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 33,176 results that match your search.33,176 results
  • On April 23 2003 the European Commission partly approved the proposed new rules for Belgian coordination centres (BCC). These new rules are designed to replace the old BCC regime, which the European Commission ordered on February 17 2003 to be phased out by the end of 2010.
  • Under the current circumstances that major banks tighten the loan assessments, it is anticipated that bad-debt loans will increase. Banks may use legal procedures, loan sales, or debt forgiveness as the primary methods to write off loans for taking tax deductions.
  • CFC taxation
  • US manufacturing multinational Ferro has hired Thomas Gannon as corporate vice president and CFO. Gannon will be responsible for overall financial management including accounting, tax and budgeting. Before joining Ferro he worked at Riverwood International, Rockwell International, Pilkington and PricewaterhouseCoopers. Ferro produces performance materials for industrial coatings and performance chemicals and has operations in 20 countries.
  • Sed Crest speaks with tax directors at leading multinationals in Europe to find out which firms are providing the best tax advice and how their tax advice needs are changing
  • ZINI & ASSOCIATES is an international law firm providing multidisciplinary services including legal and tax advice with a continued focus on sophisticated areas of the law, such as national and cross-border M&A, Capital Markets, Structured Finance, Banking, Business and Corporate Law, Telecommunications, Information Technology, E-Commerce, Antitrust and EU Law, Intellectual Property, Industrial and Commercial Real Estate, Entertainment, Arts, and Sports.
  • Internet service provider AOL is expanding its Luxembourg operations to reduce its value-added tax (VAT) liability. The move comes in anticipation of the EU's Taxation of Digital Sales Directive, which comes into effect on July 1 this year and means that the company will have to start charging customers VAT on digital downloads.
  • The EU is strengthening its audit requirements. On May 21 the Commission set out 10 auditing priorities to improve quality and protect investors. The objectives are intended to prevent conflicts of interest and Enron-type scandals.
  • The Czech coalition government will cut corporation tax from 31% to 24% by 2006 as part of a new reform package. The gradual decrease in the corporate income tax rate will be accompanied by a large increase in VAT on most services from 5% to 22% and increases in excise taxes.
  • Depend on a trusted leader