Category: Australia

Parliament takes aim at corporate ‘looting’

MPs say transfer pricing, though legal, presents challenges when determining if firms have evaded taxation and they want the practice criminalised. The portfolio committee on trade and industry has heard calls for the criminalisation of transfer pricing – a practice that, when abused, results in large corporations shifting profits offshore… – Continue reading

The “Netflix tax” – coming to a country near you

The arrival of Netflix in Australia has brought into sharp relief the GST base erosion problem caused by global digital commerce. Along with the non-taxation of low-value imported goods, the absence of GST on services and digital products imported by consumers represents an omission from the tax base that is… – Continue reading

Bitcoin is now VAT-Exempt in Spain

Bitcoin transactions are exempt from value-added-tax (VAT) in Spain, says Spanish tax lawyer Alejandro Gómez, The General Directorate of Taxes, a subsidiary of the Spanish taxing authorities, made the statement in a response to a request from Gómez. According to Gómez, the consultation found that Bitcoin payments were a form… – Continue reading

Australia property sector needs money laundering safeguards: report

(Reuters) – Australia needs to tighten safeguards against money laundering in its booming property market, which has attracted Chinese funds with likely links to corruption, an international anti-money laundering body said in a report released late on Tuesday. The intergovernmental Financial Action Task Force said real estate agents and lawyers… – Continue reading

Google tax: Hockey top adviser attacked plan in former role

The man chosen by Treasurer Joe Hockey to lead the review of the nation’s tax system has publicly criticised the British government’s “Google tax”, the inspiration for the Coalition’s looming crackdown on multinational profit shifting. Robert Jeremenko, who is running the tax white paper process in Mr Hockey’s office, described… – Continue reading

COBA warns against ‘anti-competitive’ tax

The Customer Owned Banking Association is calling on the Abbott Government to stay the course on the Financial System Inquiry (FSI) to stop anti-competitive behaviours creeping into the banking system. COBA CEO Mark Degotardi says that we are seeing an apparent willingness to reject the FSI’s recommendation against a deposit… – Continue reading

Tax Office requests impromptu hearing of tax avoidance inquiry to tackle claims by former ATO executive

The Senate inquiry into corporate tax avoidance will unexpectedly return on Wednesday after the Australian Taxation Office requested a supplementary public hearing to refute allegations made in evidence by former ATO executive Martin Lock. Mr Lock told the inquiry earlier this month that the Tax Office gives up “billions of… – Continue reading

New trade policy to be launched

The Ministry of Trade will be launching a trade policy that will re-ignite Fiji’s interest in the Australian and New Zeaand markets in the next few months. Minister for Trade Faiyaz Koya says this single reference document will identify the trade capacity, constraints and needs of each sector. ‘’The policy… – Continue reading

IT tax dodgers strangle homegrown talent

Macquarie Telecom has given full voice to an extremely serious problem facing Australian technology companies: That is, the gaming of the global tax system by multinationals puts Australia’s home-grown technology players who pay tax in Australia at a significant competitive disadvantage. This is a simple equation. It doesn’t matter how… – Continue reading

Google, Rio, BHP, Apple: Tax the ‘selfish corporate rabble’

The head of the Business Council of Australia (BCA), Catherine Livingstone, has called for a national “conversation” about what the federal government and the business community euphemistically call “economic reform”. Ever in thrall to trickle-down economics, they manage to talk in “doublespeak”, a close relative of the doublethink that George… – Continue reading

Looking to expand into Singapore? All you need to know about transfer pricing regulations

Lee Curthoys, corporate tax lead at Radius, looks at Singapore’s changing transfer pricing regulations and tells us what we need to know. For a number of reasons, ranging from public safety to proximity to other Asian markets, Singapore is a popular destination for businesses looking to expand globally. In fact,… – Continue reading

Uranium demand is putting miner Cameco back on investors’ radar

The outlook for uranium, moribund for some time, is looking up. And that means shares of Cameco Corp., the Saskatoon-based miner one analyst calls “the only real blue-chip stock in the sector,” are up, too – about 20 per cent from their 52-week lows. The stock has received a host… – Continue reading

From Liberal hero to unwelcome adviser

For almost two decades Peter Costello has been put on a pedestal by his Liberal colleagues. They still regard him as Australia’s greatest treasurer, notwithstanding Labor’s Paul Keating and Wayne Swan won global recognition for their efforts in managing the local economy. Costello’s supporters point to the fact he delivered… – Continue reading

Josh Frydenberg to boost funds management exports

The funds management industry has welcomed a commitment from Assistant Treasurer Josh Frydenberg to make tax and corporate law changes that will boost the export of asset management services to Asia. Complex and uncompetitive legal and tax settings in Australia have acted as a handbrake on the export of financial… – Continue reading

Administration Proposes to Repeal Deferral, Haircut the Foreign Tax Credit and Interest Expense Deductions, Override Treaties, and Abandon Arm’s-Length Transfer Pricing for Intangibles

As the above title indicates (it is only a modest exaggeration), the Treasury Greenbook regarding the FY 2016 budget proposes a radical restructuring of the system for U.S. taxation of foreign income of U.S. multinational enterprises (MNEs). Some Congressional players have suggested that these proposals are an opening bid in… – Continue reading

Government shouldn’t work with tax-avoiding tech companies, says Macquarie Telecom

Government agencies should be forced to justify themselves to federal ministers every time they buy services from global technology giants such as Google and Amazon Web Services that pay less in local taxes, according to telecommunications provider Macquarie Telecom. In a letter to the Senate Economics Reference Committee investigating the… – Continue reading

South32 turns bearish as tax inquiry, iron-ore put ‘sell’ skids under BHP

Johannesburg (miningweekly.com) – With the shareholder vote just over three weeks away, the planned spin-off of South32 from BHP Billiton has turned bearish and BHP Billiton has itself fallen victim to an unprecedented number of analyst sell recommendations owing to the plummeting iron-ore price, worsened by the reputational damage that… – Continue reading

Worldwide: Protecting Yourself From International Tax Investigations

Who Will Be Next? How To Respond To A Tax Investigation The international political community continues to make the most threatening noises about those who they believe do not pay enough tax. Long gone it seems are the days where it was accepted that a person could properly organise his… – Continue reading

Europe slow to adopt new accounting standard despite Greek crisis

In the five years since the eurozone crisis exploded, the European Union has adopted a great number of measures to improve its fiscal governance. Yet amazingly, it still does not have a robust, harmonized way of measuring and monitoring the financial activities of its member states, reports the Wall Street… – Continue reading

No one said reform was easy:Cormann

Finance Minister Mathias Cormann insists the government is not shying away from reform despite a tough year selling its first budget. Senator Cormann says pursuing important economic reform is a “marathon, not a sprint”. “If it was easy, anyone could do it,” he told Sky News on Sunday. Senator Cormann… – Continue reading

RPT-Commodity giants’ Singapore trading hubs under fire in tax probes

SINGAPORE, April 12 (Reuters) – The Singapore trading hubs of the world’s largest commodity companies are coming under scrutiny from the governments of some resource-producing countries who say they suspect they are using units in the Southeast Asian financial centre to avoid tax. Some of the world’s largest oil, mining… – Continue reading

Australian trade minister: FTA with GCC ‘possible within months’

Australia and the GCC countries may only be a few months away from signing a landmark Free Trade Agreement (FTA) deal “if a decision is made quickly,” with such a deal having multiple benefits for various Gulf-based businesses and stakeholders, said Australia Trade and Investment Minister Andrew Robb. Speaking to… – Continue reading

Tax terrorism versus tax haven

The key is to arrive at a Goldilocks mean — rolling out tax-friendly policies while being firm with incorrigible offenders A phrase first used by Prime Minister Narendra Modi while addressing a group of businessmen in the run-up to the elections last year has now come back to haunt his… – Continue reading

Senate tax inquiry: Google, Apple, Microsoft policies highlight golden days of tax laxness

There was a moment on Tuesday evening – hours before the first public hearing of the Senate inquiry into corporate tax evasion – when Treasurer Joe Hockey and his advisers should have sensed a firestorm approaching. Sandwiched between a story on a Gold Coast diet blogger accused of pinching other… – Continue reading

BHP and Rio Tinto under audit for Singapore hubs used to lower tax bills

Australia’s biggest miners, BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto, have told the Senate inquiry into corporate tax avoidance that they are under audit by the Australian Taxation Office for allegedly shifting profits through marketing hubs in Singapore. The Singaporean hubs are used by multinationals including the tech giants and miners to… – Continue reading

Australian Senate tax grandstanding: A preparation for austerity

An Australian Senate parliamentary committee hearing on Wednesday was dominated by the fire and brimstone of Labor and Greens politicians directed against tax avoidance by major corporations. Labor Senator Sam Dastyari called on Australian Tax Commissioner Chris Jordan to “name some of Australia’s worst corporate offenders,” declaring that they “should… – Continue reading

Big Four firms consistently ‘unaware’ before tax inquiry

Representatives from “Big Four” accounting firm Deloitte were up before the Senate tax inquiry on Friday morning. They were keen to dispel any notion that their firm would have any involvement in tax avoidance. Senator Christine Milne asked if they were aware of the Deloitte document “Investing in Africa though… – Continue reading

Cheers greet proposed changes for managed investment trusts

Proposed changes to Australia’s managed investment trust regime have been met with cheers from the investment community as they welcome the boost in certainty and tax treatments. The government revealed the long-awaited changes to Australia’s MIT tax system on Tuesday, and expects to create a new standalone regime that will… – Continue reading

Accounting giants say corporate tax advice is within the law

Major accounting firms say they are not doing anything illegal in helping corporations to minimise tax liabilities. KPMG’s managing partner Rosheen Garnon faced the second day of the Senate inquiry into tax avoidance, which has so far heard Australia is missing out on billions of dollars in tax every year… – Continue reading