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Beyond BordersBeyond Borders
These are the kind of earth-rattling headlines we read last year: IRS Reaches Agreement with Visa and MasterCard on Information Disclosure; Future of EU Savings Directive in Doubt; Developing Countries Seek to Stem Erosion of Tax Base; U.S. Enacts Stiff Measures to Fight International Terrorism and Money Laundering; Tax Havens Give in to OECD on Exchange of Information. The international estate planning
Edward J. Finley II, vice president, JPMorgan Private Bank, New York, N.Y.
These are the kind of earth-rattling headlines we read last year: “IRS Reaches Agreement with Visa and MasterCard on Information Disclosure;” “Future of EU Savings Directive in Doubt;” “Developing Countries Seek to Stem Erosion of Tax Base;” “U.S. Enacts Stiff Measures to Fight International Terrorism and Money Laundering;” “Tax Havens Give in to OECD on Exchange of Information.”
The international estate planning landscape has experienced tectonic movements in the last several years — and 2003 proved no exception. Change is expectable, but typically constant. In the past few years its velocity has been accelerating, and we can expect it to pick up even more steam in...
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