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Russia. / Kilinkarova, Elena; Pustovalov, Evgeniy; Savitsky, Andrey; Zakharov, Evgeniy.

Corporate Tax Residence and Mobility . 2018. p. 505-524.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterResearch

Harvard

Kilinkarova, E, Pustovalov, E, Savitsky, A & Zakharov, E 2018, Russia. in Corporate Tax Residence and Mobility . pp. 505-524.

APA

Kilinkarova, E., Pustovalov, E., Savitsky, A., & Zakharov, E. (2018). Russia. In Corporate Tax Residence and Mobility (pp. 505-524)

Vancouver

Kilinkarova E, Pustovalov E, Savitsky A, Zakharov E. Russia. In Corporate Tax Residence and Mobility . 2018. p. 505-524

Author

Kilinkarova, Elena ; Pustovalov, Evgeniy ; Savitsky, Andrey ; Zakharov, Evgeniy. / Russia. Corporate Tax Residence and Mobility . 2018. pp. 505-524

BibTeX

@inbook{99da88cff85545d8a491b5c1da56b139,
title = "Russia",
abstract = "The concept of residence lies at the core of corporate income taxation. In domestic tax systems, the essential function of the residence concept is to subject resident corporate taxpayers to full tax liability, usually on a worldwide basis. In tax treaties, residence plays a fundamental role in the allocation of taxing powers between states. Moreover, within the European Union, it gives access to the legal protection granted to companies by internal market rules, whether contained in EU treaties (fundamental freedoms) or in tax directives. Today, however, the globalization and the digitalization of the economy are putting residence under heavy pressure. Within multinational enterprises, the geographical dislocation of the functions performed by people and entities within the multinational group makes it harder to identify a central place of decision or management in cases where this place is not the same as the place where the company was incorporated. Moreover, tax planning strategies involving location or the transfer of residence to low-tax jurisdictions have come under the spotlight of international organizations, such as the OECD and the European Union. Against this background, this book examines the notion of residence from a comparative, EU and international law perspective. It is divided into two parts. Part one comprises a general introductory report, as well as five thematic reports on key present and future issues concerning the tax residence of companies. Part two comprises the national reports of 14 EU Member States and 6 non-EU Member States (Norway, Russia, Serbia, Turkey, Ukraine and the United States). Those reports contain an extensive analysis of the definition and function of corporate tax residence on the basis of a questionnaire (which is included as an appendix in this book). With contributions from renowned academics from Europe and beyond, this book offers an insightful and multifaceted perspective on a fundamental concept of domestic and international taxation.",
author = "Elena Kilinkarova and Evgeniy Pustovalov and Andrey Savitsky and Evgeniy Zakharov",
year = "2018",
month = jun,
language = "English",
isbn = "978-90-8722-451-6",
pages = "505--524",
booktitle = "Corporate Tax Residence and Mobility",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Russia

AU - Kilinkarova, Elena

AU - Pustovalov, Evgeniy

AU - Savitsky, Andrey

AU - Zakharov, Evgeniy

PY - 2018/6

Y1 - 2018/6

N2 - The concept of residence lies at the core of corporate income taxation. In domestic tax systems, the essential function of the residence concept is to subject resident corporate taxpayers to full tax liability, usually on a worldwide basis. In tax treaties, residence plays a fundamental role in the allocation of taxing powers between states. Moreover, within the European Union, it gives access to the legal protection granted to companies by internal market rules, whether contained in EU treaties (fundamental freedoms) or in tax directives. Today, however, the globalization and the digitalization of the economy are putting residence under heavy pressure. Within multinational enterprises, the geographical dislocation of the functions performed by people and entities within the multinational group makes it harder to identify a central place of decision or management in cases where this place is not the same as the place where the company was incorporated. Moreover, tax planning strategies involving location or the transfer of residence to low-tax jurisdictions have come under the spotlight of international organizations, such as the OECD and the European Union. Against this background, this book examines the notion of residence from a comparative, EU and international law perspective. It is divided into two parts. Part one comprises a general introductory report, as well as five thematic reports on key present and future issues concerning the tax residence of companies. Part two comprises the national reports of 14 EU Member States and 6 non-EU Member States (Norway, Russia, Serbia, Turkey, Ukraine and the United States). Those reports contain an extensive analysis of the definition and function of corporate tax residence on the basis of a questionnaire (which is included as an appendix in this book). With contributions from renowned academics from Europe and beyond, this book offers an insightful and multifaceted perspective on a fundamental concept of domestic and international taxation.

AB - The concept of residence lies at the core of corporate income taxation. In domestic tax systems, the essential function of the residence concept is to subject resident corporate taxpayers to full tax liability, usually on a worldwide basis. In tax treaties, residence plays a fundamental role in the allocation of taxing powers between states. Moreover, within the European Union, it gives access to the legal protection granted to companies by internal market rules, whether contained in EU treaties (fundamental freedoms) or in tax directives. Today, however, the globalization and the digitalization of the economy are putting residence under heavy pressure. Within multinational enterprises, the geographical dislocation of the functions performed by people and entities within the multinational group makes it harder to identify a central place of decision or management in cases where this place is not the same as the place where the company was incorporated. Moreover, tax planning strategies involving location or the transfer of residence to low-tax jurisdictions have come under the spotlight of international organizations, such as the OECD and the European Union. Against this background, this book examines the notion of residence from a comparative, EU and international law perspective. It is divided into two parts. Part one comprises a general introductory report, as well as five thematic reports on key present and future issues concerning the tax residence of companies. Part two comprises the national reports of 14 EU Member States and 6 non-EU Member States (Norway, Russia, Serbia, Turkey, Ukraine and the United States). Those reports contain an extensive analysis of the definition and function of corporate tax residence on the basis of a questionnaire (which is included as an appendix in this book). With contributions from renowned academics from Europe and beyond, this book offers an insightful and multifaceted perspective on a fundamental concept of domestic and international taxation.

UR - https://www.ibfd.org/IBFD-Products/Corporate-Tax-Residence-and-Mobility

UR - https://proxy.library.spbu.ru:3648/ehost/ebookviewer/ebook/bmxlYmtfXzE4NjA4NjBfX0FO0?sid=965cbdab-0298-4675-82d2-75fb15b0cd7d@redis&vid=0&format=EK&lpid=toc-6&rid=0

M3 - Chapter

SN - 978-90-8722-451-6

SP - 505

EP - 524

BT - Corporate Tax Residence and Mobility

ER -

ID: 28265836