Case workers are ‘still not great’ but are making fewer enquiries, making the right decision more often and are more open to calls, ITR has heard
There is a shocking discrepancy between professional services firms’ parental leave packages. Those that fail to get with the times risk losing out in the war for talent
Winston Taylor is expected to launch in May 2026 with more than 1,400 lawyers across the US, UK, Europe, Latin America and the Middle East
They are alleging that leaked tax information ‘unfairly tarnished’ their business operations; in other news, Davis Polk and Eversheds Sutherland made key tax hires
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Sponsored by QCG Transfer Pricing PracticeJesús Aldrin Rojas y José Augusto Chamorro Gómez de QCG Transfer Pricing Practice comparten los resultados de un análisis comparativo que evaluó los rendimientos de compañías localizadas en países emergentes y países desarrollados.
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Sponsored by Crowe SingaporeSivakumar Saravan and Liew Kin Meng of Crowe Singapore analyse the tax implications of the country’s unique, new corporate entity structure.
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Sponsored by MachadoRicardo Marletti Debatin da Silveira and Mercia Cristina de Paiva Braga of Machado Associados discuss recent decisions from the Brazilian Federal Supreme Court on the topic of indirect taxes.
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Overall revenues for the combined UK and Swiss firm inched up 2% to £3.6 billion despite a ‘challenging market’
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In the first of a two-part series, experts from Khaitan & Co dissect a highly anticipated Indian Supreme Court ruling that marks a decisive shift in India’s international tax jurisprudence
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The OECD profile signals Brazil is no longer a jurisdiction where TP can be treated as a mechanical compliance exercise, one expert suggests, though another highlights 'significant concerns'
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Libya’s often-overlooked stamp duty can halt payments and freeze contracts, making this quiet tax a decisive hurdle for foreign investors to clear, writes Salaheddin El Busefi
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Eugena Cerny shares hard-earned lessons from tax automation projects and explains how to navigate internal roadblocks and miscommunications
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The Clifford Chance and Hyatt cases collectively confirm a fundamental principle of international tax law: permanent establishment is a concept based on physical and territorial presence
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Australian government minister Andrew Leigh reflects on the fallout of the scandal three years on and looks ahead to regulatory changes
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The US president’s threats expose how one superpower can subjugate other countries using tariffs as an economic weapon
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The US president has softened his stance on tariffs over Greenland; in other news, a partner from Osborne Clarke has won a High Court appeal against the Solicitors Regulation Authority