GAAR INTERPRETED THE GENERAL ANTI-AVOIDANCE RULE
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- Author: ALAN M. ScHWARTZ
- ISBN: 9789386374066
- Availability: In Stock
Buy GAAR INTERPRETED THE GENERAL ANTI-AVOIDANCE RULE | Law Books , Indian Reprints, FOREIGN BOOKS , A Social Legal Perspective
The General Anti-Avoidance Rule (GAAR) was introduced as part
of the 1988 tax reforms to the Income Tax Act by enacting section 245. This
strong statutory anti-avoidance provision was designed to stop the growth of
aggressive tax avoidance transactions. Since the introduction of GAAR, there
have now been many GAAR cases decided in the courts and numerous pronouncements
from the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) on the subject. The wording and the
application of the GAAR is subject to interpretation by taxpayers, tax
advisors, Department of Finance, the CRA, and, most importantly, the courts.
GAAR Interpreted: The General Anti-Avoidance Rule is an up to date analysis of
the manner in which the GAAR has been interpreted and applied by these parties
since its implementation. The book first discusses the history behind the
development of GAAR and then describes the GAAR Committee and administrative
procedures. There is a lengthy chapter on CRA GAAR Rulings and Technical
Interpretations detailing specific CRA pronouncements with respect to
"where the GAAR could apply" and "where the GAAR was found not
to apply" each organized by extensive topical areas such as CEE,
crystallization of capital gains, debt forgiveness, salary deferral
arrangements, and surplus stripping. Another critical chapter in this book is
the extensive discussion of judicial interpretations through the years from the
1997 Equilease decision to the most recent 2005 Supreme Court of Canada
decision in Canada Trustco and post Canada Trustco decisions. There is a
chapter summarizing all the cases that have been assessed and are being
litigated but have not yet been heard by the Courts. The book also includes
chapters on GAAR and tax treaties, provincial GAAR, and GAAR and the GST.