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  • The US has filed a case with the WTO about China, charging that its value-added tax (VAT) rebates for domestic producers of semiconductors violate global trade rules
  • On February 12 2004 Advocate General (AG) Kokott issued her opinion in the Weidert and Paulus case (C-242/03)
  • A combination of previously-announced initiatives and government leaks took the tax sting out of the UK Budget, which was announced by Gordon Brown, the chancellor of the exchequer, on March 17 2004
  • With only just over a month to go before 10 new countries join the EU, companies are struggling to cope with EU VAT legislation and missing opportunities to take advantage of tax-enabled business opportunities
  • Vladimir Putin, Russian President, has targeted the oil industry to pay for sweeping tax reforms that would cut social tax paid by Russian companies. He has said once the tax system is reformed, it must not undergo changes for a long time.
  • The Chinese State Administration of Taxation has announced a tax amnesty that will allow foreign residents who are taxable in China to pay their overdue or underreported tax liabilities without penalties. The amnesty allows foreign residents or their withholding agents to remit overdue tax payments on or before June 30 2004, without penalties.
  • The Japanese parliament has approved the tax treaty signed with the US on November 6 2003. The treaty would eliminate source-country withholding taxes on all royalty income, dividends paid to parent companies owning a majority stake in the paying entity, and some interest income. Japan and the US are expected to exchange instruments of ratification on March 30 2004 in Tokyo, at which point the treaty will enter into force.
  • During the second week of February, the Ministry of Finance issued new miscellaneous regulations that both clarify and broaden tax incentives that had previously been decreed
  • The European Commission announced on March 16 2004 an investigation of the tax incentives offered by the Italian government to newly-listed companies. Upon meeting certain conditions, companies that list their shares on a regulated EU stock exchange qualify as of January 1 2004 to a reduced 20 % corporate income tax rate (instead of the ordinary 33%) for the fiscal year in which the listing occurs, and the following two fiscal years.
  • The Mexican government published the tax treaty with Australia and its protocol on February 13 2004. The treaty, signed on September 9 2002, became effective with respect to withholding taxes on dividends, interest and royalties for amounts paid or accredited on or after January 1 2004. The treaty's remaining provisions will be effective from July 1 2004.