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  • In the first of a regular series, Jai Mavani and Bhairav Dalal of PwC highlight the key challenges taxpayers face in key Indian industries. In this issue, the pair analyse the tax hurdles and opportunities in the infrastructure sector.
  • India has long been a key location for German taxpayers looking to invest overseas. Sudhir Nayak of Sudit K Parekh in Mumbai and Sten Guensel of Ebner Stolz Monning Bachem in Stuttgart, provide a checklist for German taxpayers eager to take advantage of the booming economy and highlight pitfalls taxpayers should avoid.
  • Aseem Chawla and Amit Singahania of Amarchand & Mangaldas & Suresh A Shroff & Co contemplate developments in the Indian tax legislation and its impact on cross-border transactions and what the best strategy for mitigating these challenges.
  • In its latest economic survey, the OECD has called on France to scale back inefficient tax expenditures and consider raising environmental taxes.
  • You cannot blame India's government and tax administrators if they get fed up with the constant criticism they have to listen to about the country's tax system. Efforts to improve the regime, such as the dispute resolution panels, are often dismissed as unworkable.
  • America’s biggest companies are keeping up the pressure for a reduction in their US tax burden with the publication of a study into global effective tax rates.
  • Daksha Baxi and Ritu Shaktawat of Khaitan & Co discuss the attempts by the Indian government to recover the taxes and the unaccounted money held overseas by Indian taxpayers.
  • Tax disputes are still increasing in India despite efforts to cut the backlog. M P Sarda, Milin Thakore and Ketan Ved of Deloitte run through the options available to taxpayers involved in litigation and discover that controversy is engrained in the country’s tax system.
  • A campaign is building for the introduction of the inter-quartile range, and the acceptance of multiple year data, for transfer pricing documentation in India – a country that goes against the global best practice. Indian transfer pricing regulations are unique in the sense they require the computation of a single arm’s-length price, through the mean of comparables, instead of a range. Tax practitioners are not interested in being unique though. Sophie Ashley finds out why.
  • Santosh Dalvi of KPMG sheds light on the latest developments with India’s GST and offers a secotral analysis of how taxpayers can prepare for the new tax.