20997 - GLOBAL CORPORATE TAXATION
Department of Law
CARLO GARBARINO
Suggested background knowledge
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
A. Business Income & Tax Accounting
- Introduction to corporate taxation: the tax system
- Interaction between statutory financial statements and the corporate income-tax return
- General principles of corporate income taxation
- Positive and negative components of income; book-to-tax adjustments
B. Taxation of Corporate Groups
- Core features of group taxation and tax-planning techniques
- Participation exemption for capital gains
- Intra-group dividend taxation
- Interest-deductibility limitations
- Fiscal consolidation regimes
- Permanent Establishment and Attribution of profit
- Transfer Pricing
- Controlled Foreign Companies regime
- Global Minimum Tax
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
• Describe the most complex aspects of corporate and group taxation.
• Identify and explain key book-to-tax adjustments.
• Expound the general principles governing business-income taxation in different jurisdictions.
• Recognise the building blocks of effective tax strategy, including the global minimum tax.
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
• Anticipate major tax issues facing corporations and MNEs.
• Assess the tax risks associated with specific transactions.
• Assess whether the participation-exemption regime applies to specific gains.
• Apply statutory rules on interest deductibility.
• Analyse the taxation of intra-group dividends.
• Interpret court decisions on tax matters and relevant provisions of the Italian Consolidated Income-Tax Act (TUIR).
Teaching methods
- Lectures
- Guest speaker's talks (in class or in distance)
- Practical Exercises
- Collaborative Works / Assignments
DETAILS
- Lectures
- Guest Talks (in-person or online) from academics and practitioners who share real-world insights on corporate and international taxation
- Practical Workshops featuring interactive case studies that translate theory into practice
- Group Assignments in which students research a topical case, prepare a written report and present their findings to the class
During workshops and assignments, students confront real-life scenarios - such as modelling the Pillar Two top-up tax or evaluating the tax consequences of an intra-group restructuring - applying the analytical framework developed in lectures.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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ATTENDING STUDENTS
Students will be assessed on the basis of a group presentation and a final written examination.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Students that do not participate in the group presentation will be assessed on a final written examination, which will include also the topics of the presentations.
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Textbooks and reading lists will be distributed at the beginning of the course.