International Taxation of Cross-border Leasing Income

International Taxation of Cross-border Leasing Income

Author: Amar Mehta

Publisher: IBFD

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 307

ISBN-13: 9076078718

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book discusses the practical issues faced by the banks, financial institutions, companies engaging in leasing as a form of asset financing, and their tax advisers. The book elaborately deals with the divergent tax treatment in the five most important leasing jurisdictions (ie, US, Japan, Germany, UK and Netherlands) in respect of transaction characterization, depreciation, income-recognition and anti-avoidance rules, as well as divergence in the relevant bilateral tax treaty provisions. Further, the book investigates how the parties to a cross-border leasing transaction may obtain tax advantages due to such divergent tax treatments, and whether and to what extent the general or specific anti-avoidance rules in the jurisdictions may neutralize the tax arbitrage opportunities. Finally, it examines how the framework of the EC Treaty may be relevant for cross-border leasing transactions between the EC Member States.


International Tax Congress (44th : 1990 : Stockholm). Taxation of cross border leasing

International Tax Congress (44th : 1990 : Stockholm). Taxation of cross border leasing

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1990

Total Pages: 698

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The authors of the papers from this conference attempt to find out whether there are problems in cross-border leasing, and - if that is the case - to find out their roots. Papers discuss situations in which cross-border leases result in double taxation (whether legal or economic) or in tax advantages that would not have occurred in a national lease transaction. In the context of the congress papers, a lease is defined as a contract whereby a separation of the ownership of an asset and its usage is established for a certain period of time. The papers follow a generalised format, starting with a comparative analysis of the tax rules to discover differences in the income tax treatment of leases between different countries, then moving on to international tax rules to see if they create further problems and if the tax treaty network solves these problems or creates new ones. The authors also attempt to discover whether new problems emerge in triangular cases.


Taxation of Cross-border Partnerships

Taxation of Cross-border Partnerships

Author: Jesper Barenfeld

Publisher: IBFD

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 431

ISBN-13: 9076078858

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Aims to identify and analyse problems related to double taxation of income attributable to cross border partnerships in asymmetrical situations de lege lata. This refers to cases where the same partnership, in across border owner/entity situation, is recognized as a taxable person in one country, but as transparent for tax purposes in the other."


Taxation of Income from Domestic and Cross-border Collective Investment

Taxation of Income from Domestic and Cross-border Collective Investment

Author: Andreas Oestreicher

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2013-07-30

Total Pages: 170

ISBN-13: 3319004492

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The Fund Reporting Cloud® has made tax reporting less complex, but comparing the effective tax treatment of investment funds and their investors in an international environment is still an ambitious task. Against this background, this study examines the tax consequences at fund, asset, and investor level. In geographical terms our comparison covers eleven European countries, the USA, and Japan. Our analysis of the relevant tax provisions, which is of a primarily qualitative nature, is complemented by a quantitative comparison of the tax burden for a model investor investing assets nationally in the form of a collective investment. It will be of interest both for investors seeking tax advantages and for governments to check whether there is a need for tax reforms. It also ties in perfectly with the current evaluations at OECD level in the context of TRACE.


U.S. International Tax Planning and Policy

U.S. International Tax Planning and Policy

Author: Samuel C. Thompson

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781611631807

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

To view or download the 2018 Supplement to this book, click here. This book addresses the federal income tax treatment of (1) foreign individuals and corporations in the U.S. (i.e., inbound transactions), and (2) U.S. individuals and corporations abroad (i.e., outbound transactions). After considering basic principles and treaties in Part I, Part II deals with inbound transactions; Part III addresses outbound transactions; and Part IV focuses on cross-border mergers and acquisitions. In many chapters the book compares the U.S. approach with the approach taken under the income tax law of South Africa, which has an income tax treaty with the U.S.


International Company Taxation and Tax Planning

International Company Taxation and Tax Planning

Author: Dieter Endres

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9789041145567

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book provides a description and analysis of tax systems worldwide. It offers practical guidance on international planning approaches from a team of both tax practitioners and academics. In addition to references to country-specific tax legislation - including laws and rules in all EU Member States plus the United States, as well as special provisions in Australia, Japan, and elsewhere - the book discusses important ECJ decisions and various other case studies.


Puzzles Over International Taxation of Cross Border Flows of Capital Income

Puzzles Over International Taxation of Cross Border Flows of Capital Income

Author: John Whalley

Publisher:

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 44

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

I discuss the tax treatment of transborder capital income, focussing on prevailing arrangements rather than de novo design of optimal tax arrangements. These comprise unilateral reliefs from double taxation under credit or exemption systems, and treaty reliefs (largely following the OECD model treaty) which jointly lower withholding tax rates on interest, dividends, and royalties in both host and source countries. I suggest that these arrangements involve both seemingly non-strategic unilateral actions and cooperative arrangements which are difficult to reconcile both with tax competition literature and with national interest. I pose four puzzles in this regard. The first is that from a national welfare point of view, the unilateral reliefs in use seem inferior to no relief since with competitive markets investors equate the private return on investments at home and abroad, while tax revenues largely accrue to the foreign government. Private returns are equated, but national returns are not. The second is that tax treaties only have lump sum effects between national governments if the more common credit arrangements of unilateral reliefs apply and if tax rates are similar in host and source countries (approximately the OECD situation). This raises the issue of why governments negotiate them. The third is the sharp contrast to international treaty arrangements for goods flows under the WTO; and the fourth is the absence of side payments in tax treaties. The picture emerging is that making sense of present arrangements from a national welfare point of view and in terms of efficient instrument design seems difficult. The gap relative to optimal tax considerations also seems large.