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Int'l Tax News

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MNEs Face Transfer Pricing True-Up Challenges in Time of Tariffs

  • By Steven C. Wrappe
  • By Justin Grocock
  • By Marenglen Marku

The US tariffs threatened, imposed, deferred, and changed throughout 2025 have created uncertainty for transfer pricing compliance. As multinational enterprises that import affected goods from related companies strive to navigate the changing landscape on material, new tariffs, they face increased costs, affecting not only their profitability but also their transfer pricing compliance. MNEs may be required to lower the transfer price paid to related companies for imported goods to remain within the arm’s length profitability ranges expected by the IRS.

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How Do US-Asia Trade Agreements Affect DSTs, FDDEI and VAT?

  • By Alistair Pepper
  • By Michael Plowgian
  • By Conrad Turley

On October 26, the US announced trade agreements with Cambodia and Malaysia and framework agreements with Thailand and Vietnam. Although the agreements primarily impact bilateral trade between these countries and the US, and particularly the rate of customs duties imposed, various provisions and statements focus on other tax issues.

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UN’s Public Transfer Pricing Database Faces Serious Roadblocks

  • By Chad Martin

The United Nations’ ongoing efforts to alleviate information asymmetries between taxpayers and tax administrations are worthwhile but face long odds of success.

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Advisers Suggest Ecosystem Access Tax as Pillar 1 Alternative

  • By Elodie Lamer

International tax policy advisers are picking up on the openness to pillar 1 alternatives recently expressed by Spain and Italy and suggested an “ecosystem access compensation” approach.

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Tariffs and Advance Pricing Agreements

  • By Mark J. Horowitz, Thomas D. Bettge, Donald C. Hok, Vesela Grozeva

Mark J. Horowitz, Thomas D. Bettge, Donald C. Hok, and Vesela Grozeva examine the considerations specific to advance pricing agreements that arise when transfer pricing covered by an APA is materially affected by tariffs.

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Israel Reforms Investment Fund, R&D, and IP Tax Regimes

  • By Alexander F. Peter

Following litigation over intellectual property transfers and a slowdown in tech sector growth, Israel has issued draft regulations for an improved investment fund tax regime and a notice concerning the taxation of research and development centers.

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Safe Harbors: Is the Arm’s Length Principle Losing Its Grip?

  • By Jelena Mihić Munjić

The arm’s length principle has been the foundation of transfer pricing rules for decades. It says that companies in the same group should price their cross-border transactions as if they were unrelated. However, global businesses today are more interconnected, data-driven, and centered around intangible assets. In this new world, ALP is becoming harder to apply and manage.

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Canada Proposes Investment Incentives, Transfer Pricing Reform

  • By Amanda Athanasiou

Canada’s new budget includes an enhanced research and development tax incentive program, a super deduction for businesses, and tax system integrity measures expected to increase revenues as the government reveals a C $78 billion deficit.

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EU Finance Ministers to Discuss Pillar 2 Changes

  • By Elodie Lamer

As member states continue to raise concerns about transatlantic tensions, EU countries' finance ministers are scheduled to discuss ongoing negotiations on pillar 2 changes in camera at next week's Economic and Financial Affairs Council meeting.

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Business Groups Look to 'Future-Proof' USMCA Against DSTs

  • By Jonathan Curry

 A scheduled review of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement is shaping up to be the next battleground over digital services taxes in North America.

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Paradis Fiscaux and the Role of Minilateralism

  • By Lucas De Lima Carvalho

Lucas de Lima Carvalho examines the memoir of Pascal Saint-Amans regarding his work at the OECD and the book’s implications for a minilateralist compromise.

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Geopolitics and Global Finance Governance: Diverging Superpowers

  • By Bruce Zagaris

Bruce Zagaris explores the competition between the United States and China regarding international financial governance, trade, and policy objectives.

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What's Next for Retaliatory and Discriminatory Taxes?

  • By Mindy Herzfeld

Mindy Herzfeld examines international developments around pillar 2 and considers whether the retaliatory taxes under the proposed but not enacted section 899 are still on the table.

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OECD Eyes Creating Broader Advance Tax Agreement Mechanism

  • By Shaun Courtney

An Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development group will explore developing a broader mechanism to help deliver businesses preapproved tax certainty.

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EU Walks Fine Line Between Legal and Political Issues on Pillar 2

  • By Elodie Lamer

Allaying the United States’ pillar 2 concerns is a political necessity for the EU that will require legal creativity to avoid delays and renewed tensions with the Trump administration, according to observers.

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A Discussion of Trump's Tariff Policies

  • By Ted Peterson

Ted Peterson examines past and present U.S. tariffs as well as the economic risks and rewards of a tariff-driven system, noting important distinctions between tariffs used strategically to support industrial development and those used solely as a revenue-generating or punitive measure.

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France Risks Trump Ire as Lawmakers Vote to Raise Tech Tax (1)

  • By Benoit Berthelot
  • By William Horobin

French lawmakers voted to double the country’s tax on large technology companies, risking a backlash from Donald Trump who has long threatened to retaliate against the measure with trade tariffs.

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Trade Deals Outweigh Tax Treaties in US Digital Tax Fight

  • By Ryan Hogg

The Trump administration’s recent trade deals with Southeast Asian countries signal its intent to use such deals in place of treaties to combat digital services taxes or similar taxes that it deems to be discriminating against US companies.

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U.N. Trudges Forward on Framework Convention

  • By Michael Smith

The U.N. has released two workstreams that focus on addressing issues related to its framework convention on international tax cooperation and dispute prevention and resolution.

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U.N. Tax Committee to Tackle Transfer Pricing, AI, Tax Nexus

  • By Jonathan Curry

A U.N. panel of national tax administrators has advanced plans to tee up guidance and further studies on a wide array of key tax issues, including the use of artificial intelligence in tax administration.

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U.N. Releases Concept Note on Tax Dispute Resolution Ideas

  • By U.N.

The U.N. published a concept note regarding the second early protocol to the framework convention on international tax cooperation, which focuses on tax dispute prevention and resolution, explaining that key topics of the protocol design include giving jurisdictions the option to adopt the mechanism or not; a focus on exclusively cross-border tax disputes; allowing application to a wide range of disputes; establishing a legal basis for cross-border administrative cooperation; and making mutual agreement procedures more accessible.

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Not GILTI and Pillar 2, Part 2

  • By Lee A. Sheppard

Lee A. Sheppard examines the seemingly doomed fate of the OECD’s BEPS 2.0 project.

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Indonesian Tax Official Says OECD's Pillar 1 Is Still the Future

  • By Santhie Goundar

An Indonesian Ministry of Finance tax official told a panel he believes “the future of international tax is actually still in pillar 1 because we are now moving to a digital economy” globally.

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French Committee Approves Digital Services Tax Increase


The French National Assembly’s Finance Committee has approved a proposal to sharply increase the rate and narrow the scope of the country’s controversial digital services tax as part of the 2026 finance bill.

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Italy's Budget Office Takes Dim View of G7 Side-by-Side Plan

  • By Jonathan Curry

The G7 proposal’s special carveout for the United States from the OECD’s global anti-base-erosion rules threatens to undermine international tax coordination, according to the Italian Parliamentary Budget Office.

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Companies Should Get Minimum Tax Payments Back, Report Finds

  • By Caleb Harshberger

Countries that enacted the global minimum tax would be best served giving some of that money back to companies as long as it keeps their tax rate no less than 15%, a report by a think tank affiliated with the Dutch economy ministry said.

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Countries Score Concession From US in Latest Global Tax Talks

  • By Saim Saeed
  • By Lauren Vella

Countries are getting closer to finalizing the details on a deal that would exempt US companies from major parts of the 15% global minimum tax.

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First Half of OECD Tax Deal is ‘Dead,’ IDA Ireland Chair Says

  • By Ryan Hogg

The OECD’s framework for overhauling the way multinationals are taxed is “dead,” the chair of Ireland’s state-sponsored foreign-direct investment body said.

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Standardizing Tax Residency in an Era of Remote Control

  • By Nana Ama Sarfo

Nana Ama Sarfo outlines a discussion at the recent IFA Congress in Lisbon about the need for standardization in determining the place of effective management in this era of cross-border remote work.

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Tax Uncertainty Lingers Months Before First GLOBE Return Filings

  • By Santhie Goundar

Much uncertainty remains in worldwide tax with less than a year to go before the first pillar 2 global anti-base-erosion information returns must be filed, a panel said.

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Countries Still Split on Minimum Tax Talks, OECD Chair Says (1)

  • By Saim Saeed
  • By Ryan Hogg

Countries are still divided on a number of issues as they renegotiate the global minimum tax agreement, according to Tim Power, chair of the Committee on Fiscal Affairs at the OECD.

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Minimum Tax Changes Applicable After Year-End Deadline, EU Says

  • By Saim Saeed

EU countries will be able to selectively apply changes to the minimum tax law before revising their domestic law, according to a senior European Commission official.

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More Countries Still Considering Amount B Adoption


Several countries, including Italy, Portugal, and Thailand, are still evaluating whether to implement the simplified and streamlined transfer pricing approach, according to the latest batch of updated and new OECD transfer pricing profiles.

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EU Commission to Withdraw DEBRA, FTT, and Transfer Pricing Bills

  • By Elodie Lamer

The European Commission's 2026 work program announced the withdrawal of several tax proposals, including those that would have addressed the debt-equity bias, negotiated a financial transaction tax, and harmonized transfer pricing rules.

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BusinessEurope Warns EU Could Lock in Most Complex Tax Rules

  • By Elodie Lamer

Advocacy group BusinessEurope called on the European Commission to show “ambitious leadership” to secure global consensus on pillar 2, extend its safe harbors, and “bring genuine” simplification and investment-friendly tax rules.

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UN Panel Aims to Set Model Rules for Taxing Virtual Business

  • By James Munson

The United Nations approved a plan to develop guidance making it easier for developing countries to tax companies without a physical presence within their borders.

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EU Should Reassess Minimum Tax If Needed, Business Group Says

  • By Saim Saeed

The EU should revisit its minimum tax law “to ensure it remains a reasonable and proportionate way forward” for European businesses, said BusinessEurope, a trade association representing Europe’s industry.

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Apples and Oranges: Why FTCs Under GILTI and Pillar 2 Are Not Comparable

  • By Kimberly S. Blanchard

Kimberly S. Blanchard responds to a recent letter by Patrick Driessen to clarify her perspective on U.S. foreign tax credits and their relationship to international tax policy.

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Rationalizing the Post-OBBBA International Tax Rules

  • By Mindy Herzfeld

Mindy Herzfeld considers the One Big Beautiful Bill Act’s changes to key international tax provisions in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, highlights areas where pre-TCJA rules no longer make sense, and proposes changes to reduce the rules’ complexity and lower compliance costs to U.S. taxpayers.

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Must a Consumption Tax Be Regressive?

  • By Reuven S. Avi-Yonah

Reuven S. Avi-Yonah examines the United States’ reticence to embrace the VAT and argues that its regressivity can be negated.

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Rationalizing the Post-OBBBA International Tax Rules (1)

  • By Mindy Herzfeld

Mindy Herzfeld considers the One Big Beautiful Bill Act’s changes to key international tax provisions in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, highlights areas where pre-TCJA rules no longer make sense, and proposes changes to reduce the rules’ complexity and lower compliance costs to U.S. taxpayers.

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G20 Finance Ministers Set Out Conditions for Pillar 2 Solution


G20 members have pledged to advance multilateral talks on an approach to address outstanding concerns about the OECD global minimum tax framework but said its delivery will need to meet certain requirements.

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Spain, Italy Signal Openness to Alternative Path to Pillar 1

  • By Elodie Lamer

While the EU still generally favors a global agreement on digital taxation, Italian and Spanish officials appeared open to the suggestion of a permanent digital establishment at a recent interparliamentary meeting of the European Parliament.

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OECD Marks Decade of BEPS Project Progress but More Work Remains


The OECD base erosion and profit-shifting project has reduced tax avoidance over the past 10 years, but countries will further its progress by simplifying compliance burdens and supporting global minimum taxation, the organization said.

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Has Trump Moved On From IEEPA Tariffs?

  • By Robert Goulder

Robert Goulder comments on the Trump administration’s shifting legal basis for tariff authorization.

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UN Begins New Phase of Helping Developing Countries Raise Taxes

  • By James Munson

The United Nations committee for helping developing nations boost tax revenue will decide next week whether wealth taxes, critical minerals, or transfer pricing will figure among the priorities in its new four-year term.

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G20 Finance Ministers Commit to Global Tax Deal Negotiations

  • By Ryan Hogg

The Group of 20 nations agreed to continue working towards an agreement on the global minimum tax.

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Medtronic and the Interminable Problem of Transfer Pricing Litigation

  • By Reuven S. Avi-Yonah

Reuven S. Avi-Yonah explores the status of transfer pricing and suggests the United States move to a single-factor formula, with sales of a multinational enterprise into the United States taxed by the United States.

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Progress for Developing Countries in the U.N. Convention on Tax Cooperation

  • By Hafiz Choudhury and Peter Hann

Hafiz Choudhury and Peter Hann examine the legislative history of the U.N. framework convention on international tax cooperation and identify potential obstacles to its implementation.

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OECD Reports on Tax Developments to G20 Finance Ministers

  • By OECD

OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann has submitted a report to G20 finance ministers and central bank governors on tax developments in the implementation of pillar 2; tax knowledge inequality and growth; reforms to support global mobility; approaches to environmental taxation; support for developing countries; and transparency.

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