Episodios

  • The Global Shift Toward Private Wealth Taxation
    Feb 3 2026

    A profound shift is underway in global fiscal policy. After decades of declining emphasis on wealth taxes, governments are renewing and intensifying their focus on taxing private wealth. This change reflects mounting inequality, post-pandemic fiscal strain, and unprecedented levels of international tax coordination.

    In this episode, we unpack why wealth is moving to the center of the tax debate—and why this shift looks structural rather than temporary.

    🔎 Key Drivers Behind the Shift1️⃣ Rising Inequality and Political Pressure

    In the post-pandemic period, wealth concentration has accelerated, with the top 1% capturing a disproportionate share of new wealth.

    This has fueled public and political pressure for redistribution, reflected in movements such as “tax the rich” and in proposals advanced by figures like Elizabeth Warren in the United States and Thomas Piketty in Europe.

    The political narrative increasingly frames wealth taxation as a question of fairness and legitimacy, not just revenue.

    2️⃣ Post-Pandemic Fiscal Needs

    Governments are now managing:

    • Historically high public debt from COVID-19 stimulus

    • Major new spending demands linked to the climate transition, defense, and aging populations

    Against this backdrop, wealth taxes are seen as a way to raise revenue without significantly increasing taxes on labor or consumption, which are often politically sensitive.

    3️⃣ Erosion of Traditional Tax Bases

    Globalization and digitalization have weakened the effectiveness of corporate income taxation, as profits can be shifted across borders with relative ease.

    By contrast, private wealth—particularly real estate, financial assets, and ownership interests—is often:

    • Less mobile

    • More visible

    • Easier to connect to individuals

    This makes wealth a more attractive and stable tax base for governments.

    4️⃣ International Coordination Is Reducing Evasion

    Recent international initiatives have significantly changed the enforcement landscape, including:

    • The OECD’s Pillar Two global minimum tax

    • The Common Reporting Standard (CRS) for automatic exchange of financial information

    Led by bodies such as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, these frameworks have reduced opportunities for concealment and increased transparency—making broader wealth taxation administratively and politically more feasible.

    🎯 Key Takeaway

    The renewed focus on private wealth taxation is not a short-term political experiment. It reflects:

    • Structural fiscal pressures

    • Strong public demand

    • Improved enforcement tools

    • Greater international coordination

    For high-net-worth individuals and advisors, this signals a future where wealth—not just income—will be under sustained scrutiny.

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    5 m
  • Pillar One and Pillar Two Explained
    Feb 2 2026

    The OECD’s Pillar One and Pillar Two reforms represent the most significant overhaul of international corporate taxation in decades. In this episode, we explain what each pillar does, who it affects, and why it matters, particularly in a world shaped by digital business models and globalised markets.

    Developed under the auspices of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the two pillars aim to modernise how multinational enterprises (MNEs) are taxed and to reduce harmful tax competition between jurisdictions.

    🔎 What You’ll Learn in This Episode1️⃣ Pillar One: Reallocating Taxing Rights

    Pillar One addresses the challenge of taxing highly digitalised and consumer-facing MNEs that can generate significant profits in a country without a physical presence.

    • Amount A

    This reallocates a portion of residual profits of the largest and most profitable MNEs to market jurisdictions—where customers or users are located—even if the company has no permanent establishment there.

    • Amount B

    Amount B introduces a simplified and standardised return for baseline marketing and distribution activities.

    Its purpose is to reduce transfer-pricing disputes and ease compliance, particularly for jurisdictions with limited administrative capacity.

    2️⃣ Pillar Two: The Global Minimum Tax

    Pillar Two establishes a global minimum corporate tax rate of 15% for MNEs with annual consolidated revenue of at least EUR 750 million.

    Where profits in a jurisdiction are taxed below the minimum rate, a top-up tax applies to bridge the gap.

    Key mechanisms include:

    Income Inclusion Rule (IIR) – top-up tax at the parent entity level

    Undertaxed Profits Rule (UTPR) – backstop rule allocating tax where income is undertaxed

    Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (QDMTT) – allows countries to collect the top-up tax domestically

    The objective is to curb profit shifting and base erosion, ensuring that large MNEs pay a minimum level of tax regardless of where they operate.

    3️⃣ How the Two Pillars Work Together

    While often discussed together, the pillars address different problems:

    Pillar One reallocates taxing rights

    Pillar Two sets a minimum tax floor

    Together, they seek to rebalance the international tax system between residence jurisdictions, market jurisdictions, and low-tax jurisdictions.

    4️⃣ Implementation Status

    Both pillars are being rolled out through a mix of:

    • Multilateral conventions

    • Domestic legislation

    • EU directives (in the case of Pillar Two)

    At the same time, technical details continue to evolve, and implementation timelines and political support vary across jurisdictions.

    🎯 Key Takeaway

    Pillar One and Pillar Two are reshaping international corporate taxation by:

    • Expanding taxing rights beyond physical presence

    • Establishing a global minimum effective tax rate

    • Reducing opportunities for aggressive tax planning

    For MNEs, advisors, and policymakers, understanding both the mechanics and the policy intent is now essential.

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    4 m
  • What Is The Main Risk In Cross-Border Gift Planning?
    Feb 1 2026

    In cross-border gift planning, the biggest mistakes rarely come from complex law—they come from misalignment. In this episode, we explain why the most significant risk is failing to connect the civil-law act of making the gift with its tax consequences for the recipient.

    🔎 What You’ll Learn in This Episode:

    1️⃣ The Core Risk: Legal vs Tax Disconnect

    Problems often arise when parties focus on executing the gift legally—signing documents, transferring funds, or handing over assets—without fully analysing how the gift will be taxed in the recipient’s jurisdiction.

    A gift can be perfectly valid in civil law and still produce unexpected tax exposure.

    2️⃣ The Factors Most Commonly Overlooked

    Cross-border issues typically stem from ignoring one or more of the following:

    Tax residence of the recipient (and sometimes the donor)

    Location (situs) of the asset

    Valuation rules applied at the time of taxation

    Disclosure and reporting obligations, even where no tax is due

    Each of these can independently trigger tax—or penalties—if not addressed upfront.

    3️⃣ Why the Recipient Is Often the One at Risk

    In many jurisdictions, gift tax is imposed on the recipient, not the donor.

    As a result, errors made during planning or documentation frequently materialise later as assessments, penalties, or denied reliefs for the donee.

    4️⃣ Why This Happens So Often

    Cross-border gifts sit at the intersection of:

    • Civil law

    • Tax law

    • Conflict-of-law rules

    When these are analysed in isolation instead of together, outcomes can diverge sharply from expectations.

    5️⃣ Practical Takeaway

    The main risk in international gift planning is not complexity—it’s incomplete analysis.

    Effective planning requires aligning:

    • The legal mechanics of the gift

    • The tax rules of each relevant jurisdiction

    • The reporting and valuation framework

    Failing to do so is one of the most common causes of surprise tax bills in cross-border family transfers.

    This episode highlights why successful cross-border gift planning is less about clever structuring—and more about holistic coordination between law, tax, and facts.

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    1 m
  • Can The Same Gift Be Taxed In More Than One Country?
    Jan 31 2026

    Yes—and this is one of the most common (and misunderstood) risks in cross-border gifting. In this episode, we explain how and why double taxation can arise on a single gift, and why managing that risk is often more complex than for income or capital gains.

    🔎 What You’ll Learn in This Episode:

    1️⃣ Why Double Taxation Happens With Gifts

    Different countries may assert taxing rights over the same gift based on different connecting factors, including:

    Residence of the donor

    Residence of the recipient

    Location (situs) of the gifted asset

    When these criteria overlap across jurisdictions, multiple tax claims can arise simultaneously.

    2️⃣ Why Gift Tax Is Different From Income Tax

    Unlike income tax, treaty protection for inter vivos gifts is very limited.

    Most double tax treaties:

    • Do not cover gifts at all, or

    • Address only inheritances (and even then, incompletely)

    As a result, there is often no treaty-based relief mechanism to eliminate double taxation.

    3️⃣ The Role of Domestic Law

    Because treaty relief is usually unavailable, advisers must rely primarily on:

    Domestic tax law exemptions and credits

    Territorial vs worldwide taxation rules

    • Timing, classification, and documentation of the gift

    Outcomes can differ significantly depending on how each jurisdiction’s internal rules interact.

    4️⃣ European Union Considerations

    In some cases, EU law principles—particularly the free movement of capital—may limit discriminatory treatment or allow access to reliefs that would otherwise be denied.

    However, EU law does not eliminate double taxation by default and applies only in specific circumstances.

    5️⃣ Practical Takeaway

    In cross-border gifting:

    Yes, the same gift can be taxed more than once

    • Treaty protection is usually not available

    • Prevention depends on careful planning under domestic law, not automatic relief

    • Early analysis of donor residence, donee residence, and asset location is essential

    This episode explains why gift taxation requires jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction analysis—and why assuming “there must be a treaty” is one of the most dangerous mistakes in international estate planning.

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    1 m
  • French Gift Tax Rules For Donations Manuelles
    Jan 30 2026

    Not all gifts are created equal under French law. In this episode, we explain how informal or manual gifts—called donations manuelles—are treated for French gift tax purposes and why disclosure matters.

    🔎 What You’ll Learn in This Episode:

    1️⃣ What Are Donations Manuelles?

    Donations manuelles are informal gifts made without a notarial deed, such as:

    • Cash gifts handed directly to a beneficiary

    • Personal property transferred without formal documentation

    2️⃣ When Are They Taxable?

    Unlike notarised gifts, these manual gifts become taxable only when they are disclosed to the French tax authorities. Disclosure can occur via:

    Declaration in a registered document

    Formal recognition by a court

    3️⃣ How Is Tax Calculated?

    The gift tax is generally based on the market value of the asset at the time of disclosure, not at the time of transfer.

    This ensures fair taxation while allowing some flexibility for informal gifting—though delays in declaration can carry risks.

    4️⃣ Legal Basis

    Rules are set under Article 757 of the Code général des impôts and reinforced through administrative guidance.

    5️⃣ Practical Takeaway

    Even informal gifts must be properly disclosed to avoid penalties. Planning ahead and understanding disclosure requirements is key for anyone giving or receiving manual gifts in France.

    This episode helps listeners navigate one of France’s more nuanced gift-tax rules, balancing flexibility with compliance.

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    1 m
  • What Happens In France When Both Donor And Donee Are Non-Residents?
    Jan 29 2026

    When neither the donor nor the recipient is fiscally domiciled in France, French gift tax applies on a strictly territorial basis. In this episode, we break down exactly when France can still tax the gift—and when it cannot.

    🔎 What You’ll Learn in This Episode:

    1️⃣ The Starting Point: No French Residence

    Where both parties are non-residents, France does not apply worldwide gift taxation.

    ➡️ The analysis turns entirely on where the asset is located.

    2️⃣ Assets That Can Still Be Taxed

    French gift tax applies only to assets with a French situs, typically including:

    French real estate

    • Certain movable assets located in France

    In these cases, the gift may still fall within the French tax net, even though both parties live abroad.

    3️⃣ Assets That Are Fully Outside French Tax

    If the gifted asset is located outside France:

    • The gift falls entirely outside the French gift tax system

    No French gift tax applies

    Residence alone is not enough—territorial connection is required.

    4️⃣ Legal Basis

    This territorial limitation is expressly set out in Articles 750 ter and 757 of the Code général des impôts.

    5️⃣ Practical Takeaway

    When both donor and donee are non-residents:

    French-situs asset → French gift tax may apply

    Foreign-situs asset → No French gift tax

    Correctly identifying the location of the asset is therefore the decisive step.

    This episode highlights a rare area of certainty in French gift taxation—showing how territorial limits apply cleanly when France has no personal tax connection to either party.

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    1 m
  • When Does French Gift Tax Apply To Gifts From Residents To Non-Residents?
    Jan 28 2026

    French gift tax rules change depending on who is resident and where the asset is located. In this episode, we explain when France taxes gifts made by French residents to non-resident recipients—and why documentation still matters even when the tax scope is limited.

    🔎 What You’ll Learn in This Episode:

    1️⃣ The Key Rule: Asset Location

    When a French-resident donor makes a gift to a non-resident recipient, French gift tax applies only if the gifted asset is located in France.

    ➡️ France follows a territorial approach in this specific scenario.

    2️⃣ Who Pays the Tax

    Where French gift tax applies because the asset is located in France:

    • The recipient (donee) is the taxable person

    • The donor is not assessed for gift tax

    This allocation reflects the structure of Articles 757 and 777 of the Code général des impôts.

    3️⃣ Why Documentation Still Matters

    Even though the donor is not taxed, they should ensure the gift is:

    • Properly documented

    Formally executed (where required)

    • Supported by clear valuation evidence

    This is particularly important for high-value assets, where disputes may arise over the nature of the transfer or the value declared.

    4️⃣ Practical Takeaway

    For gifts from French residents to non-residents:

    French-situs asset → French gift tax may apply (recipient pays)

    Foreign-situs asset → No French gift tax

    Strong documentation reduces risk, even when tax exposure is limited

    This episode clarifies a commonly misunderstood corner of French gift taxation—helping families and advisors apply the rules accurately and avoid preventable disputes.

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    1 m
  • Are Gifts From Non-Residents Taxable When The Recipient Is French Resident?
    Jan 27 2026

    Yes—and this often catches families by surprise. In this episode, we explain why France can tax a gift on a worldwide basis even when the donor lives abroad, and why the recipient’s residence is decisive.

    🔎 What You’ll Learn in This Episode:

    1️⃣ The Trigger: Recipient’s Fiscal Domicile

    Under Article 750 ter of the Code général des impôts, France taxes gifts on a worldwide basis when the recipient is fiscally domiciled in France.

    ➡️ Even if the donor is non-resident, the gift falls within the French tax net once the donee is resident in France.

    2️⃣ Asset Location Is Irrelevant

    In this scenario, where the asset is located does not matter.

    French or foreign assets, cash or non-cash—all can be taxable when received by a French-resident donee.

    3️⃣ Why This Rule Is So Broad

    France prioritizes personal connections (fiscal domicile of donor or recipient) over territoriality. This makes the system expansive and places significant weight on residence planning.

    4️⃣ Practical Takeaway

    For cross-border gifts involving France:

    French-resident recipient → worldwide taxation risk

    Donor residence and asset location do not prevent taxation

    Confirming the recipient’s fiscal domicile is therefore the first step in any French gift-tax analysis.

    This episode clarifies why France’s gift-tax reach is among the broadest in Europe—and why international families must factor recipient residence into every gifting decision.

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    1 m