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 33,160 results that match your search.33,160 results
  • Because tax doesn’t have to be taxing. A less-than-serious look back at some of the quirkier tax stories from the past month.
  • Companies relying on the gig economy workforce, including Uber and Deliveroo, are reviewing the commercial impact in the UK after April 2020 when they will have to treat contractors as employees and pay employment taxes.
  • As France’s digital services tax takes retroactive effect and the UK releases more details, tax heads spoke of a nightmarish cocktail of uncertainty and high politics.
  • It may seem like an odd question for an international tax journal to ask, but the OECD’s report on its programme of work on digital tax indicates that we may be at the end of whatever certainty we thought we had about cross-border sales and permanent establishments, writes Giles Parsons.
  • Altaba, a former Yahoo! entity, will begin liquidating its assets in the coming months, but corporate investors say the liquidation is not the most tax efficient option, nor what they were expecting.
  • Data from internal corporate disclosures show that internal procedures and systems for whistleblowing are improving corporate governance and inter-departmental trust within companies, but tax heads are hesitant about the results that create a paper trail.
  • In this month’s round-up of individual and company changes, RSM implemented its growth strategy in the Chinese market, while Baker McKenzie expanded its London office with a new partner and promoted another to become the global head of tax
  • Sponsored by Dhruva Advisors
    Dinesh Kanabar and Rishi Kapadia of Dhruva Advisors take a close look at India’s 2019-20 budget and the Finance Bill 2019, which together promise broad-reaching reforms to the tax regime.
  • Sponsored by Camilleri Preziosi
    Malta’s May 2019 tax amendment streamlines the treatment of corporate structures and offers a boon to intra-group transactions. Donald Vella and Kirsten Cassar of Camilleri Preziosi explain the changes.
  • Sponsored by Cuatrecasas
    Pedro Vidal Matos of Cuatrecasas reviews the EU Directive on Tax Dispute Resolution Mechanisms. Though far from perfect, it will enhance taxpayer protection and strengthen the EU’s double tax treaty network.