HIDE

Other Publications

Insights

Publications

How Soon Is Now? The O.E.C.D. Starts Work on a Substitute for Unilateral Digital Economy Fixes

How Soon Is Now? The O.E.C.D. Starts Work on a Substitute for Unilateral Digital Economy Fixes

As of November 2019, the arm’s length principle continues to operate among the O.E.C.D. Member States. In a little more than a year, this may be different. The O.E.C.D.’s workplan for urgent policy development will investigate a new nexus standard that departs from the arm’s length principle applied for decades. In his article, Michael Peggs explains the current debate between tax administrations concerning the attribution of profit to digital or non-physical P.E.’s and the three popular approaches that have been proposed. The mood in the O.E.C.D. is that markets matter most under each of the suggested approaches. Brainpower and manufacturing prowess are less important.

Read More

Economic Nexus Through Ownership and Use of Intellectual Property

Economic Nexus Through Ownership and Use of Intellectual Property

For many tax advisers outside the U.S., state corporate income tax is viewed simply as an add-on to the Federal tax.  This relatively simplistic view ignores the requirements of U.S. Federal and Constitutional law that an activity must have a connection – called a nexus – to a state before tax can be imposed on profits allocated to the state.  Alvan L. Bobrow of Akerman LLP in New York explains the concept of “economic nexus,” a way by which digital activity within a state may trigger exposure to state tax.  Companies that license marketing intangibles should be particularly wary.

Read More

Action Item 5: Countering Harmful Tax Practices More Effectively

Read Publication

The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (“O.E.C.D.”) worked together with G20 countries to develop a 15-point action plan to deal with Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (“B.E.P.S.”). The goal of the B.E.P.S. Action Plan is to develop a single global standard for automatic exchange of information and stop corporations from shifting profits to jurisdictions with little or no tax in order to ensure taxation in the jurisdiction where profit-generating economic activities are performed and where value is created.

B.E.P.S. occurs in situations where different tax laws interact in a way that creates extremely low global tax rates or results in double non-taxation. This kind of planning gives a competitive advantage to multinational entities that have substantial budgets to engage high-powered tax advisers and to implement their plans.

The O.E.C.D. published deliverables that intend to eliminate double non-taxation resulting from B.E.P.S. The final measures will be completed in 2015 and will be implemented either through domestic law or the existing network of bilateral tax treaties.

ACTION ITEM 5: HARMFUL TAX PRACTICE

Harmful Tax Competition: An Emerging Global Issue

In 1998, the O.E.C.D. published the report Harmful Tax Competition: An Emerging Global Issue (“the 1998 Report”) with the intention of developing methods to prevent harmful tax practices with respect to geographically mobile activities. These methods have been adopted in the Forum on Harmful Tax Practice (“F.H.T.P.”) with some modifications. Significant attention is given to:

  • Elaborating on a methodology to define a substantial activity requirement in the context of intangible regimes; and
  • Improving transparency through compulsory spontaneous exchange on rulings related to preferential regimes.