Artur Braga joins WZ Advogados in Brazil

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Artur Braga joins WZ Advogados in Brazil

Artur Braga 100 x 90

Artur Braga has joined WZ Advogados as a partner, based at the firm’s Sao Paolo office.

Braga comes with 20 years of experience at EY, specialising in domestic and international tax consulting in the accounting firm’s Brazil and New York offices. He has experience in the energy, manufacturing, technology, FMCG, financial, real estate, pharmaceutical, communications and entertainment industries.

Braga’s key responsibilities are to build and lead a solid, skilled and innovative tax practice and bring his knowledge of tax technology and experience of advising large multinationals to WZ Advogados, a consolidated full-service law firm. His practice will cover general tax advisory services and tax controversy, while also establishing innovative tax technology solutions.  

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

It follows a court case concerning a Freedom of Information request lodged by the founder of a software company
After years of deafening silence, the UK tax authority is taking overdue action against corporates that fail to prevent the facilitation of tax evasion
The US president has raised India’s tariff rate to 50% because of its importation of Russian oil; in other news, firms made key international tax partner hires
Tax auditors themselves had not been aware of the new TP ‘transaction matrix’ requirements, ITR hears as five German partners share their client experiences
Its features include a built-in AI assistant as well as expert insights and commentary from Deloitte specialists
AI is rapidly finding its way into tax advisory services. But how can AI be deployed responsibly, reliably, and in compliance with legal standards?
Specified taxpayers will have to apply a 19% VAT rate on services offered by third parties through their platforms; in other news, Donald Trump imposed 30% South African tariffs
A ‘quiet revolution’ in HMRC’s compliance strategy has caused Adam Craggs to rethink how to advise clients, he tells ITR
If the Reform leader becomes UK prime minister then he may follow the direction of the US in at least one significant way
Trump declared a new national emergency in issuing the order; in other news, Grant Thornton Germany is up for sale and the subject of interest from both its UK and US counterparts
Gift this article