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  • When the OECD advertised its two top jobs in transfer pricing in May, International Tax Review was quick to secure final interviews. Sophie Ashley talks to Mary Bennett and Caroline Silberztein about their reasons for leaving the organisation, what they intend to do next and what they think will happen in their absence.
  • KPMG has expanded its international corporate services practice with the addition of Jeffrey Rubinger as a principal in the Fort Lauderdale office.
  • The US Supreme Court’s decision in Mayo earlier this year caught the attention of tax professionals. George Hani and Alan Horowitz of Miller & Chevalier, Washington, DC, argue that the full impact of the case will depend on the outcome of a new case addressing whether deference is owed to a more aggressive effort by the IRS to issue regulations with retroactive effect.
  • The economic and legal situation in Spain has turned some of the structures traditionally used by foreign investors to invest in Spanish real estate into inefficient and highly expensive tools to maintain. Víctor Viana Barral & José Gabriel Martínez Paños of Uría Menéndez outline the disadvantages of these structures and include a proposal for a more efficient alternative.
  • Kai Schlegelmilch, vice president of Green Budget Germany/Europe speaks to Jack Grocott about environmental taxation, fiscal reforms and what Europe can learn from Asia’s green tax plans.
  • The deadline for the latest review of the feasibility of a general anti-avoidance rule for the UK falls at the end of October. Georgina Colegate-Stone of Exeter College, Oxford takes a fresh look at the arguments for and against in the light of recent cases in the UK and elsewhere.
  • Environmental taxation has been a divisive issue in recent years. But if there was one strong conclusion at Green Budget Europe's annual conference hosted by the European Environment Agency in Copenhagen last month, it was that the EU's Energy Tax Directive (ETD) was not working effectively and that the Commission's proposed revisions were a welcome improvement.
  • The decision will have far reaching implications
  • Gregory Barton has joined the firm and will be based in the Chicago office. He will operate in both the transfer pricing and tax controversy and dispute resolution practices.