Australia announces expert group to tackle multinational tax minimisation strategies

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

Australia announces expert group to tackle multinational tax minimisation strategies

aus.jpg

David Bradbury, Australia’s assistant treasurer, yesterday announced the members that will make up the country’s new specialist reference group, which is tasked with examining the tax minimisation strategies used by multinationals and “its risks to the sustainability of Australia’s corporate tax base”.

“The way companies do business is changing and we need to ensure that international tax systems keep pace,” said Bradbury.

The assistant treasurer has asked the Treasury to work on a paper that will assess the risks to the sustainability of Australia’s corporate tax base from multinational companies’ tax minimisation techniques, as well as identifying potential responses.

“This specialist reference group will feed into that process, with Treasury drawing on members’ knowledge and expertise,” said Bradbury.

The formation of a specialist group comes in the wake of a raft of revelations about the amounts of corporation tax paid by multinational companies in certain jurisdictions. For example, Google, Amazon and Starbucks have all come under scrutiny in the UK in recent weeks.

Bradbury acknowledges that countries across the globe must take action to keep up with increasingly more innovative tax planning techniques.

“Governments around the world need to re-examine many of the key rules of international taxation, which are not keeping up with the changing business models and tax planning arrangements of many multinational companies,” he said.

Bradbury also said a key role of the group will be to “build community understanding of the nature of the challenges we face”. It will hold its first meeting in February 2013.

Group members:

Rob Heferen (chairman), executive director of the Treasury’s revenue group; Michael Bersten, partner at PwC; Michael D’Ascenzo, commissioner of taxation 2006-2012; Frank Drenth, executive director of the Corporate Tax Association of Australia; Serena Lillywhite, mining advocacy coordinator at OxFam Australia; Ross Lyons, general manager, tax, Asia Pacific for Rio Tinto; Tim Lyons, assistant secretary, ACTU; Peter Madden, partner at Deloitte; Jason Sharman, director at Griffith University’s Centre for Governance and Public Policy; Greg Smith, adjunct professor at the Australian Catholic University and senior fellow of the Melbourne Law Masters; Tony Stolarek, partner at Ernst & Young; Niv Tadmore, partner at Clayton Utz; Brian Wilson, chairman of the Foreign Investment Review Board; and Mark Zirnsak, director of the Justice and International Mission Unit, Uniting Church.

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

The recent spree of firm mergers and acquisitions proves that geographic scale is the name of the game
The big four spin-off firm becomes Taxand’s second UK member; in other news, Haynes Boone launched a UK tax practice
Stephanie Pantelidaki’s economic expertise will give Norton Rose Fulbright’s other teams ‘extra firepower,’ she says
Mada has opened simultaneously in Paris and Dubai with an eight-lawyer team from Trinity International
PwC will continue to provide indirect tax services as part of the deal; in other news, the CJEU addressed the VAT treatment of TP adjustments
The arrival of Renan Ozturk and his team from A&M Tax introduces a unique proposition within the Middle East legal market, the firm said
The deal, reportedly worth $400m, will add Svalner Atlas’s 50-partner Nordic and Benelux presence to Ryan’s rapidly growing global footprint
The combined firm, which comprises over 1,400 lawyers, will boast robust tax practices in both the UK and US
Cascading tax reform, bullish foreign investment and vigorous TP audits have made Italy’s tax advisory market dynamic and stiffly competitive
As ITR data reveals that 2025 saw more than double the amount of private client hires than 2024, it seems firms are jostling for position
Gift this article