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  • Elena Kostovska According to the annual budget adopted late December, for this year the government has planned for €2.7 billion ($3.5 billion) and foreseeing various increases in tax revenues.
  • Doreen Lilly Griffith will become Grant Thornton's new national managing partner of tax services from August 1 2012.
  • Dewey & LeBoeuf, which has been in the news regularly during 2012 because of the number of partners leaving the firm, has now seen departures from its tax practice.
  • Alvarez & Marsal Taxand has hired James Bartek as managing director in the firm's New York office.
  • See who has done the tax work on this month’s biggest deals
  • Transfer pricing is now a prominent and global economic consideration for governments, taxpayers and the societies in which they operate. Considering this there is an increasing number of official global organisations, NGOs, individuals, governments and companies working to promote its development and set practical guidelines for others to follow. Sophie Ashley finds out who, or what, international transfer pricing professionals think are the 2012 leading forces in global transfer pricing.
  • Ireland continues to attract investment across a wide range of sectors. Pádraig Cronin and Louise Kelly of Deloitte explain why Ireland is an ideal location for multinationals looking to take advantage of the country’s low tax rate and advantageous geographical reach.
  • The German Ministry of Finance published a draft Bill of the Annual Tax Act for 2013. The publication, dated March 5 2012, will implement several EU as well as OECD regulations into the German Tax Law. Oliver Wehnert and Ivo Tankov of Ernst & Young explain what these changes mean for taxpayers and their transfer pricing operations.
  • UK controlled foreign company (CFC) rules are going through a period of change. The government is trying to develop EC compliant legislation that achieves the twin objectives of minimising tax leakage through avoidance, while not being perceived as a barrier to business, so allowing the UK to remain commercially competitive, explains Ross Welland, tax partner at Haines Watts.