"In the complex world of VAT and GST and in the complex world of finance, this book is an indispensable guide." (Charlene-A. Herbain, Intertax, Vol. 46 (5), 2018)
Part I: Establishing the VAT and Financial Supplies Benchmarks.- Chapter 1. Theories of Consumption and the Consequences of Partial Taxation of Financial Services (Robert F. van Brederode).- Part II: Financial Loans and Intermediary Services.- Chapter 2. Taxing Loan Intermediary Services: Theory and Design Considerations (Robert F. van Brederode).- Chapter 3. Financial Loan Intermediary Services: Argentina (Guillermo Teijeiro).- Chapter 4. Financial Loan Intermediary Services: Australia (Richard Krever).- Chapter 5. Financial Loan Intermediary Services: Brazil (Flavio Rubinstein).- Chapter 6. Financial Loan Intermediation Services: Canada (Simon Thang).- Chapter 7. Financial Loan Intermediary Services: China (Na Li).- Chapter 8. Financial Loan Intermediary Services: China (Joachim Englisch).- Chapter 9. Financial Loan Intermediary Services: Israel (David Goldman).- Chapter 10. Financial Loan Intermediation Services: New Zealand (Marie Pallot).- Chapter 11. Financial Loan Intermediary Services: South Africa (Alwyn de Koker).- Part III: Financial Investments.- Chapter 12. VAT and Financial Investments (Richard Krever).- Chapter 13. VAT and Cost Sharing in the EU (Ine Lejeune).- Chapter 14. A VAT/GST Perspective on Crowdfunding (Sebastian Pfeiffer).- Chapter 15. Financial Investments: European Union (Joachim Englisch).- Chapter 16. Financial Investments: South Africa (Alwyn de Koker).- Part IV: Financial Pooling Services: Insurance and Gambling.- Chapter 17. GST and Insurance: Australia (Richard Krever).- Chapter 18. VAT and Insurance: The European Union (Marta Papis-Almansa).- Chapter 19. GST and Insurance: Singapore (Soo How Koh).- Chapter 20. VAT and Gambling (Fabiola Annacondia).
Robert van Brederode is a tax lawyer, practitioner and scholar specializing in international tax and global indirect taxes, currently serving as Crowe Horwath International’s global indirect tax leader. Previously, he held executive positions in tax with several of the largest accounting firms. He also served as assistant professor at Maastricht University, School of Law; professor at the Erasmus University, Department of Economics; and adjunct professor at New York University, School of Law.
Richard Krever is a professor in the Department of Business Law and Taxation at Monash University. He is the director of the Taxation Law and Policy Research Group and specialises in taxation law and policy. In addition to his academic work, Richard has provided assistance under the auspices of the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, Asian Development Bank, and other international organisations to finance ministries and tax offices in a wide range of jurisdictions.
This book explains the theoretical and policy issues associated with the taxation of financial services and includes a jurisdictional overview that illustrates alternative policy choices and the legal consequences of those choices . The book addresses the question: how can financial services in an increasingly globalized market best be taxed through VAT while avoiding economic distortions? It supports the discussion of the key practical problems that have arisen from the particular complexity of the application of VAT to financial services, and allows for the evaluation of best practice by comparing the major current reform models now being implemented.