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Taxation-Transnational

Vanderbilt University Law School

Tax law

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Money Grab: How The G20/Oecd Inclusive Framework For Taxation Could Unnecessarily Disrupt Corporate Incentives And Misallocate Taxing Rights, William T. Anderson Oct 2022

Money Grab: How The G20/Oecd Inclusive Framework For Taxation Could Unnecessarily Disrupt Corporate Incentives And Misallocate Taxing Rights, William T. Anderson

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

The Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) is proposing a dramatic shift to international corporate taxation that both sets a floor for corporate tax rates across the globe and transforms how countries obtain taxing rights over large multinational corporations. This Note focuses on the proposed framework for re-allocating taxing rights over corporations away from the traditional requirement of a physical presence in a country to mere revenues in a country. This Note identifies problems with the proposal as it relates to artificially altering corporate incentives and structures, as well as the proposal's incompatibility with theories of taxation- including Adam …


Spontaneous Tax Coordination: On Adopting A Comparative Approach To Reforming The U.S. International Tax Regime, Anthony C. Infanti Jan 2002

Spontaneous Tax Coordination: On Adopting A Comparative Approach To Reforming The U.S. International Tax Regime, Anthony C. Infanti

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

The excessive complexity of the U.S. international tax regime is well documented. Although many commentators have cited the need for simplification, their proposals often maximize other policy goals at the expense of simplicity. Even reform proposals aimed principally at clarifying the tax code are ordinarily focused on the "internal" complexity of the code, seeking improvements only for U.S. taxpayers struggling with a single complex provision of the code or the baffling interaction, of two U.S. rules. This Article focuses on the interaction between U.S. tax law and the rules of other nations, and is intended to illustrate the benefits that …


Respect For "Form" As "Substance" In U.S. Taxation Of International Trusts, Donald D. Kozusko, Stephen K. Vetter Jan 1999

Respect For "Form" As "Substance" In U.S. Taxation Of International Trusts, Donald D. Kozusko, Stephen K. Vetter

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

...we might decide that the attribution rule should not be applied so broadly, or so automatically. But how would such a system be devised by regulation? The attribution rule could be applied to trusts in which the discretion of the trustee is very limited and the beneficial interests so clearly ascertainable that the trust is, for all practicable purposes, transparent. That is, however, only a small universe of cases. This leads to the further conclusion that the attribution rule has to be applied based on a facts and circumstances determination of the beneficial interest in each case. Yet that seems …


The Steel Products Decision: An Inquiry Into The Treatment Of The Value-Added Tax Under The Countervailing Duty Law, Charles L. Chambers Jan 1976

The Steel Products Decision: An Inquiry Into The Treatment Of The Value-Added Tax Under The Countervailing Duty Law, Charles L. Chambers

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

It is not often that one small clause in a tariff act becomes a major issue between domestic producers and the firms which import competitive foreign goods, a major issue in trade talks between the United States and the European Community, and a bone of contention between the Congress and the Executive Branch. Yet, section 303 of the Tariff Act of 1930 has done just that and no solution to the issues it has raised is in sight...

Section 303 of the Tariff Act of 1930 is simple enough on its face. It imposes a countervailing duty on any goods …


Tax Consequences Of Foreign Currency Fluctuations, Sheldon S. Cohen Jan 1972

Tax Consequences Of Foreign Currency Fluctuations, Sheldon S. Cohen

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

This article concerns the United States federal income tax treatment of the gains and losses resulting from transactions involving currencies other than the United States dollar. United States income taxes must be computed and paid in United States dollars. Therefore, when persons subject to United States income taxes engage in transactions involving foreign currencies, they must account for their profits in terms of dollars for United States income tax purposes. This result follows even if the taxpayer does not actually convert the results of these transactions into dollars. Whether the failure to convert is voluntary, or results from legal restrictions …