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Bilateral Investment Treaties: A Potential Legal Remedy in International Tax Disputes

Bilateral Investment Treaties: A Potential Legal Remedy in International Tax Disputes

Traditionally, international tax disputes tend to focus on provisions in treaties for the avoidance of double taxation. Typically, income tax treaties reduce withholding tax on various types of investment income, provide an increased threshold for imposing tax on business profits, and offer procedures to claim relief in the event of double taxation or the imposition of tax that is not in accordance with the terms of the relevant treaty. However, income tax treaties are not the only legal remedy available in an international tax dispute. Countries also conclude bilateral investment treaties (“B.I.T.’s”) with the aim of protecting and stimulating cross-border investment. In comparison to an income tax treaty, disputes under B.I.T.’s generally are settled by an independent arbitration panel. While a country may “dig in its heals” during the course of the arbitration process, it cannot follow a strategy of agreeing to disagree with its counterpart in the treaty partner country. Once an arbitration panel renders its decision against a government, the award can be converted into a judgment that is enforceable through seizure of assets owned by the government. Paul Kraan, a tax partner at Van Campen Liem in Amsterdam has authored the quintessential monograph on the use of a B.I.T. to obtain relief from confiscatory taxes or unfair treatment imposed by a signatory to an applicable B.I.T.

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Dividend Income from India: Tax Treaty Issues for Nonresident Shareholders

Dividend Income from India: Tax Treaty Issues for Nonresident Shareholders

Effective April 1, 2020, the dividend distribution tax (“D.D.T.”) imposed on Indian companies paying dividends was abolished. While Indian politicians may say otherwise, tax advisers outside India viewed the D.D.T. as a workaround allowing India to collect the equivalent of dividend withholding tax without having to take into account a lower rate provided by an income tax treaty. With the demise of the D.D.T., the Indian tax authorities are challenging claims for dividend withholding tax benefits. Sakate Khaitan, the senior partner of Khaitan Legal Associates, Mumbai, and Abbas Jaorawala, a Senior Director and Head-Direct Tax of Khaitan Legal Associates, Mumbai, review issues that have been raised by the Indian tax authorities at the time dividends are declared and paid to residents of several countries that are treaty partners of India. Terms such as G.A.A.R., P.P.T., and M.L.I. are often raised. In addition, treaties that have most-favored-nation (“M.F.N.”) provisions are now regularly challenged.

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The Last Days of Dummy Companies

The Last Days of Dummy Companies

The use of anonymous shell companies or “dummy companies” that may be availed of to conceal the true identities of the ultimate beneficial owners is viewed by financial regulators as a tool to facilitate money laundering and the financing of terrorism. The benefit of anonymity may soon be a thing of the past in the U.S. as well as in Europe. Amendments made to Recommendation 24 by the Financial Action Task Force, proposed regulations by FinCEN to require reporting on “beneficial owners,” and pronouncements on the I.R.S. website that explain the meaning of the term “responsible party” that must be reported when applying for an employer identification number in the U.S. all demand that a U.S. corporation report its controlling person. Ibn Spicer, an experienced attorney whose practice focuses on entertainment and corporate law, and who is currently enrolled in the LLM in Taxation Program of New York Law School, observes that the opportunities for hidden ownership are shrinking rapidly.

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Expanded I.R.S. Reporting Obligations for Digital Assets

Expanded I.R.S. Reporting Obligations for Digital Assets

If DeFi is the Ying in the crypto world, new I.R.S. reporting obligations are the Yang. I.R.S. reporting requirements for cryptocurrency and other digital assets have been substantially expanded, and as a result, are expected to have a significant impact on the wide range of businesses and individuals to which they apply. Among other things, information reporting requirements for certain brokers now include digital assets, and digital assets valued at more than $10,000 are treated as “cash.” Lawrence S. Feld, a New York attorney whose practice concentrates on Federal and State criminal and civil tax controversies, explains all.

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The Door to a New World: Decentralized Finance (DeFi)

The Door to a New World: Decentralized Finance (DeFi)

1. The world of crypto is fast-moving. An exciting development in this space is Decentralized Finance (“DeFi”), which entered the scene in March 2020. Its use has exploded ever since. The term refers to the offering of traditional financial services not by centralized players such as banks, insurance companies, and exchanges, but through smart contracts running on blockchains. Niklas Schmidt, a partner of the Vienna office of Wolf Theiss and leader of the firm-wide tax team, and Lioba Mueller, a Rechtsreferendarin at the Regional Court of Aachen and PhD student at the University of Bonn, Germany, explain the ups and downs of this relatively new financing vehicle.

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Use it or Lose it: The Future of Shell Entities in the E.U.

Use it or Lose it: The Future of Shell Entities in the E.U.

Shortly before Christmas, the European Commission published a proposal for a directive laying down rules to prevent the misuse of shell entities for improper tax purposes. The “Unshell Directive” applies to any company or other “undertaking,” regardless of its legal form that (i) is considered tax resident in an E.U. Member State and (ii) is eligible to receive a tax residency certificate. Targeted by the Unshell Directive are entities that have the following characteristics: (a) they lack real economic activities, (b) they are involved in certain cross-border arrangements forming a scheme to avoid and evade taxes, and (c) they allow their beneficial owners or parent company to access a tax advantage. Paul Kraan, a tax partner at Van Campen Liem in Amsterdam, explains the general exemptions, the gateway indicators, the reporting obligations, the presumptions, and potential rebuttals in this attack on certain special purpose vehicles.

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Off to New Shores: Tax Extern at Ruchelman P.L.L.C.

Off to New Shores: Tax Extern at Ruchelman P.L.L.C.

· Ruchelman P.L.L.C. actively participates in the extern arrangement for students in the LLM Program at New York Law School. We provide real life professional experience to the extern and the extern receives two credits towards his or her degree requirement. Our younger lawyers benefit by providing hands-on supervision of the extern, a needed step in professional development. Recently, we expanded our extern program to include European externs and trainee lawyers. Lioba Mueller spent two months with us as an extern, sponsored by the University of Bonn. She also qualified for a PROMOS scholarship, offered by the German Academic Exchange Service, under the German Ministry of Education and Research. In her article, Ms. Mueller tells of her experience in the U.S., both professionally with us and socially with others. Our experience with Ms. Mueller is that doing a good deed is, indeed, its own reward.

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Israeli Start-Up Expansion to the U.S.: Who Should Be On Top?

Israeli Start-Up Expansion to the U.S.: Who Should Be On Top?

Israeli high-tech companies have been quite successful in the past year in developing new technologies in Med Tech and Fin Tech spaces. Naturally, liquidity events followed. In their article, Anat Shavit and Yuval Peled, partners in the tax practice of FBC & Co., Tel Aviv, and Galia Antebi address the tax planning decision points that must be addressed in Israel and the U.S. Where should the I.P. be owned? What structures are demanded by angel investors? What tax issues are raised by the Israeli tax authorities? Can structures be revised? Is there a taxable presence in the U.S. for an Israeli company? What U.S. anti-deferral regimes could apply with a U.S. company as parent? When should planning take place for Q.S.B.S. tax benefits in the U.S.? Is there a cookie-cutter solution that fits all situations? These and other questions are addressed.

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Mexico: Recent Developments

Mexico: Recent Developments

The Mexican government adopted its 2022 budget in late October 2021. Several provisions place special emphasis on plugging gaps in tax compliance. More power has been given to the Mexican tax administration when conducting tax examinations. Taxpayers under tax examinations face serious penalties where noncompliance is found to exist, including potential application of the domain extinction law, a forfeiture provision that applies ordinarily in serious criminal investigations. G.A.A.R. has been introduced, tax reporting obligations have been imposed on advisers reflecting policies behind D.A.C.6 in the E.U., and a new regime to disregard foreign entities and arrangements without legal personality have been adopted. Alil Álvarez Alcalá, the founding partner of Álvarez Alcalá, in Mexico City dives into these and other new regimes.

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Israel Tax Authority Proposes Changes for Individuals With Cross-border Connections

Israel Tax Authority Proposes Changes for Individuals With Cross-border Connections

In an age of spectacular liquidity events for Israeli start-up companies, the Israel Tax Authority has proposed significant revisions to the tax law designed to bring more income and gains into the Israeli tax net. In part, this reflects a global trend among governments and to close a perceived tax gap among the wealthy, especially those having one foot at home and a second foot abroad. In Israel, the proposals directed at individuals include (i) adoption of objective rules for determining tax residence with greater certainty, (ii) tightening of exit tax rules to ensure collection of deferred amounts, (iii) expansion of C.F.C. rules to cover more foreign companies, (iv) elimination of foreign tax credit carryovers for unused foreign tax credits, and (v) changes to basis step-up rules for property inherited from foreign decedents. Daniel Paserman, a partner in the Tel Aviv office of Gornitzky, attorneys, and the head of the firm’s tax practice, and Inbar Barak-Bilu, a partner in the Tel Aviv Office of Gornitzky, attorneys, caution that the proposals are groundbreaking and are likely to have an influence on persons considering a move to or from Israel.

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How New York Courts Provide Broad Support to Parties Engaged in International Arbitration and Litigation

How New York Courts Provide Broad Support to Parties Engaged in International Arbitration and Litigation

Why is an international tax journal addressing the broad scope of remedies available to parties in foreign litigation or arbitration? The reason is simple. Clients enter transactions, transactions blow-up, and parties sue or can be sued. Even if the parties, the contract, or the dispute at issue have little or no connection to New York, potential documents, assets, or witnesses may be located within the State. If so, New York courts can provide tools (i) to obtain broad information vital to a pending foreign proceeding, (ii) to attach assets to secure an ultimate recovery or incentivize settlement, or (iii) to enforce final judgments or awards, including seizure of assets and other post-judgment remedies. These are important tools to a litigator. Dan J. Schulman, a commercial litigator based in New York, explains all. He has over 35 years of experience managing complex commercial litigations, arbitrations, and appeals in New York, and shares the tools that are available to parties in a litigation.

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Five Reasons Why the Legal Professional Privilege of Belgian Lawyers is Incompatible With the Mandatory Reporting Under D.A.C.6

Five Reasons Why the Legal Professional Privilege of Belgian Lawyers is Incompatible With the Mandatory Reporting Under D.A.C.6

D.A.C.6 in the E.U. requires Member States to impose a disclosure obligation on intermediaries who advise on, or are involved in, implementing aggressive cross-border arrangements. This poses a conundrum for tax lawyers involved in a transaction because, whatever they do, rights of taxpayers and duties of attorneys to maintain client confidences may be ignored, or significantly cut back. In Belgium, the approach is to ignore Belgian case law that recognizes the obligations of lawyers to keep confidences and forces attorneys to violate various obligations to clients. Not surprisingly, the Belgian Bar Councils and the Belgian Association of Tax Lawyers have challenged the restrictive interpretation of the L.P.P. before national and European courts. Werner Heyvaert, a partner at the Brussels office of AKD Benelux Lawyers, and Vicky Sheikh Mohammad, an associate at the Brussels Office of AKD Benelux Lawyers, explain the five reasons why Belgian implementation of D.A.C.6 is flawed. The case is currently under consideration by the C.J.E.U.

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Taxation of Foreign Pensions in Ireland – Walking the Tricky Tightrope

Taxation of Foreign Pensions in Ireland – Walking the Tricky Tightrope

As more individuals relocate to Ireland, the taxation of assets brought with them takes on importance once Irish tax residence is established. Of special concern are pension products that individuals accumulate while living and working outside of Ireland. The taxation of lump sum payments from foreign pensions is a complex affair. Under Irish law, most foreign pensions schemes are considered nonqualifying overseas pension plans. Consequently, lump sum payments from such pension plans should not be taxable in Ireland because no domestic legislation exists to tax lump sums. Lisa Cantillon, a Director in the Dublin office of KTA, explains all, but cautions that the Irish Revenue have a different view, notwithstanding the absence of statutory support.

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Planning for Nonresident Investment in French Real Estate – The Choice of Company Matters

Planning for Nonresident Investment in French Real Estate – The Choice of Company Matters

Among wealthy Europeans, it is common for those who are not French to own a secondary residence in France, and to do so through a company. Two recurring questions are posed to a French tax adviser representing a non-French client. Should the company be French or foreign? Should the company be subject to corporate tax or not? Sophie Borenstein, a Partner in the Paris office of Klein Wenner explains the variables that must be considered when providing answers. Some work in one set of circumstances and others work in other circumstances. Good advice must be tailored to the anticipated use of the property.

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Swiss Update on Trust Regulation and Taxation

Swiss Update on Trust Regulation and Taxation

Trusts have been of great importance to advisors all over the world. Even though trusts are mostly found in common law systems, several civil law jurisdictions have implemented the concept of trusts. To date, there is no such thing as a Swiss trust or Swiss trust law. However, Switzerland recognizes the concept of a trust. In their article, Peter von Burg, a partner at Burckhardt Ltd. in Zürich, and Matthias Gartenmann, a Swiss tax lawyer based in Zürich, provide an overview of taxation of trusts in Switzerland. One interesting aspect addressed in the article relates to Swiss administrative assistance in tax matters when the targets of the inquiry are a trust and its beneficiaries.

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Taxation in India and the U.S.: Stages in the Life of a U.S. Owned Indian Company

Taxation in India and the U.S.:  Stages in the Life of a U.S. Owned Indian Company

When a U.S. corporation expands its operations to India and forms an Indian subsidiary, tax issues need to be addressed in both countries at various points in time – when the investment is first made, as profits are generated, as funds are repatriated, and when the investment is sold. In their comprehensive article, Sanjay Sanghvi, a partner of Khaitan & Co., Mumbai, Raghav Jumar Baja, a principal associate of Khaitan & Co., Mumbai, Stanley C. Ruchelman and Neha Rastogi explain all facets of tax planning in both countries at each stage of the investment and do so in an integrated way.

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Clarity on Recharacterization of Carried Interests

Clarity on Recharacterization of Carried Interests

· Earlier this year, the I.R.S. issued final regulations providing guidance on Code §1061, which recharacterizes certain long-term capital gains as short-term gains for holders of partnership interests entitled to carried interests. The provision impacts fund managers of alternative investments, such as private equity and hedge funds, who receive carried interests. When gains are derived through a carried interest, they are treated as long-term capital gains only when the carried interest is held for 36 months and one day, significantly longer than the 12 months and one day ordinarily required. In her article written while an extern at Ruchelman P.L.L.C., Susan F. Robinson explains how the final regulations address two workarounds that were widely proposed to circumvent the lengthened holding period and cautions that the policy debate on carried interests may not be over.

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Beauty is in the Eye of the Taxpayer

Beauty is in the Eye of the Taxpayer

As a counterpoint to the view in Europe regarding tax competition, the view in the U.S. is that tax competition is an acceptable policy to influence a multinational corporation to locate operations in a particular State. In his article written while an extern at Ruchelman P.L.L.C., Corey L. Gibbs looks at policies adopted by the State of Alabama pointing out that U.S. citizens and residents are “voting with their feet,” when relocating to States that impose lower taxes. In Europe, there may be a duty to pay tax, in the U.S. there is a right to carry on one’s affairs in a way that results in the lowest tax possible.

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Tax Competition Between Member States of the European Union – An Academic View

Tax Competition Between Member States of the European Union –  An Academic View

In May, the European Commission lost its second case in the E.U. General Court when Amazon’s tax arrangement in Luxembourg was found to be onside as to rules prohibiting illegal state aid among Member States. A companion case was issued the same day in which the penalty asserted by the European Commission was upheld. These cases bring the Commission’s record before the Court to two wins and three losses, with three cases in progress. For those readers asking why Commissioner Vestager continues to bring these cases, the answer is explained by Professor Pietro Boria, of Sapienza University of Rome. A new electorate has arisen in Europe that is multinational in its scope and led by a governing body answerable to all Member States. Parochial interests that existed through the end of the 20th Century no longer control. Tax policy is no longer the realm of national governments.

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Private Investment Funds in Israel

Private Investment Funds in Israel

The State of Israel has encouraged foreign investments in Israel for many years. One of its primary tools is the special tax regime applicable to private investment funds. If listed conditions are met, a range of tax benefit benefits are granted to the fund and its investors. These include exemptions from Israeli tax for non-Israeli limited partners with respect to (i) income derived from non-Israeli investments, (ii) capital gains, dividends, and interest form venture capital investments, and (iii) income derived from the realization of Qualified Investments. Anat Shavit, a partner of FBC & Co., Tel Aviv, and Yuval Peled, a senior associate at FBC & Co., Tel Aviv explain the conditions that must be met.

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