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 33,170 results that match your search.33,170 results
  • Foreign investors should identify the best M&A strategies to reap the benefits of WTO China. By Ryan Chang, Brendan Kelly and Annalie Hampton, Deloitte & Touche, Shanghai, Beijing and New Zealand
  • After several years of aggressive action against corporate tax shelters by the IRS, the future could be looking bright for corporate taxpayers. With a December 28 ruling in favour of Compaq, the IRS lost its fourth tax shelter case in a row and with two of the cases almost identical in structure it seems certain that the government will have to readdress the way that it looks at transactions.
  • In December EU finance ministers agreed to impose a tax on digital products downloaded from outside the EU by European citizens. The tax, which will be in place for three years, will cover music, software and computer games downloaded on the internet. The EU claims that it will remove a competitive handicap but it could prompt complaints from US companies, which are currently exempt from levying the VAT on digital products. Detailed rules will be decided upon in February.
  • Taxpayers and tax authorities have been dealt puzzling new hands of transfer pricing cards by Germany’s highest tax court. By Alexander Vögele and William Bader, KPMG Frankfurt
  • CMS has further strengthened its tax offering across Europe with the addition of Italian law firm Adonnino Ascoli & Cavasola Scamoni (AA&CS) to its network, along with the recruitment of key new tax partners to firms in Germany and Belgium.
  • The tax package finally adopted by the Mexican congress at the end of 2001 ? eight months after finance minister Francisco Gil Díaz' original reform package ? is already courting controversy.
  • The Japanese government is planning a comprehensive reform of the taxation system in the country. The reform will aim to bridge the gap between government spending and tax revenue and boost the country's weak economy.
  • In our annual round-up of key transactions and the use of sophisticated tax planning tools, tax lawyers from five of the leading firms around the world give us an insider’s guide to executing the perfect deal
  • The bankruptcy of Enron and the furore surrounding the activities of its auditor, Andersen, could have a huge fall-out on all of the big-five professional services firms.