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 33,164 results that match your search.33,164 results
  • Mexican finance minister, Francisco Gil Diaz, has announced the 2001 Budget. It was approved by congress at the end of December. The Budget paves the way for March talks about broad fiscal reform.
  • PricewaterhouseCoopers has confirmed that just under 10% of its UK partners will be leaving the firm this year. According to UK senior partner Kieran Poynter, the successful integration of the merged firms meant that there was a surplus of partners in certain areas of the practice.
  • Robert Jason, former head of the tax department at Troop Steuber Pasich Reddick & Tobey, has set up a tax practice with Kirkland & Ellis' Los Angeles office. According to Jason, the decision to move was in no way related to Troop Steuber's January merger with Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld.
  • On December 13 2000, the Ruling Party in Japan released its Proposed Changes in Tax Laws (the Proposal) for the governmental fiscal year 2001. The following is a brief summary of the proposal.
  • On December 31 1999 the Argentine government adopted a new tax reform package. The 1999 tax reform law amended the Argentine income tax law (AITL) by introducing certain significant changes to Argentina's transfer pricing regime, as well as changes in the treatment of foreign source income earned by Argentine entities or resident individuals (Argentine residents).
  • The German Supreme Tax Court has overturned a recent decision by a lower court on the treatment of trademark royalties. Thomas Borstell and Oliver Wehnert of Ernst & Young's Transfer Pricing Specialist Group in Düsseldorf, report on the court's findings
  • Germany has amended its tax regulations for the treatment of investment funds. Wolfgang Oho and Gerald Plenge of Arthur Andersen, Frankfurt, review the previous regulations and look at what the new rules hope to achieve
  • The US Treasury Department has announced a new US income tax treaty with Luxembourg.
  • Members of the OECD's Committee on Fiscal Affairs have reached a consensus on how to apply the definition of permanent establishment to the taxation of electronic commerce. The consensus means that online businesses can no longer afford to ignore the tax consequences of where they locate their equipment, according to Mike Perkins of PricewaterhouseCoopers in London.
  • Luis Liñero, Arthur Andersen, Mexico City