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Barbados and Canada sign protocol amending double taxation agreement

images-Business-bridgetown_400_705786209From Caribbean360

A government statement said that Barbados values the “mutually beneficial and long standing relationship with Canada and welcomes this development as it will further concretise Barbados’ principles of transparency and substance.

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, Wednesday January 8, 2014, CMC – Barbados says the protocol amending the agreement with Canada for the avoidance of double taxation and the prevention of fiscal evasion with respect to taxes on income and capital has gone into effect.

It said the protocol took effect from December 17 last year.

“Under the provisions of this protocol, for the purposes of the agreement, the tax residency of a company that is resident in both Barbados and Canada under both countries’ domestic laws, commonly referred to as a dually resident company, will be determined based on the place of incorporation,” said the Director of International Business, Kaeron Venner:

He said as a result, a Barbados incorporated vehicle that is deemed to be dually resident would be regarded as resident solely in Barbados for the purposes of the agreement and would be liable to tax in Barbados.

“Where Canada wishes to make a claim to tax that same entity, the rule is that such a vehicle may only be taxed in Canada on certain types of income derived from Canadian sources, such as income derived from activities that it carries in Canada through a permanent establishment (PE).

“This new tie breaker rule removes the need to have recourse to the Mutual Agreement Procedure to determine the residence of a dually resident company.”

Canada and Barbados signed the Double Taxation Agreement (DTA) on January 22, 1980 which excluded companies that were subject to a special tax benefit under the international financial services regime from all of the provisions of the Treaty.

Venner said that on November 8, 2011, Canada and Barbados signed a protocol to amend the 1980 DTA.

“This Protocol, among other things, now allows entities operating in the international financial services sector to benefit from a number of provisions in the Treaty, including the provisions on residency.  In addition, such entities will now be covered under the new comprehensive exchange of information provisions which now meet the OECD (Organisation for economic Cooperation and Development) standard.”

A government statement said that Barbados values the “mutually beneficial and long standing relationship with Canada and welcomes this development as it will further concretise Barbados’ principles of transparency and substance.

“Through our network of tax treaties, it will further solidify Barbados’ commitment to international best practices on the exchange of information,” the statement added.

For more on this story: http://www.caribbean360.com/index.php/business/1105511.html?utm_source=Caribbean360+Newsletters&utm_campaign=f659fb92b1-Vol_7_Issue_001_Business1_8_2014&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_350247989a-f659fb92b1-39393477#ixzz2pqbBVBm9

 

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