International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Search results for

There are 33,184 results that match your search.33,184 results
  • Italian firm Gianni Origoni Grippo & Partners has formed an alliance with Vitali Romagnoli e Associati, the latest in a string of moves and alliances among Italian tax lawyers and boutiques
  • On April 1 2004 the Australian federal government tabled legislation in parliament containing the most significant changes to emerge from the review of international tax arrangements
  • Nicolas Sarkozy, France's finance minister, has promised to cut the country's Budget deficit to meet the EU's target of 3% of GDP, which France has missed for three consecutive years. Sarkozy said the government would reduce the deficit by public spending cuts and eliminating unfair or inefficient tax breaks. He also pledged a crackdown on tax evasion.
  • Deduction of expenses by French subsidiaries, resulting from rebilling by foreign parent companies is likely to attract the attention of the French tax authorities
  • Because of a delay in the publication of final regulations and customized filing forms for new transfer pricing legislation, the Argentine government has extended the filing deadline to August 2004. The original filing deadline for the new legislation, which will introduce a new penalties regime, was November 2003.
  • John Kerry, the Democrat challenger to US President George W Bush, is promising to overhaul international corporate tax arrangements, the biggest of its kind in 40 years, if he wins office in the US presidential elections in November 2004
  • The UK Inland Revenue is investigating more than 30 leading UK companies that used a controversial tax planning scheme involving currency swaps to deliver big reductions in corporation tax. The Inland Revenue claims the scheme has cost up to £1 billion ($1.8 billion) in lost revenue.
  • Corporate taxpayers are unimpressed with the UK government’s plans to merge the Inland Revenue and Customs & Excise, the country’s two tax collection agencies
  • The US law firm Dewey Ballantine has boosted its European tax presence by setting up new practices in Milan and Frankfurt
  • Mario Monti, the EU’s competition commissioner, on May 6 2004 met with representatives of the Belgian government to iron out a dispute over the country’s corporate tax regime