New Zealand

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

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

New Zealand

Allan Bullot

bullot.jpg

Deloitte New Zealand

80 Queen Street

Auckland

New Zealand

Tel: +64 9 303 0732

Fax: +64 9 303 0701

Email: abullot@deloitte.co.nz

Website: www.deloitte.com

Allan Bullot, Deloitte New Zealand, is widely recognised as one of New Zealand's top GST advisers. He has over 20 years' experience working exclusively in GST, in both New Zealand and Canada, and heads the largest dedicated GST team in New Zealand.

Allan is well-versed in GST issues relevant to all areas of the New Zealand economy. He advises both multinational companies and privately owned organisations operating in New Zealand. He has particular experience in the economic sectors of finance, tourism, telecommunications, and property.

He is heavily involved in submissions to Inland Revenue policy officials on various GST issues, and is involved in presenting a number of GST training sessions to Inland Revenue staff at their internal conferences. Allan is a regular presenter at a number of external conferences on GST issues, both in New Zealand and internationally.

Allan is also a lecturer at Auckland University in its masters of taxation studies GST course.

deloitte-250.png

Jeanne Du Buisson

du-buisson.jpg

Deloitte New Zealand

80 Queen Street, Levels 13-18

Auckland 1010

New Zealand

Tel: +64 9 303 0805

Email: jedubuisson@deloitte.co.nz

Website: www.deloitte.co.nz

Jeanne Du Buisson, Deloitte New Zealand, has a passion for indirect taxes; specifically GST, VAT and customs and has more than 16 years' indirect tax experience serving both local and multinational companies in New Zealand and across the world.

Jeanne has worked in a number of tax jurisdictions advising a wide range of multinational companies. He has been involved in indirect tax consultancy and planning services and has advised multinational groups on structuring their operations across the world.

Jeanne is the joint presenter of the NZ Inland Revenue GST training course and has also presented at various external indirect tax update sessions.

Jeanne worked for the South African Revenue Service for two and a half years and has been with Deloitte since 2000, moving to New Zealand in 2007.

Jeanne has a bachelor of commerce degree in accounting, tax and auditing and a higher diploma in tax law.

deloitte-250.png

Iain Blakeley

EY

Pieter Holl

Pieter Holl & Associates

Peter Scott

KPMG in New Zealand

Paul Smith

EY

Eugen Trombitas

PwC

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

The arrival of a seven-strong team from Baker McKenzie will boost WTS Germany’s transfer pricing capabilities and help it become ‘a European champion’, the firm’s CEO said
Germany has forgotten to think about digital reporting requirements, a WTS partner claimed at ITR’s Indirect Tax Forum 2025
E-invoicing is currently characterised by dynamism, with fragmentation acting as a key catalyst for increasing interoperability, says Aida Cavalera of the International Observatory on eInvoicing
Pillar two and the US tax system ‘could work in harmony’, Scott Levine tells ITR in an exclusive interview to mark his arrival at Baker McKenzie
Peter White, who has a tax debt of A$2 million, has been banned for five years from seeking registration with Australia’s Tax Practitioners Board (TPB)
Wopke Hoekstra’s comments followed US measures aimed against ‘unfair foreign taxes’; in other news, Grant Thornton and Holland & Knight made key tax partner hires
An Administrative Review Tribunal ruling last month in Australia v Alcoa represents a 'concerning trend' for the tax authority, one expert tells ITR
A recent decision underlines that Indian courts are more willing to look beyond just legal compliance and examine whether foreign investment structures have real business substance
Following his Liberal Party’s election victory, one source expects Mark Carney to follow the international consensus on pillar two, as experts assess the new administration
A German economics professor was reportedly ‘irritated’ by how the Finnish ministry of finance used his data
Gift this article