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OECD Finalizing Reports for 2014 Deliverables, Saint-Amans Says


Speaking during a May 26webcast on the status of the OECD's base erosion and profit-shifting project, Pascal Saint-Amans, director of the OECD Centre for Tax Policy and Administration, reported "tremendous progress" toward finalizing the seven 2014 action plan items.
According to Saint-Amans, the 2014 deliverables are on target to be finalized and releasedwhen the G-20 finance ministers meet in Cairns, Australia, September 20 and 21.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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CRS Report, Corporate Expatriation, Inversions, and Mergers: Tax Issues'


Recently, several high profile companies have indicated an interest in merging or plans to mergewith a non-U.S. headquartered company. This "secondwave" of inversions again raises concerns about an erosion of the U.S. tax base.
Two policy options have been discussed in response: a general reform of the U.S. corporate tax and specific provisions to dealwith tax-motivated international mergers. Some have suggested that lowering the corporate tax rate as part of broader tax reformwould slow the rate of inversions. The second option is to directly target the merger inversions.

For the CRS report, go here. (subscription required)

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Profit Shifting: De Ruiter: OECD to Accelerate BEPS Work Involving Risk Recharacterization, Capital


The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development has decided to speed up itswork on risk recharacterization and capital as part of an effort to address the most challenging transfer pricing issues in its action plan on base erosion and profit shifting, a top OECD transfer pricing official said.
Marlies de Ruiter, head of the OECD's division on tax treaties, transfer pricing and financial transactions, said May 26 that the organization'sworking Party No. 6 on Taxation of Multinational Enterpriseswill soon send its latest draft on transfer pricing issues related to intangible assets to the Committee on Fiscal Affairs (CFA) for approval as a BEPS 2014 deliverable.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Corporate Inversions: Dealmakers Ignore Congressional Warnings On Inversions; Message Confused and Weak'


Democrats in Congress are trying to block companies from cutting their tax bills by moving their legal address outside the U.S. through a merger.
Companies are forging ahead anyway.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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American Corporations Tell IRS the Majority of Their Offshore Profits Are in 12 Tax Havens

  • By Citizens for Tax Justice

A few days after Americans filed their tax returns last month, the Internal Revenue Service
released data on the offshore subsidiaries of U.S. corporations. The data demonstrate, in an
indirectway, that these companies are not playing by the same rules as the rest of us.

For the report, go here.

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Mammoth rise in tax audits worldwide


Tax audits have risen 73%worldwide, giving corporations around theworld plenty to think aboutwhen it comes to having their tax affairs in order.

For the story, go here.

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News Analysis: Countries Implement BEPS on Their Own


Let's repeat. The OECD base erosion and profit-shifting project is a European initiative designed to patch the current international system of transfer pricing and separate company accounting. It is not a Trojan horse for formulary apportionment based on sales. That regime may evolve, but not from BEPS.
Sowhat is the OECD doing? The OECD is trying to coordinate and make consistent the various domestic measures that European countries have been pursuing -- long before this project came about -- to counterwhat they see as offensive tax planning by U.S. multinationals. Herding cats is such a hackneyed phrase!

For the story, go here. (Subscription required)

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Economic Analysis: Lessons From the Last War on Inversions


If too many U.S. companies are able to shift their legal residence to foreign locations, thewhole U.S. system ofworldwide taxation could unravel.
If firms comprising a significant portion of an industry in the United States become legally domiciled outside it, theywill enjoy tax advantages not available to their domestically domiciled competitors. The domestic firms left behindwill justifiably cry foul and seek relief from Congress. If Congress doesn't provide that relief, the domestic companieswill seek foreign merger partners.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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European Union: EU Financial-Transaction Tax Plan Turns to Which Derivatives to Tax


European efforts to build a financial-transaction tax are turning towhich derivatives to tax and how to leave room for future expansion, planning documents show.
Greece,which holds the EU's rotating presidency until July 1, has proposed several options for taking the plan forward, according to the documents prepared for a May 28working group meeting.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Practitioners Discuss Partnership Rule in Levin Inversion Bill


A senior senator's bill targeting corporate inversionswould also affect transactions in some corners of the partnershipworld, and at least one practitioner recommended on May 22 that new businesses think twice before establishing themselves as domestic entities.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Bitcoin users face a global patchwork of inconsistent tax treatment

  • By ITR Correspondent

Tax authorities around theworld have yet to develop a uniform approach to the taxation of Bitcoin.

For the story, go here.

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Switzerland moves to strengthen corporate competitiveness


Switzerlandwill implement changes to its corporate tax regime at federal and cantonal level in an effort to preserve the country's tax appeal.
Several companies have chosen to move their registered company seat outside of Switzerland this year, citing tax and legal uncertainty as their main reasons for doing so.
For the story, go here.

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New OECD guidelines on VAT receive widespread support


Eighty six countries have agreed to the new OECD VAT guidelines,which aim to provide practical solutions to tackle tax avoidance, mitigate the risk of double taxation, combat lost revenue and solve issues surrounding tax law mismatches.

For the story, go here.

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Democrats Disagree on Legislative Fix for Inversions


It's not just congressional Republicanswho believe tax reform is the appropriateway to halt U.S. corporations' interest in inversions as a tax avoidance strategy. A growing number of Democratic lawmakers are saying they too believe Congress should dealwith the issue in the context of reform.
"In away, Ian Read, CEO of Pfizer, has given us awake-up call -- maybe done us a favor -- and put a spotlight on the need for us to come back to the issue of corporate tax reform," Senate Finance Committee member Thomas R. Carper, D-Del., said, noting that he believes reform is the "real solution" to the inversion issue. A merger attempt by Pfizer Inc. to avoid taxeswas rejected by U.K. company AstraZeneca PLC on May 19.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Tax Analysts Exclusive: Australia's 'Secret' International Tax Symposium?


It's common for tax conferences to acknowledge the companies and organizations that sponsor the event. Given the significant amount of money and resources needed to hold a conference, it makes sense for the host to solicit funding.
However, should that same justification applywhen the host is not a professional body or advocacy group, but a government entity that is holding a conference on a topic that directly affects those sponsors? Does it seem inappropriate if the press is barred from covering a government-hosted, private-sector-funded conference atwhich high-level government officials discuss tax policywith private sector representatives?
Those are questions that Tax Analysts debatedwhen the Australian Treasury, as part of Australia's G-20 presidency, hosted an international tax symposium in Tokyo May 9-10. Details about the symposium, including the agenda and attendee list,were posted on the Australian Treasury'swebsite.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Christian Aid wants more tax transparency despite corporate concerns


There is no doubt that companies are becoming more transparent in reporting and disclosing their tax affairs. But they are still not going far enough, according to tax justice campaigners.
More companies are voluntarily offering tax information, and the number of mentions of theword "tax" in FTSE 100 companies' annual reports has dramatically increased in the past five years.
For the story, go here.

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Multifaceted digital economy issues remain kep BEPS concern for taxpayers


The increased diversification of the digitised economy presents a major challenge for BEPS initiatives. Lack of a permanent establishment (PE) had led to debate overwhere tax should be applied, evenwhere a digital entity is not practising a tax avoidance strategy. The prospect of amended tax legislation to address this has raised concerns over the increased risk of double taxation, and a regulatory burden on multinationals.
For the story, go here.

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Global Tax Alert: OECD holds public consultation on transfer pricing documentation and CbC reporting

  • By EY

On May 19, 2014, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) held a public consultation on the transfer pricing documentation and
country-by-country (CbC) reporting draft,whichwas released on January 30, 2014.

The transfer pricing documentation and CbC reporting draft is the outputwith respect
to Action 13 of the Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) project,which requires
the development of improved transfer pricing documentation standards and a CbC
reporting template. The draft is set to be completed by September 2014.

For the alert, go here.

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Inversion Rule Tightening to Wait for Tax Reform, Wyden Says


Just after Michigan Democrats and brothers Sen. Carl Levin and Rep. Sander M. Levin introduced legislation May 20 to tighten inversion rules under section 7874 that attempt to prevent U.S. companies from moving their tax residence overseas to avoid U.S. taxation, the top Senate taxwriter threw coldwater on the idea of changing stock ownership rules before enacting comprehensive tax reform.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Corporate Inversions: Corporate Anti-Inversion Bills Face Difficult Fight on Capitol Hill


A pair of legislative efforts to curb international, tax-driven mergers and acquisitions met a tepid reception on Capitol Hill, but the bills' backers say that they put companies looking to perform corporate inversions on notice.

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US bill would thwart corporate tax moves


A group of fourteen Senate Democrats moved to thwart plans by US companies such as Pfizer to redomicile abroad through mergers to cut their tax bills, introducing legislation thatwould impose a two-year "moratorium" on such inversion deals.

The bill led by Carl Levin, a veteran Michigan lawmaker, is unlikely to gain much traction on Capitol Hill this year amid Republican resistance, but is designed to at least have a chilling effect on other companies contemplating such manoeuvres.

For the story, go here.

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Senates Levin Seeks Limits on Corporate Inversion Deals


U.S. companieswould face strict limits on mergers inwhich they move their tax address outside the U.S. under a bill proposed today by Senator Carl Levin, a Michigan Democrat.

Under Levin's plan, U.S. companies trying to buy a foreign company and relocate their headquarters to a lower-tax countrywould have to ensure that shareholders of the non-U.S. company own at least 50 percent of the combined company, up from 20 percent now. The plan,which lacks Republican support, is unlikely to become law any time soon.

For the story, go here.

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Offshore tax deals in the cross hairs


A group of Democratic senators unveiled a bill Tuesday thatwould limit corporations' ability to shift their address offshore for tax purposes, though they acknowledged it faces a long road.

For the story, go here.

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How Much Do U.S. Multinational Corporations Pay in Foreign Income Taxes?


Although multinational corporations use tax planning to reduce taxes on foreign income, the current tax system requires U.S. companies to pay taxes on foreign profits once to the host country and again to the United States,which increases their effective tax rates, the Tax Foundation said in a May report.

For the report, go here.

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Dozens of Companies Admit Using Tax Havens

  • By Citizens for Tax Justice

Twenty-eight companies disclosed that they pay less than a 10 percent tax rate on the $409 billion they collectively hold offshore, but hundreds of companies are likely avoiding about $550 billion in U.S. taxes by holding $1.95 trillion of profits offshore, Citizens for Tax Justice said in a May 19 report calling on Congress to end deferral.

For the report, go here.

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Stakeholders Lock Horns Over OECD's CbC Reporting Proposal


Heated debate over the method of filing and sharing corporate information via a country-by-country (CbC) reporting template arose among representatives from governments, the business sector, and civil society at the OECD's May 19 transfer pricing documentation consultation in Paris,with some advocating for direct filingwith all countries and others pushing for a treaty-based sharing system.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Pessimism Marks Hybrid Mismatch Consultation


Stakeholders at a May 15 public consultation in Paris found the OECD's proposals to neutralize the effects of hybrid mismatches unworkable and identified specific problems for repos, regulatory capital,widely held funds, and collective investment vehicles (CIVs).
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Profit Shifting: OECD Official Questions Business Concerns About Filing of Country-by-Country Template


An Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development official quizzed business community representatives about their assertion that the organization's proposed country-by-country reporting template should be provided by the parent company to its home tax jurisdiction.
During the OECD's latest public consultation on base erosion and profit shifting May 19, Joseph Andrus, head of the OECD's transfer pricing unit, askedwhether sharing the proposed country-by-country template and master filewith tax administrations under this approachwould impact state sovereignty.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Corporate Inversions: Levin Readies Anti-Inversion Bill, Says It Won't Cause U.S. Divestment


Proposed legislation thatwould set a two-year moratorium on corporate inversionswon't drive assets overseas, Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), the bill's top proponent, said.
Levin's bill, expected to be released May 20,would put new restrictions on international, tax-driven corporate mergers and acquisitions that result in a lower tax bill for the new company. The threshold for an inversion deal to legally take placewould likely rise from 20 percent of foreign stock ownership to 50 percent.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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OECD BEPS action 1 on the digital economy: Some thoughts on EU State aid rules

  • By PwC

The OECD held a public consultation on 23 April 2014. The consensus at this meeting supported the conclusion in the draft report that there is no separable 'digital economy'which is different from the economy, rather,whatwe are living through is a 'digitising' of the economy.

Notwithstanding this consensus, therewas a divergence of views aboutwhat the consequences of this conclusion should be. Broadly speaking, the business representatives favoured postponing futurework on the digital economy issues outlined by the OECD Task Force until itwas clearwhat recommendationswould come out of the other BEPS Action Plan groups.

For the article, go here.

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News Analysis: BEPS and Tax Haven Islands


Here'swhatwe've alwayswondered about tax havens:what do they get out of being tax havens?
Turns out they get quite a bit -- even though money merely moves through them to somewhere else -- provided they satisfy the immutable laws of tax havens.
First, a tax haven must be small. Second, a tax haven must be near the customers. Third, a tax haven must have rule of law,which usually means British corporate law and final appeals to the Privy Council.
The title of this article refers to the OECD base erosion and profit-shifting project, a principal goal ofwhich is to prevent multinationals from shifting profits to tax havens.
For the article, go here. (subscription required)

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Profit Shifting: China Delegate Calls for Flexibility' to Extend BEPS Anti-Hybrid Rules to Unrelated Parties


The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's recently proposed rules for neutralizing hybrid mismatch arrangements should be modified to allow "flexibility"for jurisdictions to apply domestic rules to mismatches between unrelated parties, a Chinese tax official said May 15.
For China, "there seems no reason to prevent [jurisdictions] from extending the scope" of the OECD rules, said Yuxianwu, principal staff member for nonresident taxation at China's State Administration of Taxation.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Developing Countries Take Center Stage in Discussions at G-20 Tax Symposium


Developing countries and their role in facilitating global tax reform came to the forefront at the G-20 International Tax Symposium on May 9-10 in Tokyo, as more than 200 government officials, tax practitioners, academics, and business representatives from more than 40 countries gathered to discuss the G-20's tax agenda for 2014-2015.

Delegates discussed a broad range of topics -- including progress on the OECD's base erosion and profit-shifting action plan andwork on automatic exchange of information -- and exchanged views on creating a stronger, more efficient global tax system.

Australia,which holds the current G-20 presidency, led the eventwith the support of the Japanese Ministry of Finance; sponsors included the Institute of Chartered Accountants Australia, the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England andwales, and the Global Accounting Alliance, aswell as Deloitte, KPMG, and PricewaterhouseCoopers.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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ABA Meeting: Stack Previews Final BEPS Reports


Robert Stack, Treasury deputy assistant secretary (international tax affairs), on May 10 previewedwhat to expect as the OECD finalizes proposals on the digital economy, hybrid mismatches, treaty abuse, and country-by-country (CbC) reporting.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Brazilian Superior Court strikes down CFC rules as incompatible with tax treaties


Taxpayers got some joy from the Brazilian Superior Court of Justice (STJ) decision that the country's controlled foreign corporation (CFC) regime does not complywith the business profits article (Article 7, OECD Model Convention) of some of the tax treaties in its network.

For the story, go here.

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OECD's Hybrid Mismatch Proposals Too Drastic, Commentators Say


Commentators responding to the OECD's discussion drafts on hybrid mismatch arrangements cited the difficulty and unfairness of the OECD's top-down approach, overly stringent related-party test, and potentially adverse effects of the proposed rules on regulatory capital,widely held funds, and imported mismatches.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Two-Year Sunset to Be Included In Levin's Anti-Inversion Legislation


Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) said his forthcoming legislation on tax-driven corporate mergerswould place a moratorium on transactions that give combined companies lower tax bills.
Setting a two-year sunsetwould give time to lawmakers on the Senate Finance and Houseways and Means committees to include new ownership rules in their broader plans to revise the entire U.S. tax code, Levin said. He said his billwould change the existing 20 percent foreign stockholder limit to closer to 50 percent.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Bill Limiting Inversions Coming This Week, Levin Says


Senator Carl Levin said hewill introduce legislation thisweek to limit U.S. companies' ability to move their legal addresses out of the country for tax purposes through mergers.

For the story, go here.

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The Problem of Corporate Inversions: The Right and Wrong Approaches for Congress

  • By Citizens for Tax Justice

Corporate "inversion," inwhich an American corporation reincorporates itself as a "foreign" company to avoid U.S. taxes, is in the news again. In 2004, Congress enacted a bipartisan law to prevent inversions, but a gaping loophole allows corporations to skirt this law by acquiring a foreign company.
For this article, go here.

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Pfizers Tax-Dodging Bid for AstraZeneca Shows Need to Tighten U.S. Tax Rules

  • By Center for American Progress

An attempt by Pfizer to purchase U.K. pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca shows the need for Congress to stop corporate inversions to avoid taxes, and a corporate minimum tax could further end incentives for companies to use tax havens, the Center for American Progress said in a May 13 report.

For the report, go here.

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Top Republican rebuffs quick Pfizer tax legislation


The top Republican taxwriter in the US Senate has quashed the idea of a quick move in Congress targeting tax "inversion" deals in thewake of Pfizer's $106bn bid for AstraZeneca, saying the problem should only be solved through a broader tax reform plan.

Orrin Hatch of Utah, his party's senior member on the Senate finance committee, on Tuesday sent the clearest signal yet that Republicanswill not embrace proposals by congressional Democrats and thewhite House to enact legislation thatwould make it much harder for companies such as Pfizer to redomicile overseas for tax reasons.

For the story, go here.

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Corporate Taxes: Levin Prepares to Roll Out Legislation Limiting Tax-Driven Corporate Mergers


A bill to limit tax-driven corporate mergers should "hopefully"emerge by May 16, Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) said.
Levin, chairman of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, has pledged to crack down on companies that redomicile abroad for tax purposes through buyout transactions, but maintain management and operations stateside.
"Hopefully thisweek," he said May 13when askedwhen hewould introduce his bill. Levin said he has generated "a lot of interest" among Senate colleagues.
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Profit Shifting: Businesses Need Role in Helping Developing Countries Fight BEPS, Shell Tax Chief Says


Businesses can play a key role in helping tax administrations in developing countries apply their "scarce" resources to areaswith the highest risk of base erosion and profit shifting, the global tax director of Royal Dutch Shell said in a recent panel discussion.
Alan McLean, executive vice president taxation and corporate structure at Royal Dutch Shell plc, spoke at an Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development forum on "tax for development."
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Profit Shifting: EY Survey of 830 Tax Executives Finds BEPS, Reputational Risk Among Concerns


Transfer pricing is the leading source of tax risk for multinational companies, according to a survey of 830 tax and finance executives conducted by EY,which listed rapid changes driven by an international project to combat base erosion as a specific transfer pricing concern.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)
For the survey, go here.

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Hatch Calls on Congress to Address Inversions by Creating an Internationally Competitive Tax Code


In a speech on the Senate floor today, Finance Committee Ranking Member Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) called on Congress to address inversions by creating an internationally competitive tax code thatwould make the United States a more desirable location to headquarter one's business. Hatch also highlighted how the punitive taxes in the President's own signature health care law, Obamacare, have caused medical device companies to move overseas.

For the release, go here.

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DealBook: A Deal to Dodge the Tax Man in America


Pfizer's chairman and chief executive, Ian Read, is in London thisweek trying to sell a skeptical public there on his $106 billion takeover plan for rival AstraZeneca.
The real question, however, iswhy Mr. Read is not being called to testify inwashington to explain the real purpose of this megadeal: a mega-tax-dodge.
For the story, go here.

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ABA Meeting: Inversion Rules Fall Short on International Tax Reform


Increasing disparity between tax rates and systems in the United States and the rest of theworld, alongwith economic incentives, encourages corporations to circumvent anti-inversion rules, panelists said May 9 at a tax conference inwashington.
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Wyden's Anti-Inversion Plan Could Jeopardize Current Deals


A plan by Senate Finance Committee Chair Ronwyden, D-Ore., to stem the tide of U.S. multinational inversions by raising the minimum required foreign ownership of a newly inverted company could have serious consequences for current inversions.

For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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Profit Shifting: Treasury's Stack Updates ABA Meeting On Progress of Five BEPS Action Items


The U.S. delegate to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's Committee on Fiscal Affairs gave an update on five of the international base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS) action items.
Robert Stack, deputy assistant secretary for international tax affairswith the U.S. Treasury, on May 10 described the progress of the OECD's recent discussion drafts on intangibles, country-by-country reporting, hybrids, treaty abuse and the digital economy.

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Corporate Taxes: Key Question in Pfizer's Takeover Of AstraZeneca: Is It About Drugs or Taxes?


When Pfizer Inc. Chief Executive Officer Ian Read faces U.K. lawmakers to justify his proposed takeover of AstraZeneca Plc, one questionwill underpin the debate:whether the more than $100 billion offer is really about drugs or about taxes.
A review of AstraZeneca's pipeline assets suggests the latter may be true. AstraZeneca lacks first- and best-in-class experimental drugs in the core cardiovascular, diabetes and cancer sections Pfizer cited as grounds for the offer.
"It doesn'twork financially on most people's calculationswithout the tax benefit," said Mark Clark, a London-based analyst for Deutsche Bankwho called AstraZeneca's estimates "blue sky"in a note to investors lastweek. "Without a doubt, tax is a major motivation."
For the story, go here. (subscription required)

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