedure against France regarding the 3% tax on dividend distributions that entered into force in 2012. The 3% tax applies to dividends and other distributions (including deemed dividends for French tax purposes) paid by French companies or French branches of non-European Union (EU) companies.

For the PwC Insight, go here.

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Tax Holiday For Repatriated Foreign Earning Unlikely: JP Morgan

  • By Mani

The prospect of a corporate tax holidayfor repatriated foreign earnings is unlikely, and even if itwere to become law, itwould have minimal impact on the economic outlook, notes JPMorgan Chase & Co.

For the story, go here.

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Tax haven and worldwide reporting legislative proposals

  • By PwC

There have been many state legislative proposals in recent months that impact international business organizations doing business in the US. Various forms of tax haven laws are already enacted in Alaska, D.C., Montana, Rhode Island, Oregon, andwest Virginia. This legislative sessionwe have seen Massachusetts, Kentucky, Maine, and New Hampshire introduce tax haven billswhile Oregon and Montana attempt to broaden their tax haven laws.

For the PwC Insight, go here.

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Special Features 2015

  • By International Tax Review

Read this month's special features on North America and Ireland,which cover issues such as derivative forward agreements and exchangeable share transactions in Canada, US transfer pricing rules and life after the double Irish.

For the articles, go here.

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The Role of Moral Hazard Under the Arm's-Length Principle


Kartikeya Singh,w. Joe Murphy and Christine Saliba of PricewaterhouseCoopers present a critique of the latest proposed guidance published by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on allocations of risk in connectionwith intercompany transactions. The authors argue that the OECD's proposal of "imputing moral hazard" to an intercompany transaction is a flawed application of the arm's-length principle.

For the Insight, go here. (subscription required)

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U.S. Official: 'Rabid Recharacterization' Poses Dangers to Developing Countries


The international project to combat base erosion and profit shifting poses dangers for developing countries if it causes a shift away from a principled approach to the valuation of transactions, a Treasury official said.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Why Corporate Inversion Are Irrelevant to U.S. Tax Policy


By Bret N. Bogenschneider (Tax Analysts)

Bret N. Bogenschneider argues that corporate inversions result primarily from the inability of shareholders to replace ineffective corporate management under Delaware corporate law, rather than from a failure of capital export neutrality.

For the viewpoint, go here. (subscription require)

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Breakthrough on BEPS Risk Draft Could Lead to Larger Consensus


Although the United States is not prepared to support the current OECD risk and recharacterization draft, it isworking hard to find consensus that could also resolve conflicts on related drafts, said Michael McDonald, financial economist (business and international taxation), Treasury Office of Tax Analysis.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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India Budget 2015 Special Report

  • By International Tax Review

ITR haswritten a report on the 2015 India Budget.

The first full Budget from Narendra Modi's Indian governmentwas keenly awaited by corporates, partly because of the pro-business sentiment presented by Modi and his finance minister, Arun Jaitley. The two did not disappoint, bringing clarity to taxpayers and foreign investors on a number of fronts.

For the report, go here.

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HMRC nets £1.1bn as it doubles take from probes at multinationals


HM Revenue & Customs raked in £1.1bn from challenging the pricing of multinational companies' internal deals in 2013-14 ÔøΩ more than twice as much as in the previous year.

The increase came as HMRC stepped up its "transfer-pricing" investigations ÔøΩ scrutinising the prices charged on transactions between different parts of the same company ÔøΩ following a public outcry over multinational tax planning.

For the story, go here.

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Negative Harmonisation: The EC, goodwill and state aid

  • By International Tax Review

by International Tax Review

In the last quarter of 2007, the European Commission notified Spain of its decision to open a formal investigation procedure under article 88(2) of the EC Treaty concerning the tax regime for the amortisation of financial goodwill. Jose Maria Garcia-Valdecasas Alloza, partner of Balaguer – Morera & Asociados and associate lecturer at the University of Barcelona, explores the EC's "negative tax harmonisation."

For the story, go here.

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The Brockman brief: Interest: Double taxation equality is fading


by Keith Brockman (International Tax Review)

Keith Brockman, global tax director at Mars, lecturer and author of the Strategizing Multinational Tax Risks blog, looks atwhy countries are enacting unilateral legislation to limit interest deductibility, the shift in focus from eliminating double taxation to eliminating non-taxation, andwhy, as a result, double taxation via interest limitations is here to stay.

For the story, go here.

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Navigating NZ treatment of cross-border service supplies

  • By International Tax Review

by International Tax Review

Taxpayers should beware of the knotty problems that can result from the supply of services by a non-resident to a New Zealand resident, explains Tim Stewart of Russell McVeagh.

For the story, go here.

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Treasury Rethinking Part of its Inversion Crackdown


The U.S. Treasury Department is rethinking parts of its recent crackdown on " inversions" after complaints that the rules are crimping legitimate mergers in the insurance sector.

For the story, go here.

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Reviewing The Rubio-Lee Proposal For Tax Reform


by Tony Nitti (Forbes.com)

Hey, I've got a neatidea…why don'twe take a break from futilelyattemptingto understand theexisting tax law and devote sometime to futilelyattempting to understand proposed tax law thatwill, in all likelihood,never become a reality?Sound good? Great. Lastweek, Republican Senators Marco Rubio (Fla) and Mike Lee (Utah) released a fairly detailed plan to overhaul the existing Code. The creatively-coined "Rubio-Lee" planhasgarnered a lot of attention, and considering Republicans currently control both the House and Senate, itshould certainly be taken seriously.Let's take a look at the plan's most interesting talking points.

For the article, go here.

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International updates - March 2015

  • By International Tax Review

Twenty jurisdictions are covered in the latest international updates from our correspondents around theworld. Topics include BEPS in South Africa; the US Budget; limited partnerships in Luxembourg and Italy's Patent Box regime.

For the updates, go here.

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Treasury Official Preview Guidance on CFC Load to Foreign Partnership


The Treasury Department and IRS have taken note of the existing authorities on adopting an aggregate or entity view of a partnership as they develop guidance on the section 956 rules on controlled foreign corporation loans to foreign partnershipswith U.S. partners, said Douglas Poms, acting Treasury deputy international tax counsel.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Treasury Considering Carveout From Cash Box for Upstream Assets


Treasurywill consider a carveout from the cash box rule for upstream assets in regs thatwill follow the anti-inversion notice (Notice 2014-52, 2014-42 IRB 712), a Treasury official said March 6.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Official: Rules to Curb Corporate Inversion Well Within Treasury Department's Authority


by Alex M. Parker (Bureau of Nationa Affairs)

Government officials defended their plans to sharpen tax code Section 956 regulations to combat so-called post-inversion hop-scotching, claiming their proposed regulations arewellwithin their powers granted under Subpart F rules.

For the story, go here. (subscription reqiured)

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