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Transfer Pricing and Corporate Taxation
Details
This handbook will guide practitioners and tax directors through the complex maze of transfer pricing. It describes current transfer pricing methods and regulations, proposes alternative approaches, and discusses ten case studies in elaborate detail.
National tax authorities individually determine multinational ?rms' country-speci?c tax liabilities by applying one or more sanctioned transfer pricing methodologies. These methodologies are founded on basic assumptions about market structure and ?rm behavior that are rarely empirically valid. Moreover, for the most part, the transfer pricing methodologies now in vogue were developed before the Internet became a dominant factor in the world economy, and hedge and private equity funds transformed ?nancial and commodities markets. For these reasons, multinational ?rms are unable to accurately anticipate their tax liabilities in individual countries, and remain at risk of double taxation. Uncertainties in corporate tax liability are extremely costly, both for individual corporations and from an economy-wide perspective. Firms pay exorbitant fees to have tax attorneys, accountants and economists prepare the documentation required by tax authorities to substantiate their intercompany pricing practices and defend their tax positions on audit. Corporate tax liabilities are also potentially much higher than they would be under a more transparent and predictable transfer pricing regime (due to the potential for double taxation and penalties), and investors' returns are reduced accordingly. The FASB's Interpretation No. 48, Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes (released on July 13, 2006), has motivated multinational ?rms to increase their reserves substantially (in many cases at the insistence of their au- tors), reducing the total funds available for productive investment. 1 The current transfer pricing regimes are embodied in the OECD Guidelines, individual OECD member countries' interpretations thereof, the U. S.
Discusses economic underlyings of existing methods and proposes alternatives Detailed analysis of case studies drawn on the author's professional experience Enables professionals in companies to perform transfer pricing analyses Incorporates the new US services regulations issued in July 2006 and the new cost-sharing regulation expected to be published late 2007/early 2008 Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
Klappentext
Transfer pricing is often identified as the most important tax issue that multinational corporations face. This publication is an extremely useful tool for practitioners and tax directors grappling with complex and contentious transfer pricing issues of various kinds. It contains a series of highly detailed case studies, which draw on the author's two decades as a government economist specializing in transfer pricing and valuation, a transfer pricing economist with Price Waterhouse, and, lastly, an independent consultant. These case studies elucidate the types of intercompany transactions that tax authorities often scrutinize, lay out how one should go about analyzing such transactions under the existing regulatory regime in considerable detail, and illustrate a number of proposed alternative approaches that could substantially reduce compliance costs and the frequency of transfer pricing disputes.
Practitioners and tax directors will find the case studies extremely helpful in formulating defensible transfer pricing policies. The case studies may also be useful in assessing tax exposure attributable to intercompany pricing practices, as required under FASB Interpretation No. 48 (FIN 48). Tax policy analysts will find the evaluation and critique of existing methods and the development of alternative proposals thought-provoking and compelling.
The book is divided into three parts: Part I contains a detailed review and critique of individual transfer pricing methods and the economic premises that underpin them. Part II contains a discussion of proposed alternative transfer pricing methods. Part III contains the aforementioned series of eight case studies, encompassing a broad range of transfer pricing issues. Global trading and certain types of Internet-based businesses, which the current transfer pricing regime does not adequately address, are among the issues covered. Each case study is analyzed under both the existing transfer pricing regime and oneor more proposed methods.
Inhalt
Economic and Accounting Rates and Concepts Should Not be Conflated.- Economic vs. Accounting Profit Rates.- Overview and Critique of Existing Transfer Pricing Methods.- Alternative and Supplementary Approaches to Transfer Pricing.- Some Alternative Approaches to Transfer Pricing.- Case Studies.- Intercompany Sale of Diamonds.- Intercompany Sale of Medical Devices.- Performance of Intercompany Services.- Replication of Internet-Based Business Model.- Sale of Assets with Embedded Intellectual Property.- Provision of CDN Services to Third Parties.- Global Trading of Commodities.- Decentralized Ownership of Intellectual Property.- Conclusions.- Concluding Observations.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09781441926784
- Sprache Englisch
- Auflage Softcover reprint of hardcover 1st edition 2009
- Größe H235mm x B155mm x T12mm
- Jahr 2010
- EAN 9781441926784
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- ISBN 144192678X
- Veröffentlichung 29.10.2010
- Titel Transfer Pricing and Corporate Taxation
- Autor Elizabeth King
- Untertitel Problems, Practical Implications and Proposed Solutions
- Gewicht 324g
- Herausgeber Springer New York
- Anzahl Seiten 208
- Lesemotiv Verstehen
- Genre Betriebswirtschaft