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Public discourse on cross-border data sharing has focused overwhelmingly on raw data. For example, a recent proposal from a Canadian think tank recommended its use to address issues such as global ...
This data covers BIC, LEI, national bank codes, IBAN data, standing settlement instructions, credit ratings, and financial institutions’ memberships to domestic and cross-border payment market infrastructures. [7] After the launch of CIPS (phase 1), its functions have been steadily improved, leading to its operation (phase 2).
A destination-based cash flow tax [1]: 27 [2] (DBCFT) [3] is a cashflow tax with a destination-based border-adjustment. Unlike traditional corporate income tax, firms are able to immediately expense all capital investment (called "full expensing"). [4] This ensures that normal profit is out of the tax base and only super-normal profits are ...
In the United States, a different cross-border tax compliance approach is promoted through the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). [citation needed] The U.S. receives information relating to US citizens' accounts from many countries due to the compliance requirements of the FATCA. The United States, in many cases, will reciprocate by ...
The Hong Kong government has initiated talks with the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) to make it easier for data to be transferred from the mainland to the city, as Beijing's new ...
Economic globalization refers to the widespread international movement of goods, capital, services, technology and information. It is the increasing economic integration and interdependence of national, regional, and local economies across the world through an intensification of cross-border movement of goods, services, technologies and capital ...
India has proposed a new comprehensive data privacy law that will mandate how companies handle data of its citizens, including permitting cross-border transfer of information with certain nations ...
Financial integration is believed to date back to the 1690s and was briefly interrupted at the start of the French Revolution (Neal, 1990 [4]).At the end of the 17th century, the world’s dominant commercial empire was the Dutch Republic with the most important financial center located in Amsterdam where Banking, foreign exchange trading, stock trading and bullion trading were situated.