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  • After years of debate, delay and controversy, the US has signed its double tax treaty with Venezuela. It is the first between the US and a Latin American country outside of NAFTA members. The treaty breaks new ground as Venezuela, like many other Latin American jurisdictions, has a territorial tax system. The hope is that the precedent set will be followed throughout the region.
  • UK law firm Allen & Overy advised the Tokyo and London offices of Banca Commerciale Italiana (BCI) and Banca Commerciale Italiana (Ireland) plc in the acquisition of $900 million of Sanwa’s air financing business.
  • In the second of his articles on the advantages available to multinationals from supply chain management, Les Secular of Ernst & Young in London reveals how organizations can create effective structures while minimizing the potential tax risks
  • The Dutch Bar Association has made an agreement with Moret Ernst & Young over the ties between the accounting firm and it’s legal services arm. The agreement, which is similar to one recently signed between the bar association and KPMG, ends 12 months of negotiations between the two organizations.
  • German law firm Pünder Volhard Weber & Axter has paid a high price for the breakdown of its international network, losing four tax lawyers and three other tax professionals to US firm Shearman & Sterling.
  • NHP has completed one of the largest securitization issues in the UK to involve receivables from property investments. The £265 million ($432 million) fixed rate bond, issued through Care Homes No. 2 Limited, was backed by income from 103 nursing home leases.
  • Ireland's minister for finance confirmed in his budget speech the agreement arrived at with the EU Commission in relation to Ireland's new corporation tax regime. The new corporation tax rate of 12.5% on trading profits will be fully phased in by January 1 2003 with the standard rate of 28% (effective January 1 1999) reducing by 4% each year. The tax rate applicable to non-trading income will be 25%.
  • The tax issues of structuring inbound and outbound expatriate contracts in Hong Kong centre on the test of location of employment. Ian Love, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Hong Kong sets out the pitfalls and opportunities to be addressed
  • Decisions in Mexico and the US allow Mexican entities to cut their assets tax base and banks to reduce reporting requirements. By Miguel Valdés, Nicolás José Muñiz, Frederico Aguilar and Jorge García of Ernst & Young in New York and Mexico City
  • Argentina's tax reform programme has introduced key changes in VAT, transfer pricing and income tax. But as Jorge San Martín and Hugo N Almoño of Price Waterhouse, Buenos Aires argue, the commitment to neutrality has been weakened