ITR Magazine
Global Tax 50 highlights the most influential individuals, organisations and geopolitical events in the tax world. Acting Managing Editor Josh White introduces the 2021-22 edition of the landmark feature.
There have been some significant new hires across a range of tax firms around the world.
Because tax doesn’t have to be taxing. A less-than-serious look back at some of the quirkier tax stories from the past month.
Tax directors find identifying ‘at-risk’ transactions is a bigger burden than reporting them. Many companies have cross-border transactions linked to the EU that fall inside the scope of DAC6’s broad hallmarks.
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Sponsored by KPMG SwedenAnna Valdemarsson of KPMG Sweden looks at how the economic employer concept in Sweden is working out.
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Sponsored by Deloitte SwitzerlandRené Zulauf and Manuel Angehrn of Deloitte Switzerland explain why the restriction of the Swiss Old Reserves practice to cases of tax avoidance is a welcome move.
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Sponsored by PwC ChileGermán Campos Kennett and Daniela Rubio of PwC Chile discuss the obligations of an employer and employee as new teleworking regulations are introduced globally.
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Investors in cryptocurrencies and other digital assets such as NFTs need a tax framework with clear rules and definitions in order to get the certainty they need to do business. Tax authorities have other ideas.
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UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson reportedly stayed at the fabulous Marbella estate during his holidays, yet the Pandora Papers suggest the property may have more advantages than two swimming pools.
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The political race to international tax reform is near its end, but the technical work remains. Yet pillar two is turning out to be a much bigger problem than pillar one for large multinational companies, writes Danish Mehboob.
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The OECD hopes it can end the rise of the digital services tax (DST) through a multilateral agreement. However, taxpayers fear DSTs may be here to stay. Giles Parsons looks at what companies can do.
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The OECD’s proposals to reform the international tax system and adopt a more formulaic approach will only work if there is accounting reform, writes Richard Murphy.
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English language requirements and elite university credentials are keeping black people out of jobs in the tax profession that they are qualified for in Brazil, according to Black Tax Matters (BTM).
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Keith Brockman explores what US tax reform may mean for businesses if Congress can get behind the changes.
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Transfer pricing (TP) teams at multinational enterprises (MNEs) are increasingly automating complex compliance projects such as managing country-specific risks, as the technology evolves.