Tax Planning for International Mergers, Acquisitions, Joint Ventures and Restructurings


Book Description

This classic handbook has once again been updated from cover to cover, assuring its secure place as the preeminent tax practice guide for the conduct of international business transactions. The user-friendly structure has been maintained—first, a hands-on overview of certain key tax aspects of international transactions that have general application (including a chapter on special issues for transactions touching the European Union), followed by detailed country profiles that offer solutions designed to maximize effective tax planning and satisfy compliance obligations in twenty key global trading jurisdictions. The expert country-by-country contributors explain each jurisdiction’s approach to the critical areas of concern in transactional tax planning, addressing among other issues: entity classification; taxable transactions; tax-free transactions (both domestic and cross-border); loss and other tax attribute planning; intellectual property transactions; compensation arrangements; acquisition financing; joint ventures; transfer pricing; VAT; and tax treaty usage. Because it is crucial for management and counsel to develop a working knowledge of the salient aspects of the relevant law in a broad range of global jurisdictions, the work is of immeasurable value in assessing, strategizing, and implementing international transactions while also allowing quick jurisdictional comparison of key tax aspects. Addressing an important information gap in an area of widespread commercial concern, this incomparable resource will be welcomed by international tax counsel, corporate and financial services attorneys, and corporate planning and compliance professionals.







U.S. International Tax Planning and Policy


Book Description

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.




Taxes and Business Strategy


Book Description

For investment banking, corporate finance, strategy consulting, money management or venture capital courses at the graduate level. Students benefit because the book provides a framework for understanding how taxation influences asset prices, equilibrium returns, and the form and content of contractual agreements. The revision features a stronger MBA perspective and emphasis on student learning. This is achieved by integrating the tax law with fundamentals of corporate finance and microeconomics. In addition, the second edition focuses more clearly on the economic consequences of alternative contractual arrangements than on the precise tax laws governing the arrangements.