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Tax Wars: How to End the Conflict over Taxing Global Digital Commerce

  • By Arthur J. Cockfield

In the last two years, dozens of governments have proposed or introduced unilateral tax measures to tax foreign-based technology companies. The new tax innovations include specialwithholding taxes, diverted profit taxes, minimum taxes, and digital services taxes. The rise of these unilateral measures threatens an international tax 'war' among governments that could stiflenew business models or even the spread of the global digital economy. This article reviews how international reform efforts have failed to constrain aggressive international tax planning and how the global digital tax conflict masks a growing dissatisfactionwith how to tax value associatedwith global transactions.The author concludes thatacoordinated solution that creates an economic presence test (a Quantitative Economic Presence Permanent Establishment) and modifies how tax revenues are divided between countries (e.g., the Residual Profit Split by Income proposal) is the bestway to address these global developments.

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France and US seek to resolve digital tax dispute

  • By Victor Mallet and Kiran Stacey

Officials to hold talks to head off new round of US trade sanctions

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Google to end the use of 'double Irish' tax loophole

  • By Richard Waters

Internet company to consolidate all of its intellectual property in the US

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Austrian Coalition Deal Would Trim Corporate Tax Rate to 21 Percent

  • By Annagabriella Colon

Austria's coalition government has announced a four-year program that calls for a corporate tax cutfrom 25 percent to 21 percent, aswell as a revised goal of climate neutrality by 2040.

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BEPS Measures Have Ambiguous Economics Effects, IMF Paper Says

  • By Ryan Finley

Although tax avoidance by multinationals has become an international political priority, it remainsunclearwhether anti-profit-shifting measures are economically beneficial for either high-tax or low-taxcountries, according to an IMFworking paper.

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A Look Ahead: On the Brink of a New Tax World Order, or Chaos?

  • By Stephanie Soong Johnston

The OECD isworking at a breakneck pace to find a multilateral solution to update the internationalcorporate tax rules for the digital age, and going into 2020, the stakes for thatwork have never been higher.

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A Look Ahead: Prospects Unclear for U.S. Tax Treaties in 2020

  • By Annagabriella Colon

 

The outlook for U.S. tax treaties and the OECD multilateral instrument in 2020 seems uncertain,particularly in light of the stormy international trade climate among major trading nations, practitioners say.

 

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OECD Says Oversharing Tax Data Can Overwhelm Governments

  • By Joseph Boris

Automatic exchanges of jurisdiction-based reports that multinational companies file about their tax activitiesworldwide are an unintended outcome of pro-transparency efforts that may inundate tax administrationswith confusing data, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development has said.

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Business Divide Over Global Tax Plan Emerges In OECD Talks

  • By Alex M. Parker

An abrupt about-face by the U.S. on an international project to overhaul the global tax system has revealed deep divisions among American businesses over the proposal,which could hike their foreign taxes.

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States' Slow Conformity To TCJA Stunting Growth, Report Says

  • By Daniel Tay

States' slow responses to the 2017 federal tax overhaul's provisions on taxing international income have created uncertainty that hampers growth, the Tax Foundation said Thursday in a report that also criticized certain states' partial adoption of the overhaul.

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Austria Rejects German Financial Transaction Tax Plan

  • By Todd Buell

Austria's finance minister has told his German counterpart he can't support Germany's plan for a financial transaction tax, presenting a potentially serious roadblock to efforts by 10 European Union countries to reach agreement on the tax.

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US Cos. Have Brought Home $1T Since TCJA, Report Says

  • By Natalie Olivio

U.S. multinationals have repatriated over $1 trillion since Congress overhauled the revenue code in late 2017 to let companies bring home their offshore earnings tax-free after a one-time payment, according to data released Thursday by the U.S. Commerce Department.

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Treasury Mulling Retroactive Relief In High-Tax Exemption

  • By Alex M. Parker

The U.S. Treasury Department is consideringwhether to retroactively apply a new high-tax exception to global income, a government official said Thursday.

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GOP Tax Overhaul Leaves Unending Policy Debate In Its Wake

  • By Stephen Cooper

Sunday marks two years since the GOP's Tax Cuts and Jobs Act sped through Congresswithout a single Democratic vote, and lawmakers are still arguing over the law's impact on federal budget deficits, economic growth and business investments.

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EU action safeguards OECD global tax reform

  • By Danish Mehboob

The European Parliament advanced a resolution on December 18 to adopt an EU standard to tax digital companies in case the OECD fails to find consensus on its global approach.

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A Look Ahead: High-Stakes Transfer Pricing Dispute to Continue in 2020

  • By Ryan Finley

 

 

Although 2019 delivered two highly anticipated Ninth Circuit decisions in transfer pricing cases,disputes concerning intangible valuation and differing interpretations of the arm's-length standard appearpoised to continue unabated in 2020

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ECOFIN to Address Digital Taxation

  • By Elodie Lamer

EU finance ministers are expected to discuss international reform of digital taxation during anEconomic and Financial Affairs Council meeting in January 2020

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Rocky Shoals Ahead for International Tax

  • By Mindy Herzfeld

Mindy Herzfeld analyzes the various factors that threaten the future of today's international taxregime

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The Impact of Profit Shifting on Economic Activity and Tax Competition

  • By Alexander Klemm and Li Liu

A growing empirical literature has documented significant profit shifting activities by multinationals. This paper looks at the impact of such profit shifting on real activity and tax competition. Real activity can be affected as profit shifting changesÔøΩand theoretically most likely reducesÔøΩthe cost of capital. Tax competition, even over real capital, is affected, because a permissive attitude toward profit shifting can be seen as a selective tax reduction for multinationals. Tightening profit shifting rules, in turn, can affect tax competition through the main rate. This paper discusses these issues theoretically andwith the help of a simulation to assess the impact of profit-shifting on investment, revenues, and government behavior. Using the theoretical framework, it also provides a brief overview of the related empirical literature.

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Hidden Treasures: The Impact of Automatic Exchange of Information on Cross-Border Tax Evasion


The authorsanalyze the impact of the exchange of information in tax matters in reducing international taxevasion between 1995 and 2018. Based on bilateral deposit data for 39 reporting countries andmore than 200 counterparty jurisdictions,theyfind that recent automatic exchange of information frameworks reduced foreign-owned deposits in offshore jurisdictions by an average of 25 percent. This effect is statistically significant and, as expected, much larger than the effect of information exchange upon request,which is not significant.To test the sensitivity oftheirfindings,theyestimatedcountries' offshore status and the impact of information exchange simultaneously using a finite mixture model. The results confirmedthat automatic (and not upon request) exchange of information impacts cross-border deposits in offshore jurisdictions,which are characterized by low-income tax rates and strong financial secrecy.

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U.S. Calls for Broader Scope, Narrower Nexus for Global Tax Deal

  • By Stephanie Soong Johnston

The United Stateswants an OECD global tax overhaul proposal to apply to "scalewithout mass" digital companies and torestrict the number of countries that can collect taxes paid on those companies' residual profits.

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Brazil to Gradually Align Transfer Pricing Rules with OECD

  • By Ryan Finley

After a 15-month OECD review of Brazil's unorthodox transfer pricing system identified significant double taxation andbase erosion risks, Brazilian officials have announced plans to gradually align the country's regime fullywith OECD standards.

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40% Of Global Investment Goes To Shell Cos., IMF Paper Says

  • By Alex M. Parker

As much as 40% of international corporate investments are actually going into shell companieswith no real connection to local economies, according to a newworking paper released by the International Monetary Fund.

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Mexico implements BEPS Action 4 to limit interest deductibility

  • By Carlos Naime & Manuel Baron

The Mexican government has set out to reform the tax system to include the OECD's recommended limits on interest deductibility in accordancewith BEPS Action 4. Mexican tax reformwill define 2020.

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The US supports GloBE, but global taxpayers are hesitant

  • By Danish Mehboob

The OECD's global anti-base erosion (GloBE) proposal under pillar two is broader than taxpayers expected. It risks over-complicating international tax before the impact of the BEPS project settles in.

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Unilever turns to UN standards for global digital tax proposals

  • By Josh White

Anglo-Dutch corporate group Unilever has called for the OECD to link its digital tax proposals to the UN's sustainable development goals.

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The unified approach

  • By Pascal Saint Amans

The OECD has embarked upon an ambitious project to redistribute taxing rights around theworld in a bid to avoid more unilateral action. Here Pascal Saint-Amans makes the case for the unified approach to pillar one.

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INSIGHT: What the Election Result Means for U.K. Taxes

  • By Paul Falvey

The Conservative Party haswon the 2019 general election. Paul Falvey, of BDO U.K., discusseswhat this means for U.K. taxes. How boldwill the new government be?

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Brazil's Tax Rules Need Upgrade Before Nation Can Join OECD (1)

  • By Sony Kassam

Brazil needs to do more to stop multinational companies from shifting profits offshore and to align its tax systemwith the rest of theworld, the OECD and the country's tax authority said.

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EU Lawmaker Majority Wants United Position for OECD Tax Talks (1)

  • By Joe Kirwin

European Union lawmakerswant member countries to adopt a united position ahead of Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development talks to reform the international tax system for multinational companies.

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INSIGHT: The OECD Unified Approach√¢$an Indian Perspective

  • By Suranjali Tandon

Suranjali Tandon of the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, New Delhi, looks at the OECD Secretariat's "unified approach,"with a focus on the stancewhich has been taken by India so far, and the potential elements of the approachwhich may not be acceptable to India.

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U.S. Weighs Limits on Taxable Presence in Global Tax Rewrite

  • By Isabel Gottlieb

The U.S.wants the OECD's plan to revamp global tax rules to apply to more companies, but limit the countries that can tax them, a Treasury official said.

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IRS Wants to Help Companies Bring Intangible Assets Back to U.S.

  • By Allyson Versprille

The IRSwants to know how it can help companies that are looking to unwind pre-tax law transactions to bring intangible property back to the U.S., according to a top agency official.

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U.S. Companies" Repatriated Cash Hits $1 Trillion Under Tax Law

  • By Reade Pickert

Corporations have brought back more than $1 trillion of overseas profits to the U.S. since Congress overhauled the international tax system and prodded companies to repatriate offshore funds, a report showed Thursday.

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Double Counting Accounting: How Much Profit of Multinational Enterprises Is Really in Tax Havens?

  • By Jennifer Blouin and Leslie A. Robinson

Logo SSRNBy Jennifer Blouin and Leslie A. Robinson

Putting an end to the base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS) activity of multinational enterprises (MNEs) is on the national agenda of nearly every country in theworld.while many influential papers suggest that the scope and magnitude of the BEPS problem is quite large,we show that these magnitudes are likely overstated due to the accounting treatment of indirectly-owned foreign affiliates in the BEA's U.S. international economic accounts data.we explain how this accounting treatment leads to double counting of foreign income and to misallocations to the incorrect jurisdiction.we demonstrate an appropriate correction, and show that the correction significantly reduces the magnitude of the BEPS estimates. For instance, our correction reduces an estimate of the U.S. fiscal effects of BEPS from 30-45% to 4-15% of corporate tax revenues lost to BEPS activity of MNEs (Clausing 2016). Ourwork has far-reaching implications, as the U.S.' national statistics have a unique accounting convention that can make comparisons of the U.S. national statistics to those of other countries difficult to interpret.

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A Critical Reassessment of the Role of Neutrality in International Taxation

  • By David Elkins

Logo SSRNBy David Elkins

Neutrality plays a central role in the literature on international taxation. In its most prevalent form, the concept of neutrality posits that in order to maximize aggregate globalwelfare, capital needs to flow towhere itwould produce the highest pretax return. The thesis of this Article is that neutrality is ordinarily inapplicable in the field of international taxation.

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Corporations paid 11.3 percent tax rate last year, in steep drop under Trump's law

  • By Jeff Stein and Christopher Ingraham

Ninety-one of America's biggest firms paid no federal taxes, the report found.

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Final Regs Narrow Two Sets of Subpart F Relatedness Rules

  • By Carrie Brandon Elliot

Carrie Elliot describes how final regulations narrow the Subpart F-related definition of related persons and the applicationof active rents exception for CFCs payments to property owners.

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OECD Aims to Publish Global Tax Reform Analysis in Early 2020

  • By Stephanie Soong Johnston

The OECD continuesworking on economic analysis and impact assessments of the pillar 1 and pillar 2 proposals thatcountries are considering and hopes to start publishing some findings in early 2020.

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Is the OECD's Project Salvageable?

  • By Mindy Herzfeld

Mindy Herzfeld examines alternatives to the OECD's pillar 1 proposal following a stepping back from the process by the United States

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U.S. Proposal for Pillar 1 Safe Harbor Sparks Concern

  • By Kiarra Strocko

A pillar 1 safe harbor regime is not a path the OECD is actively pursuing, but it isn't precluding the option of a safe harborregime, according toan OECD official

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OECD Global Tax Pact Likely To Win Out Over Chaos

  • By Todd Buell

While muchwork remains on the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's new global taxing approach, a deal on reallocation of taxing rights and a minimum tax is likely because failure to agreewould cause chaos, an OECD official told Law360.

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Nations Remain Committed To Tax Reform, OECD Official Says

  • By Matt Thompson

All members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development inclusive framework on tax reform remain committed to the process, an OECD official told stakeholders attending a public consultation held Monday near Paris.

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10 EU Countries Nearing Deal On Financial Transaction Tax

  • By Todd Buell

A group of 10 European Union countries is approaching an agreement on a financial transaction tax, Germany's finance minister, Olaf Scholz, has said in a letter to fellow ministers.

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UK political parties clash over DSTs

  • By Patrick Wiseman

The UK's political parties have taken different stances onwhether and how to introduce a digital services tax (DST) despite the threat of US retaliation.

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Brazil reveals 2020 tax reform proposals

  • By Mattias Cruz Cano

The Brazilian government has announced that itwill start presenting proposals to congress to overhaul the country's complex tax system starting in 2020.

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U.S. Tax Cuts Drive Revenue Dropoff in OECD Countries: Report

  • By Siri Bulusu

Tax revenue as a percentage of GDP in OECD countries remained unchanged from 2017 to 2018, the first time in recent years that the ratio didn't increase, according to a report. Link:

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France to Seek Europe Tech Tax Deal If No U.S. Pact: Minister

  • By Ben Livesey and Vivek Shankar

If the U.S. cannot agree to a global deal on digital taxes, Francewill try for an agreementwith Europe, the French minister for digital affairs says on Bloomberg Television.

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INSIGHT: Taxing Multinationals√¢$The GloBE Proposal for a Global Minimum Tax

  • By Lorraine Eden

The 135 member countries in the OECD/G20 Inclusive Framework on BEPS are considering the adoption of a global minimum corporate income tax for taxing multinationals as part of the Pillar Two (GloBE) proposals for taxing the digital economy. Lorraine Eden of Texas A&M University provides a detailed analysis of the global minimum tax proposal, discussed its benefits and costs, and provides policy recommendations.

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EU Trade Chief Hogan, Lighthizer to Discuss French Tariff Threat

  • By Peter Flanagan

The European Union's chief trade negotiator Phil Hoganwill sit downwith U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer next month to discuss an American threat to hit Francewith tariffs on $2.4 billion of its exports.

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