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  • A study has found that US taxpayers do not always explain in their statutory disclosures what tax planning strategies they plan to use to generate taxable income to allow them make use of deferred tax assets.
  • The new head of the OECD's tax treaty, transfer pricing and financial transactions division has been named.
  • Not only are the tax courts in Canada busy with many interesting cases, but on the international side the administrative relief programmes are well used to reduce unintended double taxation.
  • Ahead of next month’s budget, opinions are divided as to whether Singapore should reduce its corporate tax rate.
  • The US tax gap has increased to $385 billion suggesting the IRS is not doing enough to enforce compliance, official statistics reveal.
  • Carsten Heinz has become a partner of Noerr in the firm’s Berlin office. He specialises in international tax structuring and transaction advice, transformation tax law, private equity and the taxation of income on capital. In 2011, with Christoph Spiering, he advised the UK subsidiary of the Russian energy group Gazprom on its entry onto the German retail market by taking over Envacom Service, a utilities supply company in Hesse.
  • Speaking to International Tax Review today, Pascal Saint-Amans, who will replace Jeffrey Owens as the OECD’s head of tax policy and administration next month, said that formulating a set of VAT guidelines and creating a new Global Forum on VAT will be high up on his agenda.
  • Russian companies with significant foreign capital and high debt to equity ratios, are at risk of attack by the tax authorities following a recent Supreme Arbitration Court (SAC) ruling.
  • In what acting Secretary General Shinji Tarutoko has described as a “make or break year”, the ruling Democratic Party of Japan is struggling to get the support required for tax hikes which the party sees as essential to “simultaneously achieve the goals of securing stable revenue sources for financing social security and regaining governmental fiscal health”.
  • John Owen has joined Baker & McKenzie’s tax practice as a partner in Toronto.