Showing 1-10 of 11 results
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Lump-sum payments to departing employees
Business, Lawalliance Limited Company, Published on 12/07/2016
» When employment comes to an end, whether due to retirement, redundancy or voluntary resignation, the employer may need to make a lump-sum payment to the employee. As the lump sum could be all that a retired employee has left to live on, or a fund to be used during the vocational transition, the law helps to ease the tax burden by allowing a special calculation so that it is taxed separately from other income.
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Expenses paid to 'unidentifiable' parties
Business, Lawalliance Limited Company, Published on 23/02/2016
» All business enterprises from time to time may encounter a situation in which they make payments to a recipient, but its identity cannot be proved to the satisfaction of tax authorities. We are not talking about a payment made in a sham transaction simply to receive a tax deduction but a payment that completely fulfils the cardinal rules such as those made on an arm's-length basis and exclusively spent for business purposes.
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Determination of Section 40(8) income
Business, Lawalliance Limited Company, Published on 22/08/2017
» The government recently introduced a tax incentive programme to encourage individuals, including ordinary partnerships and groups of persons, to reorganise their businesses and operate them in the form of a company limited or a juristic partnership. This would make it easier to screen them for tax compliance, given the need to prepare statutory accounts.
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New tax legislation to comply with Fatca
Business, Lawalliance Limited Company, Published on 16/05/2017
» On March 4 last year, Thailand and the United States entered into an agreement to improve international tax compliance and to implement the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (Fatca), which Washington introduced in 2010 in an attempt to discourage tax evasion by US citizens holding assets abroad.
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Tougher measures against tax dodgers
Business, Lawalliance Limited Company, Published on 21/02/2017
» The world is entering a new era in which national tax authorities are joining hands to set up a system to hound those who dodge paying their fair share of tax by applying unacceptable tax-planning schemes.
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E-payment and bank secrecy: what's next
Business, Lawalliance Limited Company, Published on 17/05/2016
» It has long been understood that a taxpayer has the right to a contractual arrangement that will allow him or her to incur the lowest tax cost where possible. Nothing in past constitutions or the new draft requires Thai nationals to choose a transaction that would expose the parties to the heaviest tax burden, as long as the transaction is within the law.
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The government's tax amnesty scheme: Is it the real deal?
Business, Lawalliance Limited Company, Published on 12/01/2016
» Many small businesses had something extra to celebrate at the New Year with the surprise announcement of a tax amnesty scheme. “Amnesty” is a word the director-general of the Revenue Department refused to use in a recent interview, stressing anyone breaching the conditions could face an investigation later. Given the broad scope of the law, all small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) must understand what is involved.
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Treatment of investment in accounts receivable challenged
Business, Lawalliance Limited Company, Published on 11/08/2015
» The year 1997 was one of the most important in the economic history of Thailand. Not only did the world taste the Tom Yum Kung crisis, but some people in Thailand discovered a new line of business that brought some of them great wealth. We're taking about investing in distressed assets.
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New interpretations of leasing exemption rules
Business, Lawalliance Limited Company, Published on 16/06/2015
» Failure to comply with tax obligations can bring about disastrous results, not only for the income earner but also for the payer of the income. This is always the case for withholding tax imposed on particular types of income.
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Failure to launch: Tax concerns stall much-needed infrastructure funds
Business, Lawalliance Limited Company, Published on 23/09/2014
» Tax matters continue to attract a lot of attention in Thailand. This past week, the government finally confirmed that corporate income tax in 2015 would remain at 20% of net profit, while progressive tax rates for individual taxpayers had been adjusted downward on incomes below 4 million baht.
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