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The Implications For Australian Businesses Of Recent Developments In Us State Taxation Of Online Cross-Border Sales, Walter Hellerstein Mar 2021

The Implications For Australian Businesses Of Recent Developments In Us State Taxation Of Online Cross-Border Sales, Walter Hellerstein

Popular Media

Although there is no broad-based national consumption tax in the United States, 45 of the 50 states and the District of Columbia, as well as thousands of local jurisdictions, impose general retail sales taxes. For the twelve-month period ending in September 2020, sales taxes yielded USD 333 billion or 31.1 per cent of state tax revenues.

The US Supreme Court’s 2018 decision in South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc. dramatically expanded the US states’ power to require remote suppliers to collect taxes on in-bound sales to local consumers. The decision repudiated the pre-existing, judicially created constitutional rule limiting the states’ …


Uniform International Tax Collection And Distribution For Global Development, A Utopian Beps Alternative, Henry Ordower Jan 2020

Uniform International Tax Collection And Distribution For Global Development, A Utopian Beps Alternative, Henry Ordower

All Faculty Scholarship

Under the guise of compelling multinational enterprises (MNEs) to pay their fair share of income taxes, the OECD and other multinational agencies have introduced proposals to prevent MNEs from eroding the income tax base of developed economies by continuing to shift income artificially to low or zero tax jurisdictions. Some of the proposals have garnered substantial multinational support, including recent support from the new U.S. presidential administration for a global minimum tax. This Article reviews many of those international proposals. The proposals tend to concentrate the incremental tax revenue from the prevention of base erosion into the treasuries of the …


Effects Of Australia's Maal And Dpt On Internet-Based Businesses, Antony Ting, Tommaso Faccio, Jeffrey M. Kadet Jul 2016

Effects Of Australia's Maal And Dpt On Internet-Based Businesses, Antony Ting, Tommaso Faccio, Jeffrey M. Kadet

Articles

Australia has received considerable attention as a result of its unilateral actions to discourage multinational profit shifting. Those actions include the 2015 enactment of the Multinational Anti-Avoidance Law and the Australian Treasury’s May 2016 proposal for a diverted profits tax. This article considers how those actions might affect non-Australian multinational entities that conduct internet platform services for, and earn revenues from, Australian customers if those MNEs take no action. It also reviews structural alternatives.

As will be seen from the example set out in the article, the Australian royalty withholding tax is a major portion of the possible tax increases …


Unilateral Responses To Tax Treaty Abuse: A Functional Approach, Omri Y. Marian Jan 2016

Unilateral Responses To Tax Treaty Abuse: A Functional Approach, Omri Y. Marian

UF Law Faculty Publications

Recent years have seen a dramatic increase in the attention given to abusive tax schemes that take advantage of bilateral tax treaties. The ensuing discourse tends to view potential responses to treaty abuses as a hierarchical set of options, gradually escalating, in which treaty termination is a last resort option. This article argues that the hierarchical view of unilateral responses to treaty abuse is misguided. Unilateral responses to treaty-based abuse are not hierarchically ordered. Rather, the approach to treaty abuse is (and should be) functional, adopting specific types of unilateral responses based on the type of treaty abuse at issue. …


Attacking Profit Shifting: The Approach Everyone Forgets, Jeffrey M. Kadet Jul 2015

Attacking Profit Shifting: The Approach Everyone Forgets, Jeffrey M. Kadet

Articles

No abstract provided.


Expansion Of The Profit-Split Method: The Wave Of The Future, Jeffrey M. Kadet Mar 2015

Expansion Of The Profit-Split Method: The Wave Of The Future, Jeffrey M. Kadet

Articles

Recognizing the reality that multinational corporations are centrally managed and not groups of entities that operate independently of one another, the OECD base erosion and profit-shifting project is considering expanded use of the profit-split method. This article provides background on why expanded use of the profit-split method is sorely needed. In particular, resource-constrained tax authorities in many countries are unable to administer or intelligently analyze and contest transfer pricing results presented by multinational groups. Most importantly, this article suggests a simplified profit-split approach using set concrete and objective allocation keys for commonly used business models that should be welcomed by …


Taxing Offshore Transactions In India And The Territoriality Clause - A Case For Substantial Constitutional Limitations On Indian Parliament's Power To Retrospectively Amend The Income Tax Act, Khagesh Gautam Jun 2014

Taxing Offshore Transactions In India And The Territoriality Clause - A Case For Substantial Constitutional Limitations On Indian Parliament's Power To Retrospectively Amend The Income Tax Act, Khagesh Gautam

Khagesh Gautam

No abstract provided.


Dispute Resolution: The Mutual Agreement Procedure, Hugh Ault Jun 2013

Dispute Resolution: The Mutual Agreement Procedure, Hugh Ault

Hugh J. Ault

No abstract provided.


Some Reflections On The Oecd And The Sources Of International Tax Principles, Hugh Ault Jun 2013

Some Reflections On The Oecd And The Sources Of International Tax Principles, Hugh Ault

Hugh J. Ault

This article is the revised text of a lecture held on May 2, 2013, at the Max Planck Institute for Tax Law and Public Finance. It focuses on the OECD's work on the definition of Permanent Establishment, the transfer pricing treatment of Intangibles and the recently announced project on base erosion and profit shifting ("BEPS"). After describing these positive law developments, Ault relates to more basic questions of how principles of international tax law, and particular the normative claims to taxing rights, are established.


U.S. Tax Reform: Full-Inclusion Over Territorial System Compelling, Jeffrey M. Kadet Apr 2013

U.S. Tax Reform: Full-Inclusion Over Territorial System Compelling, Jeffrey M. Kadet

Articles

The territorial system strongly lobbied for by U.S. multinational corporations that stand to benefit from that system is not what’s best for our country or our society. It is bad tax policy for many reasons, including the strong motivation it provides our multinational corporations to continue moving operations, jobs, risks, and assets outside the United States to achieve double non-taxation. A worldwide full-inclusion system would severely curtail or completely eliminate that strong motivation because double nontaxation would no longer be possible because of a current federal tax on all earnings that cannot be eliminated through any tax schemes or creative …


The Connection Between Competitiveness And International Taxation, Michael S. Knoll Apr 2012

The Connection Between Competitiveness And International Taxation, Michael S. Knoll

All Faculty Scholarship

The term “competitiveness” is a highly elastic concept that has been used in a myriad of different ways. However, in discussions of the connection between international taxation and competitiveness, there are two conceptions of competitiveness that are frequently used, but are not always clearly distinguished from one another. One conception emphasizes the competition between firms to be profitable and grow by acquiring productive assets. The other conception focuses on the competition between states to attract investment capital and people by varying their regulations.

Those two conceptions of competitiveness each imply a distinct definition of a domestic industry and a different …


U.S. International Tax Reform: What Form Should It Take?, Jeffrey M. Kadet Jan 2012

U.S. International Tax Reform: What Form Should It Take?, Jeffrey M. Kadet

Articles

This article focuses solely on the big picture issue of whether international tax reform should take the form of a territorial system or an alternative full inclusion system. Of course, it is also necessary to compare these possible new systems with the current hybrid deferral system that has been in place for many years.

With little if any explanation of how it might be better for our nation and society as a whole, many persons and commentators whose companies or clients stand to benefit have called for a territorial system. Such persons have included CEOs, members of the professional tax …


Who Is Making International Tax Policy? International Organizations As Power Players In A High Stakes World, Diane M. Ring Sep 2011

Who Is Making International Tax Policy? International Organizations As Power Players In A High Stakes World, Diane M. Ring

Diane M. Ring

Who makes international tax policy in today’s world? Certainly no single body possesses that power - there is no global tax authority, and states are not capable of achieving all of their international tax policy goals on a unilateral basis. The development of international tax policy is an interactive and dynamic process that involves a wide range of players, most of whom can be characterized as international organizations. Their roles, goals, tools and influence vary by organization and by issue, but their net impact on tax policy is undeniable. If we are to better understand how tax policy is formed, …


The Promise Of International Tax Scholarship And Its Implications For Research Design, Theory And Methodology, Diane M. Ring Sep 2011

The Promise Of International Tax Scholarship And Its Implications For Research Design, Theory And Methodology, Diane M. Ring

Diane M. Ring

What should international tax scholars be doing? Over the past two decades, international tax has grown both as a practice area and as a field of study. Scholars have begun devoting significant attention to the development, design, and implementation of international tax law. This activity is accompanied by a reflection on the scholarship and its goals, method and content. A review of modern international tax scholarship reveals that as the field has matured, international tax scholars have increasingly turned to other disciplines, especially social sciences, to draw upon their insights, ideas, and research to improve understanding of international tax policy. …


China: A New (Furtive) Approach To Taxing International Transportation Income, Wei Cui Jan 2011

China: A New (Furtive) Approach To Taxing International Transportation Income, Wei Cui

All Faculty Publications

Donghwa Industrial Corporation v. Weihai Huancui State Tax Bureau: China's New (Furtive) Approach to Taxing International Transportation Income


Residence Of Individuals (Canada), Kim Brooks Jan 2010

Residence Of Individuals (Canada), Kim Brooks

Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press

This short paper reviews the residence of individuals under domestic Canadian tax law and under Canada's tax treaties.


Recent Treaty Developments In The Arbitration Of International Tax Disputes, Hugh Ault Dec 2009

Recent Treaty Developments In The Arbitration Of International Tax Disputes, Hugh Ault

Hugh J. Ault

No abstract provided.


2008 Oecd Model: The New Arbitration Provision, Hugh Ault Apr 2009

2008 Oecd Model: The New Arbitration Provision, Hugh Ault

Hugh J. Ault

New Art. 25(5), added to Art. 25 (Mutual agreement procedure) of the OECD Model as part of the 2008 Update, provides for the mandatory arbitration of unresolved issues arising in the course of a mutual agreement procedure. This article first examines the various factors that led to the adoption of Art. 25(5) and the stages of its development by the OECD. The article then discusses some technical aspects of the new arbitration provision, including the Sample Mutual Agreement setting out some procedural rules, which is attached as an Annex to Art. 25.


Reflections On The Role Of The Oecd In Developing International Tax Norms, Hugh Ault Dec 2008

Reflections On The Role Of The Oecd In Developing International Tax Norms, Hugh Ault

Hugh J. Ault

On September 8–9, 2008, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (“OECD”) held a Special Conference commemorating the 50th Anniversary of the OECD Model Tax Convention (“Model Convention” or “Model”). The Conference was attended by over 650 participants from the private sector and the government, representing over 100 countries. Both the level of participation and the geographical diversity represented at the conference would seem concrete evidence of the perceived importance of the role of the OECD in developing international tax norms. In his remarks opening the conference, the OECD Secretary General noted that the success of the OECD Model was …


Japanese Cfc Rules Consistent With Treaty, Court Holds, Hugh Ault, Mitsuhiro Honda Mar 2008

Japanese Cfc Rules Consistent With Treaty, Court Holds, Hugh Ault, Mitsuhiro Honda

Hugh J. Ault

In a practice article, Mitsuhiro Honda and Hugh J. Ault comment on a Tokyo High Court ruling that held that Japan's controlled foreign corporation rules are consistent with article 7(1) of the Japan-Singapore tax treaty.


Current Developments In Procedures For The Resolution Of International Tax Disputes, Hugh Ault Dec 2007

Current Developments In Procedures For The Resolution Of International Tax Disputes, Hugh Ault

Hugh J. Ault

No abstract provided.


Introduction To United States International Taxation, Hugh Ault, James Repetti, Paul Mcdaniel Dec 2004

Introduction To United States International Taxation, Hugh Ault, James Repetti, Paul Mcdaniel

Hugh J. Ault

The 2005 edition of this well-known reference work for the tax community provides an introduction to the application of the United States international taxation system to taxpayers investing or transacting business in the US and other countries. In a relatively brief and manageable form, it sets forth the principles adopted by the US in taxing US or foreign individuals and corporations as they invest, work, or carry on a trade or business in the US or abroad. The presentation focuses on ten specific aspects of the subject matter: -general aspects of the corporation income tax, the individual income tax, the …


Improving The Resolution Of International Tax Disputes, Hugh Ault Dec 2004

Improving The Resolution Of International Tax Disputes, Hugh Ault

Hugh J. Ault

The dramatic increase in international trade and investments and related phenomena under the general heading of Globalization have multiplied the situations in which international tax disputes can arise, both between taxpayers and governments but also, and in some ways, more importantly, between governments themselves. These disputes may involve transfer pricing issues, differing income characterization rules, disagreement about the existence of a permanent establishment, or more generally, diverging views on the appropriate exercise of potential taxing rights by the source country jurisdiction and the corresponding obligation of the residence country to provide double tax relief. In the current circumstances, it seems …


Review Of Foundations Of International Income Taxation, By Michael Graetz, Hugh Ault Jan 2004

Review Of Foundations Of International Income Taxation, By Michael Graetz, Hugh Ault

Hugh J. Ault

No abstract provided.


U.S. Exemption/Territorial System Vs. Credit-Based System, Hugh Ault Nov 2003

U.S. Exemption/Territorial System Vs. Credit-Based System, Hugh Ault

Hugh J. Ault

No abstract provided.


Optimal International Taxation And Tax Competition: Overcoming The Contradictions, William B. Barker Jan 2002

Optimal International Taxation And Tax Competition: Overcoming The Contradictions, William B. Barker

Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business

This paper presents a theory of international taxation based on a new approach to source taxation that reflects world development and synthesizes the objectives of economic efficiency, fairness to taxpayers, and fairness to governments. Adoption of this model results in the preservation of comprehensive income taxation to capital-exporting nations and an expenditure tax base for capital-importing nations. The system would reduce much of the distortion caused by tax competition, eliminating the tax incentive for businesses to use productive assets and technologies outside the country of their development and saving the jobs of many workers.


Arbitration In International Tax Matters: Some Structural Issues, Hugh Ault Dec 2000

Arbitration In International Tax Matters: Some Structural Issues, Hugh Ault

Hugh J. Ault

No abstract provided.


The Importance Of International Cooperation In Forging Tax Policy, Hugh J. Ault Dec 2000

The Importance Of International Cooperation In Forging Tax Policy, Hugh J. Ault

Hugh J. Ault

No abstract provided.


Prospects For A Multilateral Tax Treaty, Diane M. Ring Dec 2000

Prospects For A Multilateral Tax Treaty, Diane M. Ring

Diane M. Ring

No abstract provided.


Transcript From The Symposium: 'Globalization And The Taxation Of Foreign Investment', Hugh Ault Sep 2000

Transcript From The Symposium: 'Globalization And The Taxation Of Foreign Investment', Hugh Ault

Hugh J. Ault

No abstract provided.