Back to Basics - Transfer Pricing
Back to BasicsTo help clients navigate your way through tax, here are common issues to take note of for transfer pricing!
Articles exploring tax issues to help you gain trust and stay ahead, enabling you to manage your tax transparently and ethically.
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To help clients navigate your way through tax, here are common issues to take note of for transfer pricing!
This international indirect tax guide provides an overview of tax systems in key countries and how you can get further support from Grant Thornton member firms.
To help clients navigate your way through tax, here are common issues to take note of for your corporate tax year-end filing!
International taxation is undergoing the biggest shake-up for a generation. The already complex world of transfer pricing is at the front and centre of these disruptive changes, both in the rules that govern it and in the heightened scrutiny it now faces.
The global mobility environment is changing rapidly. Businesses and their employees working internationally are faced with a complex web of regulations and laws.
Nobody thought that complying with the Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) transfer pricing analysis and documentation demands would be easy.
Significant changes to Singapore’s Goods and Services Tax (‘‘GST’’) system were announced by Finance Minister Heng in the recent 2018 Budget.
The Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (“IRAS”) released its 5th edition Transfer Pricing Guidelines (“TPG”) on 23 February 2018. The revised TPG provides guidance on the implementation of the transfer pricing (“TP”) related amendments made to the Income Tax Act (“ITA”) on 26 October 2017.
Automating and optimising your supply chain can help save money and facilitate growth. So could it work for your business?
While we may not have sight of what our future relationship with the EU will look like, Grant Thornton has developed Brexit Indirect Tax Impact Analysis, to help you to understand the possible Customs Duty and VAT costs posed to your business by various Brexit scenarios.
Tax affairs used to be a largely private matter between company and tax authority, with very little public disclosure beyond what was available in the report and accounts. Today, the veil of confidentiality is being stripped away.
Off the back of the Singapore Budget announcement by Finance Minister and Prime Minister Mr Lawrence Wong on 18 February 2025, experts from Grant Thornton Singapore share their thoughts.