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  • The Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) is to grant tax concessions to four new members.
  • Norton Rose has hired the first tax partner for its Paris office. Bertrand Dussert joins the firm from Bureau Francis Lebebvre. He will specialize in international corporate tax.
  • US firm Weil Gotshal & Manges has grabbed a tax partner from a UK firm to head its UK tax practice.
  • International law firm Richards Butler has boosted its corporate finance team with the recruitment of tax consultant Richard Sowler. He is acting head of tax at Richards Butler until an additional partner is hired for the role.
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  • The US Treasury has expanded the tax policy group with three new hires.
  • Australian firm Gilbert & Tobin has established its first tax practice by poaching two lawyers from local rivals.
  • German firm Haarmann Hemmelrath has increased its Paris tax practice with the recruitment of a partner from Landwell et Associés. Alfred Fink joined on April 1 after spending five years with Landwell and prior to that six years with Coopers & Lybrand. Fink will be in charge of corporate finance and banking law, as well as international tax law. He brings with him an assistant, Etienne Mathey.
  • Over-complexity and over-simplicity are just two of the evils marring the sophistication of tax regimes in many Asian jurisdictions. The following article looks at how variety spices up the business of tax advice in Asia and provides the results of International Tax Review's survey into Asia's best advisers. By Sharon Cunningham
  • Effective April 1 2001, the Netherlands Ministry of Finance issued various decisions concerning the Dutch ruling policy and introduced transfer pricing regulations. Based on these decisions, the Dutch tax authorities will no longer sign off standard rulings, but instead will conclude advanced pricing agreements (APAs) and advanced tax rulings (ATRs). This new policy is a result of the international developments within the EU and the OECD.