Eurobond and Tax incentive: Difference between pages

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# An offshore bond in the international capital markets, issued in (offshore) [[Eurocurrency]], most frequently in USDEurobonds are, generally speaking, beyond domestic market regulation.  Maturities at issue are normally greater than one year and are usually, but not always, in bearer form.  They can be issued on any interest basis. Some attempts are being made to refer to Eurobonds as International bonds. One reason for this change in terminology is to avoid confusion with the [[euro]] (the currency of the euro area, informally Eurozone or [[Euro zone]], introduced some decades after the development of the Eurobond market).
1''Tax and treasury''.
# An alternative - and increasingly common - spelling of [[euro bond]], a (currently theoretical) bond backed by all the EU Member States in the euro area.
 
Tax incentives usually are tax-beneficial legal structures, designated physical locations, investments, activities, financial arrangements or instruments that are intended by the revenue authority attract exemption from - or reduced liability to - different forms of taxation.
 
Tax incentives are designed by the tax rule-setting authorities to encourage particular wanted activities, contrasted with unintended tax "loopholes" and over-aggressive tax planning.
 
 
This kind of tax incentives are also known informally as ''tax breaks''.
 
 
2.
 
Additional tax - or less favourable tax treatment - attaching to activities, or omissions, that the tax rule-setting authority wants to discourage.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Bond]]
 
* [[Bond basis]]
* [[Advance tax ruling]]
* [[Euro]]
* [[Business rates]]
* [[euro bond]]
* [[Capital Gains Tax]]
* [[euro zone]]
* [[Capital tax]]
* [[Eurocurrency]]
* [[Carbon tax]]
* [[Foreign bond]]
* [[Charge]]
* [[International bond]]
* [[Claims and elections]]
* [[An introduction to debt securities]]
* [[Cliff edge]]
*[[Code]]
* [[Concession]]
* [[Corporation Tax]]
* [[Customs duty]]
* [[Determination]]
* [[Direct tax]]
*[[Directive]]
* [[Double tax treaties]]
* [[Double taxation]]
* [[Duty]]
*[[Ethics]]
* [[Federal Corporate Income Tax]]
* [[Foreign tax credit]]
*[[Framework]]
* [[Global minimum corporate tax rate]]
*[[Good practice]]
*[[Governance]]
*[[Guidance]]
* [[Incentive]]
* [[Income Tax]]
* [[Indirect tax]]
* [[Inheritance tax]]
* [[Internal Revenue Code]]  (IRC)
* [[Jurisdiction]]
* [[Landfill Tax]]
* [[Law]]
* [[Legislation]]
* [[Levy]]
* [[Marginal rate of tax]]
* [[National Insurance ]]
* [[OECD model tax convention]]
* [[Output tax]]
* [[Payroll tax]]
* [[Preferential tax regime]]
*[[Principle]]
* [[Profit after tax]]
* [[Profit before tax]]
* [[Regime]]
* [[Regulation]]
*[[Reporting]]
*[[Reputational risk]]
*[[Rules]]
* [[Sales Tax]]
*[[Standards]]
* [[Stealth tax]]
* [[Supertax]]
* [[Surcharge]]
* [[Tax]]
* [[Tax arbitrage]]
* [[Tax avoidance]]
* [[Tax base]]
* [[Tax compliance]]
* [[Tax credit]]
* [[Tax depreciation]]
* [[Tax evasion]]
* [[Tax harmonisation]]
* [[Tax haven]]
* [[Tax planning]]
* [[Tax rate]]
* [[Tax relief]]
* [[Tax risk]]
* [[Tax ruling]]
* [[Tax shelter]]
* [[Tax shield]]
* [[Tax yield]]
* [[Treasury]]
* [[Trust]]
* [[UK Bank Levy]]
* [[Value Added Tax]] (VAT)
* [[Wealth tax]]
* [[Withholding tax]]
 
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]

Revision as of 19:17, 28 January 2024

1. Tax and treasury.

Tax incentives usually are tax-beneficial legal structures, designated physical locations, investments, activities, financial arrangements or instruments that are intended by the revenue authority attract exemption from - or reduced liability to - different forms of taxation.

Tax incentives are designed by the tax rule-setting authorities to encourage particular wanted activities, contrasted with unintended tax "loopholes" and over-aggressive tax planning.


This kind of tax incentives are also known informally as tax breaks.


2.

Additional tax - or less favourable tax treatment - attaching to activities, or omissions, that the tax rule-setting authority wants to discourage.


See also