Global Tax 50 2015: Mohammed Amine Baina

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

Global Tax 50 2015: Mohammed Amine Baina

Vice-chair, ad hoc group for the development of a multilateral instrument

Mohammed Amine Baina

Mohammed Amine Baina is a new entry this year

Mohammed Amine Baina, a Belgian-educated Moroccan, has held a variety of roles during his illustrious career to date, including head of international cooperation at the Moroccan Ministry of Finance's Department of Taxation as well as various divisional director positions within the department.

He has been actively involved in UN Tax Committee meetings as well as meetings of the OECD Global forum on taxation for years and this active role continued during 2015 when, on May 27, Baina was appointed to the ad hoc group for the development of a multilateral instrument.

The objective of the multilateral instrument being drafted by Baina and his peers is to achieve the coordinated, consistent and swift modification of tax treaties, without replacing or superseding them.

The Moroccan is a vice chair of the group, along with fellow Global Tax 50 entrants Liao Tizhong from China and Kim Jacinto-Henares from the Philippines. Another entrant, the UK's Mike Williams, is the group's chairman.

The ad hoc group comprises 94 members from OECD and G20 countries, developing countries and non-OECD/non-G20 economies, all participating in the work on an equal footing, and Baina's Moroccan roots ensure the group will be keeping the interests of developing countries at heart.

Like many other BEPS action items, nothing like this – creating a multilateral instrument – has been attempted before and those involved have acknowledged the challenges that Williams, Liao, Jacinto-Henares and company face in steering the ad hoc group through its work.

"The first challenge is that the multilateral instrument will need to modify a wide range of tax treaties. While the BEPS work produced agreed changes to the text of the OECD Model Tax Convention, existing treaties do not necessarily follow that language," say Jesse Eggert and Evelyn Lio, senior advisers at the OECD involved in the Action 15 work. "A large part of the work on the multilateral instrument will involve converting the Model language into language that can accomplish its intended purpose regardless of the language of existing tax treaties."

"The provisions of the instrument will also need to make clear which provisions of existing treaties are intended to be modified and which are not, so that the instrument can modify and supersede old provisions where intended, but avoid modifying provisions that are outside of its intended scope," they add, saying that the instrument will need to describe its relationship with existing provisions in ways that provide legal certainty without the need to spell out the individual impact on each of the thousands of treaties to be potentially modified."

The inaugural meeting of the multilateral instrument ad hoc group took place in November and, with the group aiming to conclude the development of the instrument in 2016, Baina and his colleagues are set for another busy year, and one in which their influence on international taxation is set to increase even further.

The Global Tax 50 2015

View the full list and introduction

The top 10 • Ranked in order of influence

1. Margrethe Vestager

2. Pascal Saint-Amans

3. Wang Jun

4. Arun Jaitley

5. Marissa Mayer

6. Will Morris

7. Ian Read

8. Pierre Moscovici

9. Donato Raponi

10. Global Alliance for Tax Justice

The remaining 40 • In alphabetic order

Brigitte Alepin

Andrus Ansip

Tamara Ashford

Mohammed Amine Baina

Piet Battiau

Elise Bean

Monica Bhatia

David Bradbury

Winnie Byanyima

Mauricio Cardenas

Allison Christians

Rita de la Feria

Marlies de Ruiter

Judith Freedman

Meg Hillier

Vanessa Houlder

Kim Jacinto-Henares

Eva Joly

Chris Jordan

Jean-Claude Juncker

Alain Lamassoure

Juliane Kokott

Armando Lara Yaffar

Liao Tizhong

Paige Marvel

Angela Merkel

Zach Mider

Richard Murphy

George Osborne

Achim Pross

Akhilesh Ranjan

Alan Robertson

Paul Ryan

Tove Maria Ryding

Magdalena Sepulveda Carmona

Lee Sheppard

Parthasarathi Shome

Robert Stack

Mike Williams

Ya-wen Yang

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Levine, who served under the Joe Biden administration, led the US’s negotiations on the OECD’s two-pillar solution
The deal to acquire ITR's parent company is expected to complete by the end of May 2025
JBS, the biggest meat company in the world, allegedly used Luxembourgian ‘mailbox companies’ to avoid taxes between 2019 and 2022
Despite the conviction of Jessa Dabalos, the Tax Practitioners’ Board’s investigative work continues with five outstanding PwC scandal probes
Heads of tax need to push their teams forward as strategic business advisers to add value across their organisations, says Sandy Markwick
Scott Bessent reportedly felt undermined by Musk naming Gary Shapley as acting IRS commissioner; in other news, Baker Tilly will combine with a top 15 US firm
The promise of nine years’ tax certainty and a ‘rational and pragmatic’ government process makes APAs a no-brainer, Indian tax advisers tell ITR
Despite garnering significant revenues from multinationals, Italy’s digital services tax presents pressing double taxation issues, say Stefano Simontacchi and Francesco Saverio Scandone of BonelliErede
ITR’s research shows that in-house tax counsel in Asia also feel underserved by their advisers’ international networks
World Tax global head of research Jon Moore tells ITR how his team spots standout submissions, and gives early statistical insights into this year’s entries
Gift this article