Saturday, October 12, 2013

Singapore Law Watch - Taxing times for CFOs


A COMPANY'S ability to effectively manage its taxes across borders affects not just its bottom line these days, but also its reputation in the eyes of stakeholders and the wider public. A spate of high-profile cases has put the spotlight on the issue of tax avoidance by large corporations in recent months. Tech giant Apple found itself in hot water when a US Senate committee found in May that all of its foreign sales were channelled through an Irish entity that paid no taxes. This and other cases have led to certain groups expressing outrage over corporate behemoths getting away with not paying their fair share of taxes.



Indeed, "tax morality" is emerging as one of the most prominent areas being scrutinised by governments, the general public and the media, said Tay Hong Beng, head of tax at KPMG in Singapore.



"This is the essence of concerns keeping CFOs and finance heads awake at night. More than just paying the legal obligations surrounding tax, the issue is becoming increasingly about paying a fair share of tax," he said. An organisation's reputation can risk significant damage if there is a perception that it has been overly aggressive in minimising its tax liability.



"If not effectively managed, the cost of getting it wrong is more than the financial cost of additional taxes, interest and penalties - it also includes the cost of senior management to resolve the issues, the potential financial viability of an investment, and the reputation of the corporation," said Brendan Egan, head of tax at insurer AIG APAC Holdings Pte Ltd.



Add to that the thorny issue of transfer pricing and the complexity of compliance across multiple jurisdictions and the tax landscape has become a particularly tricky one for senior finance executives to navigate.



"Unfortunately, potential and unexpected tax audit adjustments, challenges to group transfer pricing policies and the growing application of anti-avoidance provisions in a number of tax jurisdictions have served to increase the angst," said Alan Ross, head of tax at PwC Singapore.



The problem is compounded in the Asia-Pacific by the fact that tax systems across the region are far from homogenous with more nuances than perhaps one would find in Europe, he added.



Transfer Pricing



One significant issue facing CFOs is the issue of transfer pricing, which refers to the method of attributing a corporation's profit or loss before tax across the different countries it operates in. Since countries impose different corporate tax rates, companies try to allocate more of their profit to low-tax jurisdictions, in order to minimise the overall taxes they have to pay. Many countries impose penalties on corporations if they consider that they are being deprived of taxable profit.



While a global consensus on transfer pricing rules has yet to be established, some countries such as China and India are in favour of a system that puts an additional premium on their country's share of a group's profits in exchange for access to their large consumer markets, said Mr Ross.



"More business-friendly locations such as Singapore and Hong Kong and jurisdictions such as Switzerland, Ireland and Luxembourg therefore have to think about defending their tax revenue base derived from corporates operating out of their country as challenges on intercompany transfer prices eventuate in other counterparty jurisdictions," he said.



Meanwhile, tax compliance issues are particularly troublesome for companies with operations across several countries. For instance, more and more jurisdictions impose significant penalties for late filing of returns, incorrect returns, and the lack of transfer pricing documentation or transfer pricing adjustments.



This is particularly problematic for small-and medium-sized enterprises which cannot afford the luxury of engaging tax experts in every country in which they seek to operate.



"This necessitates the use of systems and control procedures to monitor issues and adherence to deadlines and typically a system of alerts where those deadlines are not being met," said Mr Ross.



Similar to the issue of perceived tax avoidance, the failure to comply with tax regulations can, apart from incurring financial costs, also potentially damage an organisation's reputation.



Indirect taxes



CFOs also have to deal with a trend among many governments towards using indirect taxes to balance their budgets, experts said.



"Given the impact of the global financial crisis which started back in September 2008, the level of corporate profits was impacted, as were the tax collections from direct taxes. The focus started to turn to indirect taxes as the taxing authorities' need to meet fiscal budgets intensified," said Mr Egan.



For instance, Malaysia recently indicated that it would be pushing to introduce a goods and services tax (GST) in its upcoming Budget in October to help curb the country's fiscal deficit and debt burden. Meanwhile, Japan is planning to hike its consumption tax rate, a move aimed at improving the country's finances.



With indirect taxes such as GST and Value-Added Tax (VAT) present in more than 150 countries, the impact of such taxes on cross-border trades can be significant.



However, as such taxes are not as well measured or managed as direct taxes, they are sometimes poorly understood, warned Mr Ross.



"Within organisations there is often a lack of clarity on where the responsibility for indirect taxes lies, whether in operations or in finance. Another problem is the lack of a common framework in Asia to harmonise the rules," he said.



A failure to properly manage a company's indirect taxes can result in a significant tax bill plus penalties for the company, as well as reputational risk for the organisation. The emerging challenges on the tax front means that companies must change their mindsets towards tax risk management, and realise that failure to deal with the changes can result in damage to more than just the bottom line.



"Companies need to watch the development at the local and international level closely. It is also important to ensure that tax decisions are made taking into consideration the reputational risks and not merely based on whether the tax law in the various jurisdictions has been complied with," said Mr Tay of KPMG.



This is the last in a four-part business strategy thought leadership series that looks at how Singapore companies and business leaders can better prepare for the challenges ahead and capitalise on a world of opportunities in Asia and beyond. The series is brought to you by CPA Australia, in conjunction with this year's CPA Congress that will be held on Oct 9, 2013



Source: Business Times © Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Permission required for reproduction.

Source: http://www.singaporelawwatch.sg/slw/headlinesnews/31550-taxing-times-for-cfos.html?utm_source=rss%20subscription&utm_medium=rss
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Sunday, July 21, 2013

Across U.S., people rally for 'Justice for Trayvon'

ATLANTA (AP) ? Crowds chanted "Justice! Justice!" as they rallied in dozens of U.S. cities Saturday, urging authorities to change self-defense laws and press federal civil rights charges against a former neighborhood watch leader found not guilty in the shooting death of unarmed teen Trayvon Martin.

The Rev. Al Sharpton's National Action Network organized the "Justice for Trayvon" rallies and vigils outside federal buildings in at least 101 cities one week after a jury delivered the verdict for George Zimmerman in Martin's 2012 death in a gated central Florida community.

"No justice! No peace!" participants chanted. Some sang hymns, prayed and held hands. Many held signs ? in Los Angeles, one read, "This is Amerikkka: From Dred Scott to Emmett Till to Trayvon Martin, black people have no rights that white people are bound to respect."

The case has become a flashpoint in separate but converging national debates over self-defense, guns, and race relations. Zimmerman, who successfully claimed that he was protecting himself when he shot Martin, identifies himself as Hispanic. Martin was black.

In Atlanta, speakers noted that the rally took place in the shadows of federal buildings named for two figures who had vastly differing views on civil rights and racial equality: Richard B. Russell was a Georgia governor and U.S. senator elected in the Jim Crow South; the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. is the face of African-Americans' civil rights movement.

"What's so frightening about a black man in a hood?" said the Rev. Raphael Warnock, who now occupies the pulpit at King's Ebenezer Baptist Church.

In New York, hundreds of people ? including Martin's mother, Sybrina Fulton, and music superstars Jay-Z and Beyonce ? gathered in the heat.

Fulton told the crowd she was determined to fight for changes needed to ensure that black youths are no longer viewed with suspicion because of their skin color.

"I promise you I'm going to work for your children as well," she told the crowd.

Earlier Saturday, at Sharpton's headquarters in Harlem, she implored people to understand that the tragedy involved more than Martin alone. "Today it was my son. Tomorrow it might be yours," she said.

In addition to pushing the Justice Department to investigate civil rights charges against Zimmerman, Sharpton told supporters In New York that he wants to see a rollback of stand-your-ground self-defense laws.

"We are trying to change laws so that this never, ever happens again," Sharpton said.

Such laws are on the books in more than 20 states, and they go beyond many older, traditional self-defense statutes. In general, stand-your-ground laws eliminate a person's duty to retreat, if possible, in the face of a serious physical threat.

Zimmerman didn't invoke stand-your-ground, relying instead on a traditional self-defense argument, but the judge included a provision of the law in the jurors' instructions, allowing them to consider it as a legitimate defense.

Neither was race discussed in front of the jury. But the two topics have dominated public discourse about the case, and came up throughout Saturday's rallies.

"It's personal," said Cincinnati resident Chris Donegan, whose 11-year-old son wore a hoodie to the rally, as Martin did the night he died. "Anybody who is black with kids, Trayvon Martin became our son."

In Indianapolis, the Rev. Jeffrey Johnson told roughly 200 attendees that the rallies were about making life safer for young black men who are still endangered by racial profiling.

Johnson compared Zimmerman's acquittal to that of four white officers in the beating of black motorist Rodney King in 1992.

"The verdict freed George Zimmerman, but it condemned America more," said Johnson, pastor of the Eastern Star Church in Indianapolis and a member of the board of directors of the National Action Network.

In Miami, Tracy Martin spoke about his son.

"This could be any one of our children," he said. "Our mission now is to make sure that this doesn't happen to your child."

He recalled a promise he made to his son as he lay in his casket. "I will continue to fight for Trayvon until the day I die," he said.

Shantescia Hill held a sign in Miami that read: "Every person deserves a safe walk home." The 31-year-old mother, who is black, said, "I'm here because our children can't even walk on the streets without fearing for their lives."

Attorney General Eric Holder announced this week that his department would investigate whether Zimmerman could be charged under federal civil rights laws. Such a case would require evidence that Zimmerman harbored racial animosity against Martin.

Most legal experts say that would be a difficult charge to prove. Zimmerman's lawyers have said their client wasn't driven by race, but by a desire to protect his neighborhood.

____

Associated Press writers Philip Lucas in Atlanta, Charles Wilson in Indianapolis, Amanda Lee Myers in Cincinnati, Christine Armario in Miami and Verena Dobnik in New York contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/across-us-people-rally-justice-trayvon-171951320.html

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Badgers football: Appleton native Chris Gill takes 'crazy path' to Madison

Having grown up in Appleton as a huge fan of the University of Wisconsin football team, Chris Gill is keenly aware of the story behind Mark Tauscher?s senior year with the Badgers.

In fact, Tauscher is a family friend of Gill and his four older brothers.

Tauscher was set to transfer to Youngstown State in Ohio for his final year of eligibility, wanting to become a teacher.

Jim Hueber, who was the UW offensive line coach at the time, didn?t even know Tauscher had a year of eligibility remaining before running into him at the Kentucky Derby and convincing him to finish his career with the Badgers.

Tauscher became the starting right tackle during the 1999 Rose Bowl season before going on to a successful NFL career as a starter with the Green Bay Packers.

Now, along comes Gill, who spent the past four seasons at Mississippi, including a redshirt year in 2009, prior to graduating.

After a casual conversation between one of Gill?s brothers and a member of the UW athletic communication department, Gill has transferred to UW, where he will be a walk-on center and eligible to play his final year in 2013.

He was accepted into a masters program for Educational Leadership and Policy Analysis on Tuesday and joined his new teammates for summer workouts on Thursday.

?It?s been kind of a crazy path to get here, but I?m so thankful I?ve got this opportunity,? Gill said ?Friday.

The 23-year-old Gill, 6-foot-4, 295 pounds, appeared in two games at Ole Miss, both coming last season. ?

The Badgers have an alarming lack of depth on the offensive line and Gill is capable of playing center, guard or tackle. He will start out at center behind redshirt freshman Dan Voltz, the projected starter.

?Wherever they need me, I?m more than happy to play,? Gill said.

Nobody is expecting Gill to become another Tauscher, but the stories have much in common.

?(Tauscher) is an unbelievable guy and an unbelievable player,? Gill said. ?I would never want to parallel myself to someone of his caliber. I really do hope the season is a lot of fun and I?m sure we?ll do great as a team.?

Gill?s path to UW started with a conversation between Ben, an older brother, and Patrick Herb, the main media contact for UW men?s basketball. Herb grew up in Appleton and was a roommate in college with Ben.

Chris planned to go to law school in Florida?.

?I was already enrolled and about to go, but I?ve been missing football a whole lot,? Chris said.

Greg Sr. and Cathie Gill have five boys ? and the first four all earned varsity letters at UW.

In order from the oldest: Greg Jr. was an All-American decathlete; Patrick was a linebacker who played for Barry Alvarez and earned a letter during the 1998 Rose Bowl season; Ben was All-Big Ten honorable mention in the decathlon; and Barry was a middle distance runner who earned All-Big Ten honorable mention as part of a relay.

Chris desperately wanted to play for the Badgers, but was undersized at 240 pounds after graduating from Appleton Xavier and didn?t get an offer.

?It was a little disappointing,? Chris said. ?I would have loved to play for the home state, it?s always been a dream.?

Among his offers were Colorado State, as well as the Naval and Air Force academies, but he elected to go to Hargrave Military Academy in Chatham, Va., for three months to increase his exposure.

The Southeastern Conference recruits that school heavily and Chris signed with Ole Miss, where his dad went to law school.

?He really liked playing for Houston Nutt,? Greg Sr. said. ?We?ve got nothing but great things to say about him.?

Chris played under offensive line coach Mike Markuson for three seasons. Markuson was hired as UW?s offensive line coach last season but fired after the second game. Two torn meniscus cartilage injuries stalled Chris? development early in his career, though he was healthy last season.

Nutt was fired after the 2011 season and replaced by Hugh Freeze, who decided to go with younger players on the line. If that had not happened, Chris probably would have played his final year at Ole Miss, his dad said.

Herb contacted UW cornerbacks coach Ben Strickland, who recruits in the state, after the conversation with Ben. Given UW?s need at the position, it seemed like a perfect marriage between Chris and the Badgers.

?I told him, ?You can go to law school any time you want, you can?t (play football) again,? ? Greg Sr. said. ?They?re glad to have an experienced, mature young man. Chris is a great student. Houston Nutt kind of summed it up when he said he was the most coachable kid he ever had. I think (UW coaches) are looking for some maturity, dependability, someone who?s not going to get rattled.?

?Nobody knows if this story will end as well as Tauscher?s did, but given the Gill family?s ties to UW, it?s already a good tale. The entire family is already making plans to attend as many games as possible.

?It?s a lot less expensive to drive to Madison to have beers and brats than fly to Oxford (Miss.) and get a condo for the week and drink wine and (eat) cheese,? Greg Sr. said.

Source: http://host.madison.com/sports/college/football/badgers-football-appleton-native-chris-gill-takes-crazy-path-to/article_be01823b-8cce-500a-ad6b-8e4ae440df84.html

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Help a Reader: Paying Off Low-Interest Loans (Free Money Finance)

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Here's an email I recently received from a reader: Is paying off low-interest debt always the best choice? I am very fortunate in that I only have one source of debt: a car loan. No student loans, nothing on my...

Source: http://www.freemoneyfinance.com/2013/07/help-a-reader-paying-off-low-interest-loans.html

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

Mass. police officer releases photos of 'evil' Boston bombing suspect

Courtesy Boston Magazine

A sniper trains his beam on Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. Photo by Sean Murphy.

By Matthew DeLuca and Becky Bratu, NBC News

A Massachusetts State Police officer released photos of Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev that depicted him bloodied and lit up by sniper rifle sights in the aftermath of a massive manhunt, saying he wanted to show "the real Boston bomber.?

The release of the photos came amid uproar about a Rolling Stone magazine cover story image that some said glamorized the accused killer.

Tactical photographer Sgt. Sean Murphy said the hundreds of images of the manhunt for Tsarnaev in April that he gave to Boston Magazine show someone not ?fluffed and buffed for the cover of Rolling Stone magazine.?

The photographs released to Boston Magazine by Murphy show some of the hundreds of heavily armed police officers who scoured Watertown, Mass., in the search for Tsarnaev after his older brother Tamerlan was killed in a shootout with police. In some of the more than one dozen photographs published by the magazine, law enforcement officers dressed in camouflage gear and helmets surround the white boat in a backyard where Tsarnaev was ultimately found injured but alive.

In other photographs, the bleeding accused bomber slumps out of the tarp-covered boat with a laser beam from an officer?s sniper rifle trained on his forehead.

Murphy said in a statement to Boston Magazine that he released the photographs after being outraged by a photo of Tsarnaev printed to accompany a Rolling Stone cover story earlier this week, calling the image ?an insult.?

?An image like this on the cover of Rolling Stone, we see it instantly as being wrong,? Murphy said in the statement published on Boston Magazine?s website. ?What Rolling Stone did was wrong. This guy is evil. This is the real Boston bomber. Not someone fluffed and buffed for the cover of Rolling Stone magazine.?

Three people were killed, including an 8-year-old boy, and more than 200 injured when blasts from two homemade bombs rocked the finish line of the Boston marathon on April 15. Tsarnaev appeared for an eight-minute hearing in federal court on July 11, where he pleaded not guilty to a 30-count indictment.

The court appearance was attended by scores of bombing survivors and their families. More than a dozen officers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology police force stood outside the courthouse in apparent homage to Officer Sean Collier, who died in a shooting in the course of the manhunt.

Family members of the survivors said the defendant appeared to smirk and appear indifferent to the court proceedings, speaking only to enter his plea with an accent reflecting his Chechen background.

The editor-in-chief of Boston Magazine wrote in a post later on the publication?s website on Thursday that Murphy had been relieved of duty, but not fired. His status of duty was to reviewed next week, editor John Wolfson wrote.

Murphy, who described himself as a 25-year veteran of law enforcement, was relieved of his gun, badge, cameras, and police identification, according to Wolfson?s post. He was also reportedly ordered not to have any further communication with the press.

NBC News was not able to immediately verify the report, and calls for comment to the Massachusetts State Police were not returned. In a statement, a spokesman for the state police said that the release of the photos was not authorized.

?Today?s dissemination to Boston Magazine of photographs of Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and police activity related to his capture was not authorized by the Massachusetts State Police,? spokesman David Procopio said in a statement Thursday night, according to the Boston Globe. ?The department will not release the photographs to media outlets.?

A spokeswoman for U.S. Attorney Carmen M. Ortiz called the release of the photos ?completely unacceptable,? according to the Boston Herald.

?We have spoken with the Massachusetts State Police, who have assured us that the release of the photos was unauthorized and that they are taking action internally in response,? the spokeswoman said.

The editors of Rolling Stone have defended the cover photo of Tsarnaev, which was headlined ?The Bomber? and included a tagline that called the man ?a monster.? Stores including CVS and Tadeschi Foods have announced that they will not sell the issue on their newsstands.

?Our hearts go out to the victims of the Boston Marathon bombing, and our thoughts are always with them and their families,? Rolling Stones? editors said in a statement. ?The fact that Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is young, and in the same age group as many of our readers, makes it all the more important for us to examine the complexities of this issue and gain a more complete understanding of how a tragedy like this happens.?

But for many in Boston, Murphy said in his statement after releasing the photographs, the wounds from the 19-year-old Tsarnaev?s alleged actions are still raw.

?These were real people, with real lives, with real families,? Murphy said. ?I know from first-hand conversations that this Rolling Stone cover has kept many of them up ? again.? It?s irritated wounds that will never heal ? again. There is nothing glamorous in bringing more pain to a grieving family.?

Related:

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Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2ee2bab1/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C180C195482340Emass0Epolice0Eofficer0Ereleases0Ephotos0Eof0Eevil0Eboston0Ebombing0Esuspect0Dlite/story01.htm

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What?s the future for Canada?s military procurement

CBC News Thursday 18th July, 2013

Two years after it first appointed a minister to solve the problem of an often-messy system of military procurement, the Conservative government blanked the post during the cabinet shuffle Monday, believing it's now close to a permanent solution to one of its most vexing problems. With tens of billions of dollars worth of military procurement projects either underway or being contemplated, CBC News has learned the government has now settled on two possible outcomes, but neither, at this point, apparently require the service of an associate minister of national defence. Government sources hav...

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Source: http://www.canadastandard.com/index.php/sid/215921412/scat/71df8d33cd2a30df

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Justin Bieber Nightclub Accuser Files Police Report Over Alleged Spitting

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/07/justin-bieber-nightclub-accuser-files-police-report-over-alleged/

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