International

  • February 10, 2025

    Pension Execs Found Liable In $2B Danish Tax Fraud Case

    A New York federal jury found Monday by "clear and convincing evidence" that Denmark's tax agency reasonably relied on the false statements made on pension plan applications that were part of a $2.1 billion tax fraud scheme by pension plan executives.

  • February 10, 2025

    UAE Lays Out Exclusions, Transition Period For Minimum Tax

    The United Arab Emirates' Ministry of Finance further explained how it is implementing the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's 15% global corporate minimum tax, detailing a number of exclusions and a planned transitional period.

  • February 10, 2025

    Australian Senate OKs Green Energy Production Tax Credits

    The Australian Senate passed tax incentives Monday for hydrogen and critical mineral production as part of an effort to invest in renewable energy technology and reduce carbon emissions.

  • February 10, 2025

    S. Korea Tax Revenue Dips Due To Weak Corp. Earnings

    South Korea collected 336.5 trillion won ($232 billion) in 2024, a 7.5 trillion won dip compared with 2023, the country's revenue agency said Monday, pinning the blame on a year-over-year decline in corporate performance.

  • February 10, 2025

    UK Tax Compliance Costs Cos. £15.4B Annually, Report Says

    The increasingly complex U.K. tax code has led to businesses paying at least £15.4 billion ($19 billion) annually to comply with the system, and that figure is likely an understatement, a British public spending watchdog said Monday.

  • February 10, 2025

    Skadden Adds Designer Of Tax Cut Act's Int'l Provisions In DC

    Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP announced Monday it has hired a tax attorney who helped create some international provisions in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, and who joins the firm as House Republicans signal they'll vote to renew some measures of that bill that are set to expire.

  • February 10, 2025

    Proskauer Hires Tax Pro In Paris From Addleshaw Goddard

    Proskauer Rose LLP added a tax professional in Paris from Addleshaw Goddard LLP who advises private equity funds and multinational groups on mergers and acquisitions.

  • February 10, 2025

    Pillsbury Recruits Former Mayer Brown Tax Pro In NY

    Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP said it has recruited a former Mayer Brown LLP tax expert to serve as a partner in Pillsbury's New York office.

  • February 10, 2025

    Financier Bids To Resurrect HMRC Bungled Prosecution Claim

    A corporate financier sought permission Monday to challenge a decision to dismiss his claim against HM Revenue and Customs and the Crown Prosecution Service for wrongly prosecuting him, arguing that the judge had failed to properly consider the evidence.

  • February 10, 2025

    Film Executives Ran £13M VAT Fraud, Prosecutors Tell Jury

    Four former managers at a film production company best known for "Avatar" cheated taxpayers out of £13 million ($16.14 million) through a "convoluted" VAT scheme run out of the back garden of a modest home in London, prosecutors told a jury on Monday.

  • February 07, 2025

    Feds Defend Corporate Transparency Act In 5th And 4th Circuits

    The U.S. government defended the Corporate Transparency Act in the Fifth and Fourth Circuits on Friday, urging the former to reverse a Texas federal judge's nationwide injunction on the law and the latter to affirm a Virginia federal judge's rejection of a bid to block the law's enforcement.

  • February 07, 2025

    Tax Take Is Up But Lagging In Developing Nations, OECD Says

    Average tax revenue as a percentage of gross domestic product in developing countries rose to 17.1% from 16.5% between 2015 and 2022 despite the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said Friday, though difficulties still remain for building up those countries' coffers.

  • February 07, 2025

    Taxation With Representation: Kirkland, Latham, Skadden

    In this week's Taxation With Representation, Triumph Group goes private via Berkshire Partners and Warburg Pincus affiliates, alternative asset manager TPG buys Altus Power, Globus Medical buys Nevro Corp., and Honeywell separates its automation and aerospace technology businesses, resulting in the formation of three distinct companies.

  • February 07, 2025

    Former Top Congressional Investigator Leaves Lasting Legacy

    Elise J. Bean, former chief counsel for the U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, is remembered for leading landmark bipartisan congressional probes, which exposed massive tax and financial scandals with findings that helped pave the way for game-changing legislation.

  • February 07, 2025

    German Car Dealer Arrested In €5.8M VAT Fraud Scheme

    A German car dealer was arrested Friday in connection with what the European Public Prosecutor's Office called a value-added tax fraud scheme that generated more than €30 million ($31 million) in illicit funds, causing €5.8 million in tax losses.

  • February 06, 2025

    Baker McKenzie Partner Rejoins Firm From Apple

    Baker McKenzie announced that a former partner specializing in trade and customs law has rejoined the firm after serving as principal counsel and the lead adviser on global trade matters for Apple.

  • February 06, 2025

    US To Appeal Block On Corporate Transparency Act

    The federal government plans to challenge an order preventing it from enforcing the Corporate Transparency Act's reporting requirements for businesses, following the U.S. Supreme Court's pause of another nationwide block on the law in a separate case, according to a notice filed in a Texas federal court.

  • February 06, 2025

    EU Can't Let US Global Tax Rebuff Harm Its Cos., Official Says

    The European Union cannot allow the legal uncertainty surrounding President Donald Trump's rejection of a global tax deal to harm its companies, a European Commission official said Thursday, adding that the U.S. and EU will discuss the matter in April.

  • February 06, 2025

    Kazakh Collaboration Aids Transfer Pricing Rules, OECD Says

    After a decade of collaboration between Kazakhstan and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the Central Asian country has brought its transfer pricing rules closer in line with international standards, which has been particularly helpful in the mining sector, the OECD said.

  • February 06, 2025

    Spain Busts €184 Hydrocarbon VAT Fraud Ring

    Eleven people were arrested as part of the dismantling of a €184 million ($191 million) value-added tax fraud ring in the hydrocarbon sector, Spain's tax agency said Thursday.

  • February 05, 2025

    Israeli Law Firm Allowed To Amend Suit Against GILTI Regs

    A D.C. federal court on Wednesday let the owner of an Israeli law firm amend his challenge of regulations for the U.S. tax on global intangible low-taxed income, a provision of the 2017 tax overhaul.

  • February 05, 2025

    Ryanair Loses €1B TAP State Aid Challenge

    Low-cost Irish airline Ryanair has lost yet another attempt to stop state aid from being delivered to its rivals in the airline industry after a European Union court on Wednesday batted away its challenge to a €1.2 billion ($1.249 billion) aid package for the parent company of TAP Air Portugal.

  • February 05, 2025

    US Bill Aims To Ax Tax Incentives For Multinational Cos.

    Congress should repeal and replace federal tax measures that allow multinational corporations to reduce taxable income in the United States, including by holding assets abroad, according to two Democratic lawmakers who reintroduced a bill to that effect Wednesday.

  • February 05, 2025

    US Trade Deficit Up To $918B In 2024, Gov't Says

    The U.S. trade deficit in goods and services spiked 24% month over month in December to $98.4 billion, the U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis said Wednesday, leading to the U.S. closing the year with a $918.4 billion deficit.

  • February 05, 2025

    Denmark Floats Edits To OECD Tax Standards Adoption

    The Danish Ministry of Taxation is seeking feedback on proposed edits to measures tied to its implementation of the OECD's standards, such as the adoption of new administrative guidance for the global minimum tax and tweaks to its transfer pricing procedures.

Expert Analysis

  • OFAC Designation Prosecutions Are Constitutionally Suspect

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    Criminal prosecutions based on the Office of Foreign Assets Control’s sanctions-related listing decisions — made with nearly unfettered discretion through an opaque process — present several constitutional issues, so it is imperative that courts recognize additional rights of review, say Solomon Shinerock and Annika Conrad at Lewis Baach.

  • How The OECD Global Tax Proposal Could Affect M&A

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    Following agreement on the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s Pillar Two proposal to introduce a global minimum tax, domestic implementation is expected to have a significant impact on international M&A transactions, with financial modeling, deal structuring, risk allocation and joint venture arrangements likely to be affected, say lawyers at Freshfields.

  • UK Shares-Tax Proposals Offer Long-Awaited Modernization

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    The U.K. government's recent consultation on the introduction of a new tax on transactions in securities raises detailed legal and practical issues, but the prospect of a single digital stamp tax offering both streamlined legislation and administration will be welcomed, say Zoë Arnautov and Mark Sheiham at Simmons & Simmons.

  • IRS Foreign Tax Credit Pause Is Welcome Course Correction

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    A recent IRS notice temporarily suspending application of 2022 foreign tax credit regulations provides wanted relief for the many U.S. multinational companies and other taxpayers that otherwise face the risk of significant double taxation in their international operations, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.

  • IRS Criminal Probe Spells Uncertainty For Malta Pension Plans

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    The IRS’ recent scrutiny of Malta pension plan arrangements — and its unusual issuance of criminal administrative summonses — confirms that it views many of these plans as illegal tax evasion schemes, and the road ahead will not be smooth and steady for anyone involved, say attorneys at Kostelanetz.

  • IRS Announcement Will Aid Cos. In Buyback Tax Planning

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    Recent IRS transitional guidance regarding current requirements for reporting and payment of the stock repurchase excise tax will help corporate taxpayers make decisions about records retention and establishing reserves for future tax payments, say Xenia Garofalo and Kyle Colonna at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • Flawed Analysis Supports Common Law Tax Deficiency Ruling

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    The Colorado federal district court’s recent decision in Liberty Global, holding that the U.S. Department of Justice may assert a common law tax claim without the notice of tax deficiency required by the Internal Revenue Code, relies on a contorted reading of the statute and irrelevant case law, say Loren Opper and Christie Galinski at Miller Canfield.

  • Review Of Repatriation Tax Sets Justices On Slippery Slope

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    The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision to review the constitutionality of the repatriation tax in Moore v. U.S. has implications for many tax rules involving unrealized amounts and could leave the court on the brink of invalidating large swaths of the Internal Revenue Code, say attorneys at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • What To Make Of IRS' New Advance Pricing Guidance

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    Recent guidance on the IRS' goals for its advance pricing agreement system provides helpful insight into review and decision-making procedures for advance pricing agreement requests, but it also raises questions about the IRS' objectives, say Richard Slowinski and Stefanie Kavanagh at Alston & Bird.

  • Reserved Investor Fund Would Plug Gap In UK Finance Market

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    The reserved investor fund recently proposed by HM Treasury has the potential to be a welcome tax-efficient addition to the U.K.’s canon of products for real estate investments, with attractive features for companies and, in particular, large asset managers, say lawyers at Herbert Smith.

  • The Reciprocal Tax Bill Is A Warning Shot At Pillar 2

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    A bill recently introduced in the House of Representatives to reciprocally tax countries deemed to have imposed discriminatory taxes on U.S. citizens and businesses takes aim at countries implementing the global minimum tax treaty known as Pillar Two, with which the U.S. has not complied, says Alan Cole at the Tax Foundation.

  • What Tax-Exempt Orgs. Need From Energy Credit Guidance

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    Guidance clarifying the Inflation Reduction Act’s credit regime, expected from the U.S. Department of the Treasury this summer, should help tax-exempt organizations determine the benefits of clean energy projects and integrate alternative energy investments into their activities, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • How Foreign Info Return Penalty Case May Benefit Taxpayers

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    The U.S. Tax Court's recent decision that the Internal Revenue Service cannot penalize taxpayers for failing to file foreign corporation information returns may give similarly situated taxpayers an opportunity to also avoid penalties, provided they protect their rights before the decision is overturned or mooted by legislation, say attorneys at Arnold & Porter.

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