Donald Johnston takes ITIC role

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

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

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

Donald Johnston takes ITIC role

Donald Johnston, secretary general of the OECD between 1996 and 2006, has joined the International Tax and Investment Centre’s board of directors as an honorary co-chairman. He will advise ITIC on key fiscal reform programmes and ITIC’s work in the BRIIC (Brazil, Russia, India, Indonesia and China) and other emerging economies.

Before his role at the OECD, Johnston was a tax lawyer in Canada, first with Stikeman Elliott and then the now-defunct Heenan Blaikie. He was a Canadian member of parliament for 10 years and served as minister of state for science and technology, and minister of state for economic and regional development in the government that was in office between 1980 and 1984.

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

An OECD report on taxation of the digital economy is expected by the end of 2026, according to the group of nations
Trophy assets are evolving from personal indulgences to structured investments, prompting family offices to prioritise tax efficiency, governance discipline, and cross-border compliance
As demand for complex, cross-border private client counsel spikes, Patrick McCormick sees opportunity in starting from scratch
As part of an exclusive global alliance, KPMG will become one of Anthropic’s ‘preferred consultants’ for private equity
In the second part of this series, the focus shifts to how taxpayers can manage ongoing risks across the lifecycle of cross-border structures
Jurisdictions have moved to ensure that multinationals are not punished for late GIR filings due to a lack of available filing portals or exchange relationships
HMRC’s push for unified tax adviser registration won’t prevent every instance of improper conduct, but it is good for taxpayers and the UK’s reputation
Elsewhere, the UAE’s tax office has issued an update on registration penalties and two firms have been busy making lateral hires
The case sits within a context of Brazil signalling that it is replacing informal discretion and ambiguity with structures that reward analytical rigour, one expert tells ITR
Jeff Soar lifts the lid on WTS UK’s ambitious recruitment plans, the firm's positioning against the big four, and why tax is the perfect profession for AI
Gift this article