I am well aware that many might find my blogging on country-by-country reporting a little repetitive, but when you have been working on an idea for
Read the full article…
Ernst & Young object to my tweeting this morning
As Transfer Pricing Weekly have reported this morning, Ernst & Young objected to my live tweeting from the OECD earlier today. I was commenting on
Read the full article…
At the OECD on country-by-country reporting today
I rarely mention my day’s events on this blog: it happens around them in most cases, not because of them. Today is likely to be
Read the full article…
HMRC say they have no discretion before parliament but apparently do when briefing journalists
I have discussed this morning the Judicial Review of Ingenious Media – in which it has been found that HMRC do have the right to
Read the full article…
HMRC can talk about individual taxpayer’s affairs – so what they’ve said to the PAC is wrong
As many readers of this blog will know, the standard response of HMRC when asked about the affairs of companies like Google, Amazon and Starbucks
Read the full article…
How can KPMG be a fund manager and an auditor?
I wrote last week about the credibility of auditing, or the lack of it. As if on cue to prove my point on independence the FT
Read the full article…
A Code of Conduct for Taxation
In 2007 I wrote a Code of Conduct for Taxation for the Tax Justice Network and Association for Accountancy & Business Affairs. The Code of Conduct was just 2 pages
Read the full article…
Is the audit profession credible?
I had a conversation yesterday on the future of the audit profession. It does not matter who with, where or why. What it did was
Read the full article…
We used to fear inflation: deflation is a much bigger threat
As the FT has noted: The European Central Bank on Thursday responded to fears of deflation across the eurozone by unexpectedly cutting rates to a record low
Read the full article…