Sentences with phrase «foreign multinational firms»

Remember: The EU made a colossal mis - calculation when it challenged Ireland it couldn't have a preferential 10 % tax rate (to attract foreign multinational firms).

Not exact matches

Eighty - one percent of the 462 companies included in the survey, among them U.S. and multinational firms, said foreign business was less welcome in China than in the past, up from 77 % in 2016.
Now, documents filed in BNY's case in the past few weeks 2014 the court proceedings begin Monday 2014 provide unprecedented detail about how STARS was crafted at a time when banks and accounting firms were offering deals for multinational corporations to take advantage of loopholes in rules governing foreign tax credits.
Regardless, tax relief would be a major win for small and mid-cap firms especially and encourage large multinational companies to repatriate foreign cash.
Or we can stop trying to tax foreign profits, which will encourage firms to turn their domestic profits into «foreign profits»; that will let some companies escape tax on truly domestic activity, and put firms that operate only in the United States (and therefore can't hide their profits abroad) at a competitive disadvantage with multinationals.
Relative to Q2 last year, the greenback is roughly 20 % stronger across the board; this means that foreign sales at many of the large, multinational firms that make up the index are worth «less» when translated back into U.S. dollars.
For far too long, the fastest growing firms in Ontario couldn't access the critical capital they needed to scale up because these programs were tailored towards large, foreign multinational companies.
Gilpin, for instance, asserts that the term «globalization» became popular in the late 1980s in reference to multinational firms and foreign investment.
Tourists going abroad need foreign exchange, an import firm has to keep up with currency conversion rates to pay for purchases overseas, and multinationals need to keep tabs on multi-currency operations.
The firm prides itself on being the go - to practice for foreign investors in Africa, guiding a number of large multinational companies through the M&A process on the continent, such as advising American Tower Corporation on investments in Nigeria and Tanzania.
However, many foreign firms with offices in China, including Dentons, have for decades taken advantage of a loophole that allows them to advise multinational clients on «the Chinese legal environment,» meaning they can handle a wide variety of domestic matters short of appearing in court or signing official documents.
The practice ban notwithstanding, many foreign firms with offices in China, including Dentons, have for decades taken advantage of a loophole that allows them to advise multinational clients on «the Chinese legal environment,» meaning they can handle a wide variety of domestic matters short of appearing in court or signing official documents.
The firm's clients include multinational insurance companies and UK and foreign banks, and the practice's scope of work includes derivatives mis - selling claims; professional negligence; consumer credit and payment protection insurance claims; fraud; and contentious insolvency.
Foreign firms have responded to the country's unique challenges differently: some firms have deepened their ties through mergers with Chinese law firms, while others have closed shop (most notably multinational firm Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP in 2015, and Cadwalader Wickerhsam & Taft stating that it will leave China by the end of 2016).
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