The document discusses several recent tax developments across Europe:
1) The European Commission ordered Ireland to recover up to €13 billion in back taxes from Apple, claiming Ireland's tax rulings with Apple constituted illegal state aid. This decision does not affect Ireland's overall tax system.
2) New rules were enacted in the Netherlands imposing country-by-country reporting requirements and transfer pricing documentation obligations on large multinational groups.
3) The Silicon Valley Tax Directors Group sent a letter to the Dutch government with suggestions to improve the Netherlands' business tax regime and maintain its competitiveness in attracting foreign investment. They expressed concerns about the EU's anti-tax avoidance directive and public country-by-country reporting proposals
Compartilho o artigo escrito em coautoria com Ramon Tomazela Santos no qual abordamos um panorama geral sobre preços de transferência no Brasil, publicado em "The Transfer Pricing Law Review - Steve Edge and Dominic Robertson (Ed.)". Confira a íntegra:
Investments and Trade in Spain - October 2015TAG Alliances
Bufete Escura is one of the most well known and respected Law firms in Barcelona. A client centered service, coupled with high quality ethical standards form the basis of our mission. Our longstanding service ethic has resulted in us becoming the reference Law firm for a wide range of business associations who trust our firm as the Law firm they recommend to their associates. Bufete Escura delivers legal services to a great number of global companies, who trust in us to supervise and advise their subsidiaries due to our specialist knowledge of the regulatory and business framework both in Catalonia and throughout Spain. We must emphasize our special relationship with Italian companies based or willing to be based in the Barcelona area, given that we have several collaboration agreements signed with different Italian Chambers of Commerce.
INVERSIONES Y NEGOCIOS EN ESPAÑA
ESCURA tiene una larga tradición en la prestación de servicios a empresas extranjeras en España, apoyándolas en la defensa de sus asuntos, así como en la creación de filiales y sucursales.
En este sentido tenemos constituidos varios Desk, es decir, departamentos especializados por países.
Muchos clientes nos hacen llegar sus necesidades de servicios, habiendo detectado que muchas empresas necesitan un acompañamiento inicial para su implantación en España.
Conscientes de esta necesidad, hemos creado el International Service Hub (ISH).
El ISH agrupa un conjunto de servicios que requieren las empresas muy especialmente en su fase inicial de implantación. Servicios que van de disponer de unas oficinas y un domicilio, hasta recibir servicios de asesoramientoen todas las áreas que sean requeridas.
La guía "Investments & Trade in Spain" introduce el conocimiento a los inversores sobre las particularidades jurídicas, fiscales y laborales, de España y por extensión de Cataluña, siendo ésta la mejor región para invertir al sur de Europa, con un contenido focalizado en:
- Información General del País.
- Sistema Legal.
- Sistema Fiscal.
- Regulación Laboral.
- Sistema de procedimientos civiles.
- Legislación Contable.
Compartilho o artigo escrito em coautoria com Ramon Tomazela Santos no qual abordamos um panorama geral sobre preços de transferência no Brasil, publicado em "The Transfer Pricing Law Review - Steve Edge and Dominic Robertson (Ed.)". Confira a íntegra:
Investments and Trade in Spain - October 2015TAG Alliances
Bufete Escura is one of the most well known and respected Law firms in Barcelona. A client centered service, coupled with high quality ethical standards form the basis of our mission. Our longstanding service ethic has resulted in us becoming the reference Law firm for a wide range of business associations who trust our firm as the Law firm they recommend to their associates. Bufete Escura delivers legal services to a great number of global companies, who trust in us to supervise and advise their subsidiaries due to our specialist knowledge of the regulatory and business framework both in Catalonia and throughout Spain. We must emphasize our special relationship with Italian companies based or willing to be based in the Barcelona area, given that we have several collaboration agreements signed with different Italian Chambers of Commerce.
INVERSIONES Y NEGOCIOS EN ESPAÑA
ESCURA tiene una larga tradición en la prestación de servicios a empresas extranjeras en España, apoyándolas en la defensa de sus asuntos, así como en la creación de filiales y sucursales.
En este sentido tenemos constituidos varios Desk, es decir, departamentos especializados por países.
Muchos clientes nos hacen llegar sus necesidades de servicios, habiendo detectado que muchas empresas necesitan un acompañamiento inicial para su implantación en España.
Conscientes de esta necesidad, hemos creado el International Service Hub (ISH).
El ISH agrupa un conjunto de servicios que requieren las empresas muy especialmente en su fase inicial de implantación. Servicios que van de disponer de unas oficinas y un domicilio, hasta recibir servicios de asesoramientoen todas las áreas que sean requeridas.
La guía "Investments & Trade in Spain" introduce el conocimiento a los inversores sobre las particularidades jurídicas, fiscales y laborales, de España y por extensión de Cataluña, siendo ésta la mejor región para invertir al sur de Europa, con un contenido focalizado en:
- Información General del País.
- Sistema Legal.
- Sistema Fiscal.
- Regulación Laboral.
- Sistema de procedimientos civiles.
- Legislación Contable.
Getting the Deal Through: Tax Controversy 2019, IrelandMatheson Law Firm
Tax partner, Joe Duffy, Tax principal, Greg Lockhart and Tax associate, Kathryn Stapleton co-author the Ireland chapter of Getting the Deal Through: Tax Controversy 2019.
The Legal 500 and The In-House Lawyer Comparative Legal Guide Ireland: TaxMatheson Law Firm
Tax partner, Joe Duffy and Tax associate Tomás Bailey author the In-House Lawyer Comparative Legal Guide Ireland: Tax. This Q&A provides an overview to tax laws and regulations that may occur in Ireland.
As with previous years, our tax experts have prepared a comprehensive yet brief overview of taxation in Hungary.
Our material shall provide you with the necessary information about Hungarian business environment and its statutory framework, therefore we encourage you to pay close attention.
Following approval of the State Budget for 2014 by the Portuguese Assembly of the Republic and the reform of the corporate income tax, various changes have been made to the Portuguese tax regime, some of them of relevance to the International Business Centre of Madeira (IBCM). This presentation highlights the most relevant changes and its impact on the Madeira tax regime. Updated: January 30, 2014.
- New rules for group tax consolidation perimeters / horizontal tax groups
- Restrictions on parent company regime
- Office tax no longer deductible
- Buyback of own shares
- Capital gains tax changes affecting non residents
- Allowable interest rates on shareholder loans
- Penalties for inadequate transfer pricing documentation for large groups
- Tax treaty changes
- Tax audits
- Nominative Social Declaration (DSN)
- Transfer pricing reporting requirements
- VAT on internet selling
- Internet intermediary obligations
- Restricted stock unit rule changes
- Refund claim against 3% tax on dividend distributions
- France-Luxembourg tax treaty
- Dividend distributions by tax group members
- Employees seconded to France
- Allowable interest on shareholder loans
- C3S threshold changes
- Retail software obligations
Julie Murphy O'Connor and Gearoid Carey provide an overview on Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Ireland in the 2018 edition of Getting the Deal Through.
Getting the Deal Through: Tax Controversy 2019, IrelandMatheson Law Firm
Tax partner, Joe Duffy, Tax principal, Greg Lockhart and Tax associate, Kathryn Stapleton co-author the Ireland chapter of Getting the Deal Through: Tax Controversy 2019.
The Legal 500 and The In-House Lawyer Comparative Legal Guide Ireland: TaxMatheson Law Firm
Tax partner, Joe Duffy and Tax associate Tomás Bailey author the In-House Lawyer Comparative Legal Guide Ireland: Tax. This Q&A provides an overview to tax laws and regulations that may occur in Ireland.
As with previous years, our tax experts have prepared a comprehensive yet brief overview of taxation in Hungary.
Our material shall provide you with the necessary information about Hungarian business environment and its statutory framework, therefore we encourage you to pay close attention.
Following approval of the State Budget for 2014 by the Portuguese Assembly of the Republic and the reform of the corporate income tax, various changes have been made to the Portuguese tax regime, some of them of relevance to the International Business Centre of Madeira (IBCM). This presentation highlights the most relevant changes and its impact on the Madeira tax regime. Updated: January 30, 2014.
- New rules for group tax consolidation perimeters / horizontal tax groups
- Restrictions on parent company regime
- Office tax no longer deductible
- Buyback of own shares
- Capital gains tax changes affecting non residents
- Allowable interest rates on shareholder loans
- Penalties for inadequate transfer pricing documentation for large groups
- Tax treaty changes
- Tax audits
- Nominative Social Declaration (DSN)
- Transfer pricing reporting requirements
- VAT on internet selling
- Internet intermediary obligations
- Restricted stock unit rule changes
- Refund claim against 3% tax on dividend distributions
- France-Luxembourg tax treaty
- Dividend distributions by tax group members
- Employees seconded to France
- Allowable interest on shareholder loans
- C3S threshold changes
- Retail software obligations
Julie Murphy O'Connor and Gearoid Carey provide an overview on Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Ireland in the 2018 edition of Getting the Deal Through.
Adressé au domicile de chaque salarié et édité en 8 langues, Teams se veut un lien trimestriel entre les 18.000 collaborateurs de l'entreprise, qui exercent plus de 100 métiers différents et se répartissent dans 60 pays et continents.
Ici rédaction du dossier sur le train après un grand reportage en Russie.
Agence In Fine (Paris)
Design failure modes and effects analysis (dfmea) of an all terrain vehicleeSAT Journals
Abstract Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) organizes a student engineering design competition named Baja in which an All-terrain vehicle (ATV) is designed and fabricated by undergraduate engineering students. ATV is a vehicle that can run on a wide variety of terrains and travels on low-pressure tires with a seat straddled by the operator. SAE BAJA involves designing and fabrication of a modified and scaled down smaller version of ATV. Starting from initial design and analysis to actual fabrication of ATV, everything is done by the students. As in any engineering design, there is a constant need to design a safe and sustainable vehicle. This involves predicting and defining all failure modes in the initial design step itself. An effective method of doing this failure analysis is DFMEA (Design Failure Modes and Effects Analysis), which is an extension of popular Failure Modes and Effects Analysis (FMEA) technique and is done in the design stage. In this paper DFMEA technique is used to list out all modes of failure for various components of the ATV, its causes, effects and ways of preventing it. Risk Priority Number methodology of FMEA is used to find out the components which are more susceptible to failure and needs more attention than others. Keywords: All Terrain Vehicles (ATV), Baja SAE, Design Failure Modes and Effects Analysis (DFMEA), Risk Priority Number (RPN)
Graph Processing with Titan and ScyllaJason Plurad
Graphs are growing in popularity, but the landscape is becoming a hairball. Learn how to unravel it with the Apache TinkerPop graph computing framework and Gremlin, a functional, data flow language for traversing graphs. This session helps you distinguish between OLTP and OLAP graph processing as well as how to bridge the gap between graph databases and graph engines. We will talk specifically about how Titan, an open source graph database, can combine with Scylla to handle both types of workloads. http://www.scylladb.com/summit/
Wealthfront & Betterment: Democratizing The Investment ProcessJackson Moses
Given the complicated facets of investing, most young adults consciously choose to avoid the stock market; this is an extremely costly decision. By not investing until adulthood, individuals will forego seven-figures in lifetime income. Wealthfront and Betterment address this concern with their automated investment platforms (robo-advisors), both of which require little human involvement.
Homeobox genes (2) /certified fixed orthodontic courses by Indian dental acad...Indian dental academy
The Indian Dental Academy is the Leader in continuing dental education , training dentists in all aspects of dentistry and offering a wide range of dental certified courses in different formats.
Indian dental academy provides dental crown & Bridge,rotary endodontics,fixed orthodontics,
Dental implants courses.for details pls visit www.indiandentalacademy.com ,or call
0091-9248678078
HBaseCon 2015: S2Graph - A Large-scale Graph Database with HBaseHBaseCon
As the operator of the dominant messenger application in South Korea, KakaoTalk has more than 170 million users, and our ever-growing graph has more than 10B edges and 200M vertices. This scale presents several technical challenges for storing and querying the graph data, but we have resolved them by creating a new distributed graph database with HBase. Here you'll learn the methodology and architecture we used to solve the problems, compare it another famous graph database, Titan, and explore the HBase issues we encountered.
This brochure highlights some of the main tax implications of restructuring transactions and insolvency procedures across Europe to give the reader advance warning of the areas where specialist advice might be required.
The European tax landscape is in flux as governments evaluate and begin to enact the output from OECD’s base erosion and profit shifting (“BEPS”) initiatives. Tried and tested cross-border restructuring techniques may need to be reconsidered in what is a tricky environment where there are yet few certainties. Excellent read provided by Deloitte UK.
Prices charged between associated enterprises established in different countries may not reflect an independent market price, which is called transfer pricing. This is a major concern for tax authorities, who worry that MNEs may set transfer prices on cross-border transactions to reduce taxable profits in their jurisdiction. This has led to the rise of transfer pricing regulations and enforcement, making transfer pricing a major tax compliance issue. While there were too much gaps and frictions in the combination of domestic tax rules and the OECD guidelines, the OECD issued its BEPS Action Plan.
BEPS filing requirements for multinationals under country by country reportingPaul Authachinda
BEPS FILING REQUIREMENTS FOR MULTINATIONALS UNDER COUNTRY BY COUNTRY REPORTING. An MNE’s CbC report should include detailed financial and tax information
relating to the global allocation of its income and taxes. CbCR is required where the ultimate parent company has its tax residence.
As of January 1, 2016 the Dutch Corporate Income Tax Act has been extended with specific regulations regarding Transfer Pricing documentation requirements. These new regulations are applicable for all companies:
being part of an international group/having a permanent establishment;
having a group turnover over euro 50M.
If you meet both requirements the new regulations are applicable as of the financial year starting on or after January 1, 2016.
Future of treaty formed holding companies and preferential Harm J. Oortwijn
Past present and future developments in holding and preferential tax regimes - what once was appropriate is now perceived inappropriate... and the perception continues to evolve!
Personal Brand Statement:
As an Army veteran dedicated to lifelong learning, I bring a disciplined, strategic mindset to my pursuits. I am constantly expanding my knowledge to innovate and lead effectively. My journey is driven by a commitment to excellence, and to make a meaningful impact in the world.
Event Report - SAP Sapphire 2024 Orlando - lots of innovation and old challengesHolger Mueller
Holger Mueller of Constellation Research shares his key takeaways from SAP's Sapphire confernece, held in Orlando, June 3rd till 5th 2024, in the Orange Convention Center.
Affordable Stationery Printing Services in Jaipur | Navpack n PrintNavpack & Print
Looking for professional printing services in Jaipur? Navpack n Print offers high-quality and affordable stationery printing for all your business needs. Stand out with custom stationery designs and fast turnaround times. Contact us today for a quote!
Discover the innovative and creative projects that highlight my journey throu...dylandmeas
Discover the innovative and creative projects that highlight my journey through Full Sail University. Below, you’ll find a collection of my work showcasing my skills and expertise in digital marketing, event planning, and media production.
B2B payments are rapidly changing. Find out the 5 key questions you need to be asking yourself to be sure you are mastering B2B payments today. Learn more at www.BlueSnap.com.
The world of search engine optimization (SEO) is buzzing with discussions after Google confirmed that around 2,500 leaked internal documents related to its Search feature are indeed authentic. The revelation has sparked significant concerns within the SEO community. The leaked documents were initially reported by SEO experts Rand Fishkin and Mike King, igniting widespread analysis and discourse. For More Info:- https://news.arihantwebtech.com/search-disrupted-googles-leaked-documents-rock-the-seo-world/
Improving profitability for small businessBen Wann
In this comprehensive presentation, we will explore strategies and practical tips for enhancing profitability in small businesses. Tailored to meet the unique challenges faced by small enterprises, this session covers various aspects that directly impact the bottom line. Attendees will learn how to optimize operational efficiency, manage expenses, and increase revenue through innovative marketing and customer engagement techniques.
Building Your Employer Brand with Social MediaLuanWise
Presented at The Global HR Summit, 6th June 2024
In this keynote, Luan Wise will provide invaluable insights to elevate your employer brand on social media platforms including LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, X (formerly Twitter) and TikTok. You'll learn how compelling content can authentically showcase your company culture, values, and employee experiences to support your talent acquisition and retention objectives. Additionally, you'll understand the power of employee advocacy to amplify reach and engagement – helping to position your organization as an employer of choice in today's competitive talent landscape.
Enterprise Excellence is Inclusive Excellence.pdfKaiNexus
Enterprise excellence and inclusive excellence are closely linked, and real-world challenges have shown that both are essential to the success of any organization. To achieve enterprise excellence, organizations must focus on improving their operations and processes while creating an inclusive environment that engages everyone. In this interactive session, the facilitator will highlight commonly established business practices and how they limit our ability to engage everyone every day. More importantly, though, participants will likely gain increased awareness of what we can do differently to maximize enterprise excellence through deliberate inclusion.
What is Enterprise Excellence?
Enterprise Excellence is a holistic approach that's aimed at achieving world-class performance across all aspects of the organization.
What might I learn?
A way to engage all in creating Inclusive Excellence. Lessons from the US military and their parallels to the story of Harry Potter. How belt systems and CI teams can destroy inclusive practices. How leadership language invites people to the party. There are three things leaders can do to engage everyone every day: maximizing psychological safety to create environments where folks learn, contribute, and challenge the status quo.
Who might benefit? Anyone and everyone leading folks from the shop floor to top floor.
Dr. William Harvey is a seasoned Operations Leader with extensive experience in chemical processing, manufacturing, and operations management. At Michelman, he currently oversees multiple sites, leading teams in strategic planning and coaching/practicing continuous improvement. William is set to start his eighth year of teaching at the University of Cincinnati where he teaches marketing, finance, and management. William holds various certifications in change management, quality, leadership, operational excellence, team building, and DiSC, among others.
In the Adani-Hindenburg case, what is SEBI investigating.pptxAdani case
Adani SEBI investigation revealed that the latter had sought information from five foreign jurisdictions concerning the holdings of the firm’s foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) in relation to the alleged violations of the MPS Regulations. Nevertheless, the economic interest of the twelve FPIs based in tax haven jurisdictions still needs to be determined. The Adani Group firms classed these FPIs as public shareholders. According to Hindenburg, FPIs were used to get around regulatory standards.
Implicitly or explicitly all competing businesses employ a strategy to select a mix
of marketing resources. Formulating such competitive strategies fundamentally
involves recognizing relationships between elements of the marketing mix (e.g.,
price and product quality), as well as assessing competitive and market conditions
(i.e., industry structure in the language of economics).
Us desk quarterly newsletter september 2016 edition
1. 1
FÁILTE
EUROPEAN U.S. TAX DESK NEWSLETTER
September 2016
IN THIS ISSUE!
Welcome to the first issue of the Mazars European U.S. Tax Desk Newsletter!
This is our new series of regular European tax newsletters. These will provide you with insights on current
topical tax issues and discuss how they will affect you.
Following the Brexit announcement and the European Commissions Apple decision, we consider the
impact these decisions have on foreign direct investment and what your business needs to do. In this
edition, our contributors from 5 European countries, discuss the increasing transparency of the European
tax regimes, new anti-avoidance legislation and increased exchange of information. On a more positive
development, draft German legislation proposes greater flexibility in the utilisation of trading tax losses.
On behalf of the Mazars European U.S. Tax Desk, we hope you find our newsletter useful. If there are any
issues you would like to discuss further, please do not hesitate to contact us.
2. 2
CONTENTS
The Netherlands
1. New tax avoidance rules
2. New Dutch documentation requirements
3. Letter from Silicon Valley Tax Directors
Group
Ireland
4. Apple Ruling: European Commission
demands €13bn in back taxes
5. EU Parent Subsidiary Directive
Luxembourg
6. Automatic exchange of advance cross
border rulings and advance pricing
Germany
7. Revision for offsetting tax losses for
corporations
United Kingdom
8. Brexit – Tax implications for multinationals
HERE TO HELP YOU!
International firms with a competitive advantage
have real time access to insightful foreign tax
knowledge. The right advisor helps to identify
opportunities and to manage risk profiles. Given
the far reaching effects of the OECD BEPS
project, awareness of legislative and regulatory
changes has never been more important.
The Mazars European US Tax Desk was
created to help US companies successfully
manage these challenges. We can help you to
ask the right questions, set priorities and define
the action plans needed to succeed in the fast
moving landscape of international tax.
The Mazars European US Tax Desk is a
platform for companies with existing European
operations and those looking to enter Europe.
In working with the Desk, companies will be able
to access a wealth of multifaceted, cross border
experience in areas such as:
International tax structuring
Transfer pricing
Inbound and outbound investment
Intellectual property planning
Financing structuring
Treaties – interpretation and
maximisation of benefits
Research and development tax credits
Cross border financing, leasing and
licensing
Corporate acquisitions and divestments
We are here to help you! As part of our
programme to keep you up to date on what is
happening in Europe, we will publish regular
newsletters. These will discuss important tax
legislative changes, provide on the ground
insight, but most importantly, identify how this
news is of relevance to you.
We hope you enjoy our first newsletter. Please
do not hesitate to contact any of the Desk
members if you have a particular issue you
would like to discuss further.
3. 3
1. NEW TAX AVOIDANCE RULES
On 28 January 2016, the European Commission (EC) announced an anti-tax avoidance package for corporate tax
in response to the OECD-G20 agreed BEPS measures.
These measures will need to be ratified by the 28 Member States. Some of the measures are not completely
aligned with the OECD’s proposals, and there are some additional proposals too. Given that many Members of the
EU are also OECD members, it is not clear why the EC has chosen to plough a different furrow in some areas,
notably on how the anti-hybrid measures would operate. The EC is also taking the opportunity to revive proposals
for a Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base (CCCTB). Whilst we can expect some changes to be made to
the proposals, EU based groups need to be aware of the proposals as they stand.
Key aspects of the proposals are:
draft anti-tax avoidance directive;
automatic exchange of CbyC reports;
draft anti-treaty shopping rules;
external strategy regarding non-Member State countries
DRAFT ANTI-AVOIDANCE DIRECTIVE
The objective of this draft directive is the implementation of various anti-avoidance measures in common form
across the 28 Member States. The directive will cover all taxpayers subject to corporate tax in EU Member States,
as well as permanent establishments of other companies located in the EU. There are six specific areas covered
by the draft.
INTEREST DEDUCTIBILITY
To discourage erosion of the tax base through ‘inflated’ interest charges, the proposal is for a limitation to be
placed on the amount of interest which will be tax deductible in a given year. Net interest will only be deductible up
to a fixed ratio based on gross operating profit (proposed to be calculated on the higher of 30% of EBITDA or €1
million). However, the taxpayer will be able to have full deductibility if they are able to demonstrate that its equity to
total assets ratio is within 2% of being as high as the equivalent ratio of the group. Interest costs which are not
deductible one year can be relieved in a future year provided the 30% EBITDA limit is not exceeded. These rules
will not apply to the financial sector.
EXIT TAXATION
The exit tax provisions are aimed at taxpayers intending to reduce their tax liabilities by either moving their tax
residence and or assets, to a low tax jurisdiction. An exit charge will apply based on the market value of the assets
transferred. The EC is clearly mindful of previous litigation at the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) in
respect of exit charges, so within the EU or EEA, the taxpayer will be able to defer payment of the tax by payment
in instalments over five years. This is an area which was not covered by the OECD-G20 BEPS proposals.
THE NETHERLANDS
4. 4
GENERAL ANTI-ABUSE RULE
The EC proposal would apply to ‘Non-genuine arrangements carried out for the essential purpose of obtaining a tax
advantage that defeats the object or purpose of the otherwise applicable tax provisions shall be ignored for the
purposes of calculating the corporate tax liability… An arrangement or series thereof shall be regarded as non-
genuine to the extent that they are nor put into place for valid commercial reasons which reflect economic reality.' If
the EC GAAR were to apply, the tax liability would be calculated by reference to the economic substance.
CONTROLLED FOREIGN COMPANY LEGISLATION
Not all Member States currently have CFC rules. The draft directive proposes to change this, with the introduction
of a CFC regime for 50% subsidiaries based in non-Member States with a tax rate less than 40% of the tax rate in
the parent company’s territory. This would be targeted at companies with at least 50% of their income coming from
passive sources. Furthermore, the CFC’s profits would only be apportioned if the CFC did not have significant
people functions to manage its business.
In view of the Cadbury Schweppes litigation, there is a carve out for EU/EEA subsidiaries. These would only be
within the scope of CFC rules if they were wholly artificial or engaged in arrangements with a main purpose of
obtaining a tax advantage.
HYBRID MISMATCHES
This would apply where two Member States give different legal characterisation of the same taxpayer (hybrid
entity) or to the same payment (hybrid instrument). However, in these proposals, the treatment adopted in the state
in which deduction is first claimed would then need to be followed in the second state.
5. 5
2. NEW DUTCH DOCUMENTATION REQUIREMENTS
On 30 December 2015, the Dutch Ministry of Finance enacted a decree on new Transfer Pricing requirements to
apply to Dutch taxpayers. In general, the new legislation adopted the provisions of the Action 13 of the OECD Base
Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) Project.
COUNTRY-BY-COUNTRY REPORT
(Consolidated turnover in excess of €750m)
A Dutch based multinational group with consolidated turnover in excess of €750m has to prepare a Country-by-
Country (CbyC) report. This report will provide specific information (e.g. revenues, profit and losses, main business
activities and taxes paid) for each jurisdiction in which the group operates. The CbyC report is to be submitted by
the Dutch ultimate parent to the Dutch tax authorities. They in turn will share this information with other relevant tax
jurisdictions. Foreign-based multinationals that reach the above mentioned threshold need to ensure compliance
with the Dutch CbyC requirements. It should be noted, that in certain circumstances (for example when the tax
jurisdiction of the ultimate parent has not yet adopted CbyC rules), the Dutch entity may be responsible for the
submission of the CbyC report.
MASTER FILE AND LOCAL FILE
(Consolidated turnover in excess of €50m)
A Dutch entity, which is a member of a multinational group with consolidated revenue in excess of €50m, is
required to prepare transfer pricing documentation consisting of a Masterfile and a Local file.
The Masterfile should contain an overview of the business of the
multinational group, its general transfer pricing policy and the
worldwide allocation of income and economic activities. This is in
order to assist tax authorities to identify and assess substantial
transfer pricing risks. The required information can be grouped into
five main aspects:
Organization structure;
Business description;
Intangibles;
Intercompany financial activities; and
Financial and tax positions.
The Local file should include information with respect to the specific
cross-border transactions the Dutch entity is involved in, including
an economic analysis supporting the arm’s length nature of such
transactions.
6. 6
TIMELINE
The new documentation
requirements are in force for
financial years starting on or
after 1 January 2016.
Masterfile and Local File are to
be prepared and be in the
administration of the taxpayer
before filing the tax return for
the same financial year.
The CbyC report is to be
submitted to the tax authorities
within 12 months from the last
day of the respective financial
year.
CONSEQUENCES OF
NON-COMPLIANCE
Failure to comply with the transfer pricing documentation requirements will shift the burden of proof to the taxpayer.
In addition, administrative fines, as well as criminal sanctions (for non-compliance with the CbyC reporting) may be
imposed.
7. 7
3. LETTER FROM SILICON VALLEY TAX DIRECTORS
GROUP
The Silicon Valley Tax Directors Group (‘’SVTDG or the “Group”’’), a group of representatives from various leading
high-technology firms, has written a letter to the Dutch government on how the Netherlands could maintain and
improve its favorable business tax regime.
Please refer to the following link for the full letter:
http://www.svtdg.org/docs/svtdg_letter_to_ministry_of_general_affairs.pdf
CURRENT NETHERLANDS REGIME
According to the SVTDG, the most attractive features of the Dutch tax regime are:
easy access to the Dutch tax authorities;
the possibility to obtain advance tax rulings to obtain legal certainty on a tax position;
the favorable participation exemption regime;
the wide tax treaty network;
the absence of a withholding tax on interest and royalties;
the 30% tax ruling for expatriates; and
incentives for R&D related activities.
In order for the Netherlands to maintain and improve the attractiveness of their fiscal investment climate, the Group
has stipulated some of their views in a letter. Next to suggestions relating to the improvement and maintenance of
the Dutch fiscal investment climate, the Group also focusses on certain specific concerns such as grandfathering
clauses, permanent establishment exposure, State Aid, the Anti-Tax Avoidance Directive (“ATAD”) and Public
Country by Country Reporting.
GRANDFATHERING AND PE EXPOSURE
One of the suggestions made by the Group, relates to legislation covering the rapid changes in the tax world. In
order for companies to adjust to the new rules, the Group suggests the Netherlands should provide for
grandfathering (or transitional) rules.
The SVTDG is also quite concerned about the impact of the introduction of the UK Diverted Profits Tax (‘’UK DPT’’)
on Principal Companies located in the Netherlands. The SVTDG believes it would be appropriate for the Dutch
government to question the legitimacy of the UK DPT since the UK DPT violates the tax treaty between the UK and
the Netherlands and it is a breach of EU fundamental law.
STATE AID SUPPORT
Another distress for the SVTDG is the recent State Aid investigations initiated by the European Commission
(‘’EC’’). These investigations have created uncertainty in the use of rulings as an instrument to manage risks.
However, the SVTDG is pleased to see that the Dutch government has appealed against the EC’s decision in the
Starbucks case of unlawful State Aid.
8. 8
IMPROVE AND MAINTAIN INVESTMENT CLIMATE
In light of the BEPS (“Base Erosion and Profit Shifting”) Action Plan and related initiatives, the Netherlands should
provide clarity on maintaining and improving the competitiveness of the Dutch tax systems to attract foreign
investors. By doing so, it could eliminate existing uncertainty about the future of the Dutch fiscal investment climate.
Also, according to the SVTDG a competitive tax rate could be achieved by the Netherlands if they lower their
corporate tax rate, which should be comparable to the UK, Ireland and Switzerland.
ANTI-TAX AVOIDANCE DIRECTIVE
The SVTDG is also concerned that the scope of ATAD (EU) goes beyond the outcomes of the OECD BEPS Action
Plan (global). The ATAD requires minimum standards, but subsequently allows Member States to be stricter than
the minimum standard. Therefore, a cohesive implementation of the BEPS Action Plan may not be achieved, only
more uncertainty within the EU, i.e. more uncertainty for non-EU companies dealing with the EU.
According to SVTDG, the Netherlands should maintain two important cornerstones of their tax system to attract
foreign investments: (i) adherence to the principle of capital import neutrality (ii) the absence of a withholding tax on
interest and royalties and the objective to eliminate, through the use of tax treaties, withholding taxes on dividends.
PUBLIC COUNTRY BY COUNTRY REPORTING
The SVTDG believes that the EC proposals of country by country reporting will harm the business environment in
the EU. It will harm the EU’s ability to attract investment. The public report of data can be misunderstood and
misinterpreted, which will result in reputational damages for companies.
9. 9
4. EU PARENT SUBSIDIARY DIRECTIVE
The aim of the EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive is to prevent tax measures of the Member States that constitute a
disadvantage to cooperation between companies of different Member States compared to cooperation between
companies of one Member State.
In accordance with the EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive, profits distributed by a subsidiary in one Member State to
its parent company in another Member State will be exempt from withholding tax provided that the parent company
holds at least 10% of the subsidiary.
The EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive has been adopted by all Member States of the European Union.
The member states may require that the parent company maintain a holding for an uninterrupted period of up to 2
years. They are allowed to require the
payer to withhold tax provisionally or lodge
a security equal to the tax until the parent
company proves that the minimum holding
period has been met.
Amendments to the Directive were
proposed with the intention of reducing tax
avoidance in Europe by closing loopholes
which some companies have been using to
escape taxation. In particular, companies
will no longer be able to exploit differences
in the way intra-group payments are taxed
across the EU to avoid paying tax at all.
Therefore, the EU Parent-Subsidiary
Directive is strengthened by these new
general anti-abuse rules.
On 27 January 2015, the European
Council formally adopted a binding general anti-abuse rule (GAAR) to be included in the EU Parent-Subsidiary
Directive (PSD). Member States had until 31 December 2015 to implement the GAAR to their own national law.
While the original version of the PSD only allowed Member States to apply domestic or agreement-based
provisions required by anti-abuse rules, the PSD will now contain a mandatory GAAR. This means the Member
States are required to deny the dividend withholding tax exemption under PSD in cases of tax avoidance.
The objectives under the introduction of the PSD GAAR is to encourage corporate groups to further align their
businesses toward an operating model where operational and management structures more loosely match the
holding structure.
The existence of the new rule has significant implications. As of 1 January 2016 the PSD GAAR affects new and
also existing international holding structures. Specifically, this impacts those cases where a withholding tax
exemption could have been available, with cash-strapped European tax authorities now relying on the subjective
interpretation of the PSD GAAR clause to deny such exemption. In terms of double taxation, this may also mean
that access to the participation exemption regime may also be denied in cases where abuse is perceived to have
occurred.
IRELAND
10. 10
5. APPLE RULING: EUROPEAN COMMISSION
DEMANDS €13BN IN BACK TAXES
The European Commission issued a negative decision in the Apple State Aid case.
Ireland has been instructed by the European Commission to recover up to €13bn of alleged state aid from the
company covering a ten year period. The European Commission has stated that “This decision does not call into
question Ireland's general tax system or its corporate tax rate”. No other companies are subject to this decision by
the European Commission.
Following the announcement, the Irish Minister for Finance said “I disagree profoundly with the Commission’s
decision. Our tax system is founded on the strict application of the law, as enacted by the Oireachtas, without
exception…..It is important that we send a strong message that Ireland remains an attractive and stable location of
choice for long-term substantive investment. Apple has been in Ireland since the 1980s and employs thousands of
people in Cork. The company has continued to expand its operations in Ireland in recent times.”
In its decision, the Commission stated that the amount to be recovered by Ireland could be reduced if the US
authorities were to require Apple to pay larger amounts of money to their US parent company for this period to
finance research and development efforts.
Notwithstanding the right of appeal, Ireland is legally obliged to recover the alleged State Aid from Apple in the
interim. Given that this money may ultimately have to be returned, the Irish government has confirmed that the
money can be held in escrow until the case has concluded.
Ireland has indicated that it will appeal the Commission’s decision. However, any such appeal will most likely take a
number of years to conclude.
THE APPLE RULING: HOW IT ALL STARTED
In 2014, the European Commission announced that it was opening investigations into the tax arrangements of
Apple in Ireland, Starbucks in the Netherlands and Fiat and Amazon in Luxembourg. The EU Commission
contended that the relevant Member States offered illegal State Aid to the US companies involved. Essentially, it
was being argued that these companies were being offered deals which were overly generous and not available to
other companies.
The focus of the EU Commission was on so-called “tax rulings” issued by the Irish Revenue Commissioners to
Apple in 1991 and 2007. A preliminary decision was issued by the Commission in 2014 stating that it believed that
Ireland offered Apple State Aid.
The European Commission has similarly issued adverse findings in respect of cases taken against the Netherlands
(Starbucks) and Luxembourg (Fiat and Amazon). Both jurisdictions have appealed the Commission’s findings.
IMPACT ON IRISH FDI LANDSCAPE
While this recent announcement is disappointing, it was not unexpected. Similar negative announcements have
been previously issued by the Commission to the Netherlands and Luxembourg. This highly anticipated
announcement has been expected since 2014. It needs to be kept in mind that the alleged State Aid relates to so
called rulings issued as far back as 1991. In the subsequent years, a suite of new legislation has been enacted by
Ireland. These BEPS compliant provisions advocate transparency, while continuing to be best in class.
11. 11
Companies who have been looking at coming into Ireland have done so with the knowledge of the Apple
investigation. IDA Ireland, the inward investment agency of the Irish Government, reports a strong first half to 2016.
Ireland continues to be one of the strongest performers in Europe in the FDI sector. Technology and Business
Services and International Financial Services were amongst the strongest performers in the first half of 2016. This
was followed by Life Sciences. The US remains Ireland’s key market.
The recent UK referendum decision to leave the European Union (Brexit) presents opportunity for Ireland. We are
already witnessing increasing levels of queries, particularly from groups in the mobile technology and financial
services sectors.
Overall, the Irish FDI space looks positive.
12. 12
6. AUTOMATIC EXCHANGE OF ADVANCE CROSS-
BORDER RULINGS AND ADVANCE PRICING
The Law concerning the automatic exchange of information with respect to tax rulings (ATRs) and
advance pricing agreements (APA) was voted on 14 July 2016 and has been published.
It aims to amend and supplement the Law of 29 March 2013 on the exchange of tax information.
CONTEXT
The European Council has expressed the need for further measures to combat against cross-border tax
avoidance, aggressive tax planning and harmful tax competition, both at global and European Union
levels. Therefore, in order to increase transparency, the Tax Administration of an EU Member State will
have to automatically exchange information about cross-border ATRs and APAs with all other EU
Member States and to a lesser extent with the European Commission.
This measure is based on the principle that it is the other Member States who are best placed to assess
the potential effects and the relevance of a decision, rather than the Member State which issues the ATR
and/or APA.
SCOPE OF AUTOMATIC EXCHANGE
The scope of the automatic exchange of the cross-border ATRs and APAs issued, amended or renewed
to a particular person or group of persons upon which that person or group of persons is entitled to rely,
should cover any material form (irrespective of their binding or non-binding character). As a result, the
Law n°6972 defines cross-border ATRs and APAs in such way to cover a wide range of situations.
The automatic exchange of information is mandatory for the below cross-border ATRs and APAs:
1) Issued, amended or renewed after 31 December 2016.
Deadline for exchange - within three months following the end of the half of the calendar year during
which the ATR or APA have been issued, amended or renewed.
2) Issued, amended or renewed within a period beginning five years before 1 January 2017, as follows:
o If the ATR or APA were issued, amended or renewed between 1 January 2012 and 31 December
2013, such communication shall take place under the condition that they were still valid on 1
January 2014;
o If the ATR or APA were issued, amended or renewed between 1 January 2014 and 31 December
2016, such communication shall take place irrespective of whether they are still valid.
Deadline for exchange - before 1 January 2018.
LUXEMBOURG
13. 13
The scope of the automatic exchange of information does not cover:
Information on cross-border ATRs and APAs issued, amended or renewed before 1 April 2016 to a
particular person or a group of persons with a group-wide annual net turnover (as defined in Article
48 of the Law 19 December 2002 on the Register of Commerce and Companies and the accounting
and annual accounts of Undertakings) of less than EUR 40.000.000 (or the equivalent amount in
any other currency) in the fiscal year preceding the date of issuance, amendment or renewal of
those ATRs and APAs. This exemption does not apply for persons or a group of persons conducting
mainly financial or investment activities.
The tax rulings which exclusively concern and involve the tax affairs of one or more natural persons.
The tax rulings and arrangements
related only to Luxembourg
transactions.
INFORMATION EXCHANGED
The main information to be
communicated by a Member State to all
other Member States include the
following:
a) the identification of the person,
other than a natural person, and
where appropriate the group of
persons to which it belongs;
b) a summary of the content of the
ATR or APA, including a description
of the relevant business activities or
transactions or series of
transactions provided in abstract
terms, without leading to the
disclosure of a commercial,
industrial or professional secret or
of a commercial process, or of
information whose disclosure would
be contrary to public policy;
c) the dates of issuance, amendment or renewal of the ATR or APA;
d) the start and end date of the period of validity of the ATR or APA, if specified;
e) the type of the ATR or APA;
f) the amount of the transaction or series of transactions, if such amount is referred to in the ATR or
APA;
g) the description of the set of criteria used for the determination of the transfer pricing or the transfer
price itself in the case of an APA;
h) the identification of the method used for determination of the transfer pricing or the transfer price
itself in the case of an APA;
i) the identification of the other Member States, if any, likely to be concerned by the ATR or APA;
14. 14
j) the identification of any person, other than a natural person, in the other Member States, if any,
likely to be affected by the ATR or APA (indicating to which Member States the affected persons are
linked); and
The information to be communicated to the European Commission does not include points a), b), g) and
j) mentioned above.
Furthermore, the Member States may request additional information, including the full text of the cross-
border ATR or APA.
PRACTICALITIES
It is the Luxembourg Tax Administration that should provide the required information to all other Member
States and the European Commission. Nevertheless, the Tax Administration will rely on the assistance
of the companies concerned by the automatic exchange of information.
In this respect, Form 777 E which summarises the information to be exchanged with other Member
States in English is already available on the website of the Luxembourg Tax Administration:
http://www.impotsdirects.public.lu/formulaires/collectivites/.
In addition, as of 1 January 2016, Form 777 E must be completed and attached to each new ATR/APA
request and the Tax Administration has already started approaching companies regarding the ATRs and
APAs issued before 2016.
OUR ASSISTANCE
Please contact us should you need additional information or require our assistance regarding the
automatic exchange of information on cross-border ATRs and APAs.
In particular, we could help you to identify which ATRs/APAs issued for your company(s) fall within the
scope of the exchange. Furthermore, we could assist you in determining the modalities of completing the
Form 777 E for your selected ATRs/APAs.
15. 15
7. REVISION FOR OFFSETTING TAX LOSSES FOR
CORPORATIONS
With the draft bill of 23 August 2016, the German federal government initiated a process to develop the offset of
corporate tax losses. The present regulation of § 8c KStG, introduced to avoid any shell company purchase, was
mostly seen as too restrictive. Even after the implementation of the corporate group clause and the hidden
reserves provision, many corporations faced a forfeiture of tax loss carry-forwards (TLCF).
A need for relief was identified in particular in regard of those cases in which the business activities of a company
are not affected by the change of its shareholders, but remain consistent even after the transfer of shares. This is
the point at which the new § 8d KStG (draft) shall tie up.
THE EXISTING §8C KSTG
§ 8c KStG provides that if a transfer of shares is (i) made to only one purchaser, related parties of such purchaser
or a group of purchasers acting in concert and (ii) exceeds a certain percentage within a period of five years, the
corporation´s TLCF’s and current tax losses will be forfeited (pro rata if more than 25% and up to 50% of the
shares are being transferred, or entirely if the transfer exceeds 50%). The forfeiture can only be avoided if the
corporation has adequate hidden reserves (hidden reserves provision) or for specific transfers within a group. The
regulations of § 8c KStG apply as well for trade tax losses.
THE NEW §8D KSTG (DRAFT) – OPPORTUNITIES AND RISKS
§ 8d KStG, as drafted, aims to eliminate the tax barriers regarding the corporate financing through changes in
shareholders and to offer the option of using TLCF’s and current tax losses independently from the prejudicial
acquisition of shares.
The requirement for the use of this regulation is that historically, more precisely during the last three fiscal years
(before the application was filed) or since beginning of business and in the future, the corporation has been
undertaking the same kind of business operations.
§ 8d KStG (draft) shall however not apply in the case of the following events:
business activities are put on hold
business activities´ purpose changes
corporation undertakes an additional business
the corporation joins a partnership
the corporation becomes a parent company (acc. to § 14 (1) KStG)
assets are being transferred to the corporation and recognized with a lower value than the fair market value
To prevent a misuse of structural alternatives, none of the previous events should have occurred in the three fiscal
years prior to the prejudicial acquisition of shares.
GERMANY
16. 16
Each corporation decides for itself whether or not to use the regulations of § 8d KStG (draft) by filing an application
along with its tax return. While § 8c KStG still is the current legal standard for the limits on the use of tax losses, §
8d KStG (draft) proposes an alternative. If the application is allowed, a separate, continuation-bound TLCF is
determined by the tax authorities. This TLCF is to be used first, before the general TLCF according to § 10d (4)
EStG.
A cessation of the business operations or the occurrence of one of the previously defined damaging events, are
leading to a total forfeiture of the continuation-bound TLCF, except for those with hidden reserves in the same
amount.
The new regulations shall be applicable to all transactions conducted after 31 December 2015.
POINTS OF DISCUSSION
The strict separation of regimes according to § 8d KStG (draft) and § 8c KStG could lead to unsystematic results.
Therefore, a pro rata forfeiture according to § 8c KStG (e.g. 35%) could turn into a total forfeiture by choosing the
regulations of § 8d KStG (draft).
Furthermore, delimitation problems similar to those with the former regulation in § 8 (4) KStG could come up during
the practical implementation.
17. 17
8. BREXIT – TAX IMPLICATIONS FOR MULTINATIONALS
As the UK will remian a member of the EU for at least another two years it is not necessary to take any immediate
action, especially since we do not know yet what action will be taken by the UK Government. However, now
certainly is the time to start identifying and assessing the tax impact of Brexit on your businesses and start to plan
what might be possible solutions or opportunities.
Repatriation of profits
It is important to businesses to eliminate or reduce double taxation. For businesses operating within the EU there
are two important EU directives upon which businesses rely to reduce the withholding tax in the paying jurisdiction:
The Parent Subsidiary Directive allows dividends to be paid between EU Member States without incurring
withholding tax. In the absence of the EU Directive, UK shareholders would need to rely on the UK’s double tax
treaty network to benefit from reduced withholding tax. The UK has an extensive network of treaties but they do
not all reduce the withholding tax to zero.
The Interest & Royalties Directive eliminates withholding taxes on interest and royalties paid between EU Member
States. In the absence of a suitable treaty or an EU Directive, payments of interest and royalties from the UK would
be subject to withholding tax at 20%. Businesses would need to rely on the UK’s treaty network but, as with
dividends, they do not all eliminate the withholding taxes – some only reduce the rate that needs to be applied.
It is likely that the UK will seek to renegotiate a deal which will maintain these beneficial arrangements, as it will be
in the interests of both the UK and EU Member States to facilitate international trade.
UK as a holding company location
The UK is often used as a holding company location. Brexit could potentially have a significant impact on this form
of international investment. How multinational businesses will react is likely to depend on the UK’s negotiations with
the EU post Brexit.
However, there are a number of other advantages which could mean the UK remains an attractive location for a
holding company. Eg Extensive treaty network, membership of major international organisations such as the G8,
G20, and OECD, dividend and capital gains exemption on share disposals, along with very attractive (and falling)
headline corporate tax rate.
Transfer Pricing and the Arbitration Convention
The EU Arbitration Convention establishes a procedure to resolve disputes where double taxation occurs between
companies of different Member States as a result of an upward adjustment of profits of a company of one Member
State. On exit, this Convention will no longer apply unless specifically included in the negotiation. The lack of such
a Convention could make it more difficult for companies to resolve such issues. However, in practice agreement is
often sought through the mutual agreement procedure in the relevant double tax agreement.
Impact of EU law on UK tax policy
Recently, the European Commission has conducted a number of State Aid investigations into transfer pricing
rulings granted by some Member States to multinational companies (Apple, Starbucks, McDonald's and Fiat). On
UNITED KINGDOM
18. 18
leaving the EU, the UK would no longer be bound by the
State Aid rules. This would give the UK government the
freedom to introduce more reliefs, offer advantages to
selective industries, without having to be concerned about
incompatibilities between the UK and EU law. However
UK’s membership of the G20 and the OECD may
constrain what the UK can do in this area.
Leaving the EU could have other advantages such as not
being bound by decisions of the Court of Justice of
European Union and not having to participate in the EU’s
desire for a common consolidated corporate tax base.
Customs duty
Customs duty within the EU is almost entirely governed by EU directives. On exit the UK would no longer be part of
the EU’s Customs Union and as a result EU’s customs duties could apply, making it more expensive for EU
companies and consumers to import from the UK. Similarly, if the UK decides to introduce customs duty on imports
from the EU, then UK businesses which rely on imports from the EU could find their costs increasing.
Given the UK is a net importer from the rest of the EU, it seems highly likely that the UK would seek a Customs
agreement with the EU, perhaps similar to those concluded between the EU and EEA or Turkey. However it is
important that businesses review their supply chain and identify those parts which are affected.
VAT
As VAT is a European tax, UK VAT legislation has had to fall in line with the EU Principal VAT Directive. However,
there is no practical chance that VAT will be abolished, as it is a major source of revenue for the UK. However, the
UK would no longer be bound by European constraints. Whilst there may be more freedom for the UK government
in formulating VAT policy in future, it is still likely that European VAT law would influence UK policy in order to deal
with potential tax avoidance and uncompetitive double taxation.
There is widespread expectation that Brexit will not result in a significant change to the VAT treatment of cross
border supplies of services. However, changes in the administration for cross border movements of goods are
likely, especially if the UK does not retain direct access to the Single Market in an EEA type arrangement.
Employment tax and Share Plans
Many areas of employment law have substantial influence emanating from the European Union. The exit from the
European Union is likely to have an impact on employment law but to what degree remains to be seen. In reality
many of the fundamental employment protections will have to be retained to enable the UK to maintain strong
trading relations with Europe.
Conclusion
This is clearly a period of considerable uncertainty for the UK, which is not good news for business. However, the
full impact of Brexit may be softened by the UK renegotiating replacement deals with the EU. The UK is a member
of the G8, G20 and OECD independently from its membership of the EU. It will thus continue to be a party to
double tax treaties and other agreements that have their basis in these international organisations.
We at Mazars can assist you with reviewing your commercial and corporate structure and identify the optimal tax
strategy for your business as a result of Brexit.