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Audit
At Grant Thornton, our IFRS advisers can help you navigate the complexity of financial reporting.
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IFRS support
Our IFRS advisers can help you navigate the complexity of the Standards so you can focus your time and effort on running your business.
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Transfer pricing
The laws surrounding transfer pricing are becoming ever more complex, as tax affairs of multinational companies are facing scrutiny from media, regulators and the public
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Tax Audit
Our trusted teams can prepare corporate tax files and ruling requests, support you with deferrals, accounting procedures and legitimate tax benefits.
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Tax Appeal
Our teams have in-depth knowledge of the relationship between domestic and international tax laws.
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Advance Ruling
Through our global organisation of member firms, we support both companies and individuals, providing insightful solutions to minimise the tax burden for both parties.
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Tax Treaty Benefits Application
Tax Treaty Benefits Application
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FINI/FIDI Tax Services
Our solutions include dealing with emigration and tax mitigation on the income and capital growth of overseas assets.
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Expatriate Income Tax Filing
Our team has extensive experience in helping expatriates in Taiwan to file personal income returns and claim tax refund where applicable. We file approximately 300 expatriate personal income tax returns in Taiwan annually.
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Bookkeeping
Effective bookkeeping and financial accounting are essential to the success of forward-thinking organisations. To get the optimum benefit from this part of your business, you'll need an experienced team behind you.
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Inventory movement reporting
Outsourcing your operations and specific business functions to Grant Thornton can not only cut costs, but also bring new insights and experience to your business.
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Payroll administration
Payroll and, in addition, personnel administration are the biggest and most time-consuming challenges facing expanding organisations. Grant Thornton’s outsourcing teams can manage these commitments on your behalf, allowing you to focus on what you do best – growing your business.
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Trust account management
Running a transparent and trusted business means keeping shareholders, owners, management and other important stakeholders informed about key developments in your organisation.
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VAT returns
At Grant Thornton, we understand the pressures management is under to achieve results, and for this reason we have developed systems for taking away the burden of compliance chores, leaving you to spend your time and energy on the core activities that ultimately lead to growth.
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Head Office reporting
Businesses frequently outsource some of their daily operating tasks in order to focus their energy on their core competencies, while improving performance and lowering costs of their non-core activities. By saving time and money, Grant Thornton's outsourcing services allow clients to concentrate on what is really important to their business.
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Executive Search
We understand that HR leaders need to focus on securing talents and this is no easy exercise. Our mission is to share best practices with our clients and help our clients to stay competitive in the market. Please do not hesitate to contact us to find out more about details of our services and how we can work together with you.
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Work Permit and Employment Gold Card Application Services
Work Permit and Employment Gold Card Application Services
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Expatriate Tax
Expatriate Tax
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PRIMA Consulting Services
PRIMA Consulting Services
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Business Operation Plan Composition
Business Operation Plan Composition
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Setting up legal entities
With a global network of experts in their respective tax and regulatory environments, Grant Thornton advisors help individuals and corporations establish the type of business entity that will best position them to achieve their goals from the very start of their operations.
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Liquidation and de-registration
Sometimes a business suffers an adverse event which impacts its ability to continue trading. And sometimes a solvent sale proves unsuccessful or a turnaround just isn't an option.
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Update company statutory record
With a global network of experts in their respective tax and regulatory environments, Grant Thornton advisors help individuals and corporations establish the type of business entity that will best position them to achieve their goals from the very start of their operations.
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Merger and Acquisition
Merger and Acquisition
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Administrative remedies
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Corporate legal consulting
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Bankruptcy and restructuring
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Company dissolutions and liquidations
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Supplier and employee background investigations
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Legal attest letter drafting service
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Preparation and review of agreements in Chinese and English
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Lifting restrictions on going abroad
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Labor law compliance and labor-management negotiation
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Inheritance, inheritance tax, family business, and personal asset planning
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Not for profit organizations
Not for profit organizations
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Schools
Schools
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Others
Others
Day three: the importance of tackling tax evasion to development
Denmark has made huge strides in tackling tax evasion, for example by digitising tax returns and ensuring that the authorities always know who the true owner of a company is. However, the Danish minister of taxation, Benny Engelbrecht, summed up the problem at last week's IMF/World Bank summit: "I have companies coming to me saying they are being 'forced' by their competitors to use tax loopholes; they tell us we need to remove the loopholes and create a level playing field so that one company does not have an unfair advantage over another."
The need to take morality out of the tax equation is something that Francesca Lagerberg, Grant Thornton's global leader for tax services, has been very vocal on and it is why we support the G20 BEPS (Base Erosion And Profit Shifting) initiative being developed by the OECD. The problem is complex but pressing, especially for the developing world.
The battle cannot be won without private sector engagement
The panel agreed that tackling tax evasion requires the mobilisation of domestic resources, both public and private. Sri Mulyani Indrawati, managing director of the World Bank, said "an estimated 60 per cent of global trade happens between multinationals… aid will not be sufficient to reach development goals; we need to engage the private sector".
The panellists suggested a range of ways in which this could be achieved. Eric Hylton, executive director at IRS Criminal Investigations in the US, said it would continue to "aggressively pursue" financial institutions to send a message that money laundering was unacceptable. It might not catch every instance but the deterrent is strong; just ask Credit Suisse. Villa Kulild, director general of Norway's Development Agency, said the first thing she tells governments in countries starting on this journey is that they are "entitled to tax your natural resources" even though some companies might tell them otherwise. However, the panel agreed that to address a business model which the US president of Oxfam, Ray Offenheiser, describes as "aggressive tax exploration", engagement with the private sector is the most important tool available to them.
Reform means greater transparency and reciprocity
Indrawati made the point that having good tax policy is pointless without the governance, measurement and collection processes in place to implement and revise it. However, an issue acknowledged by all the panellists is the complexity of corporate taxation, particularly involving transactions across borders in the digital age.
The IRS is helping countries in the developing world learn how to better exchange information and recognise illegal activity. Offenheiser welcomes this capacity building as he doubts whether these economies are ready for the reciprocity – in terms of the information they would be expected to share with other countries – that signing up to a global tax agreement would necessitate. Engelbrecht thinks that developing countries need to do more themselves, arguing that multinationals are often able to extract huge, opaque tax concessions (which are not given to their domestic peers), distorting the market and giving local operators a reason to avoid paying up.
Tackling tax evasion is vital for developing economy growth
Tax evasion costs developing economies US$300bn a year in foregone revenue, according to Indrawati, who described it as "stealing people's opportunities". Luis Miguel Castilla, the former finance minister of Peru, estimates that tax evasion in his country reduces income tax revenues by 50 per cent and VAT receipts by 35 per cent. These are missing revenues that governments could spend on social programmes, for example boosting productivity though health and education, but if people do not see a trade-off in improved public services they are unlikely to get behind increased openness and transparency.
Clearly the BEPS initiative is important beyond the G20 and multinationals. Offenheiser summed up the scale of the issue: "There is no hope of us reaching the (World Bank) sustainable development goals without tackling tax avoidance."
For more information on the questions a business leader can ask to ensure tax compliance please see Global tax: it's time to act.