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  • Dell’s long-running battle with the Norwegian tax authorities over the issue of permanent establishment came to an end on Friday with a win for the company.
  • Patricia Anne Rexford has joined Baker & McKenzie in Chicago as a tax controversy and litigation partner.
  • Reprimands issued by Hong Kong’s High Court to the Inland Revenue Department’s (IRD) Commissioner highlight the need for structural reform in the process for determining taxpayer objections to assessments, warn advisers.
  • Michelle Levac, the chairwoman of the OECD’s Working Party No 6 on the transfer pricing aspects of intangibles, spoke exclusively to TPWeek about the project’s progress and her concerns for its development.
  • While all taxpayers deal with intellectual property (IP), and the evaluation issues surrounding it for taxation purposes, some taxpayers place more value on it than others. Paul Morton, the head of tax for publishing house, Reed Elsevier, explains the practical day-to-day problems surrounding IP, when operating on a global scale.
  • To prevent consequences similar to those in the European countries regarding current debt crisis, the Montenegrin government plans to implement a number of economic measures by the end of the year, which will mostly concern public sector spending.
  • Compliance is not only a requirement of taxpayers. For a tax system to work, officials have to abide by the rules too, as the Indonesian finance minister has been pointing out.
  • In recent years, the courts of both lower and higher courts have ruled in favour of the tax authorities. It is interesting to learn from the lessons of this development.
  • The Senate Finance Committee and the House Ways and Means Committee met yesterday for a joint hearing to assess what the future holds for the tax treatment of financial products in the US.
  • The president of the Irish Tax Institute (ITI) described the tax measures in yesterday’s budget as innovative, as the country continues to support multinational investment and growth.