Immovable Property Under VAT: A Comparative Global Analysis (Series on International Taxation)
Book Details
Description
This book describes and analyses VAT treatment of real estate transactions in six representative countries: Australia, Canada, Germany, Japan, Mexico, and the United Kingdom. As in any jurisdiction, the VAT schemes covered must accommodate complex factual matrices that demand consistent, fair, and equal treatment. Among these VAT determinants the authors, each an expert in the national tax law of one of the six countries, address the following:
- types of real estate sales;
- long versus short term leases;
- commercial versus residential use;
- newly constructed versus existing property;
- status of the parties involved as taxable or non-taxable for VAT;
- taxable and tax-free supplies;
- special rules for charities, mooring facilities, aircraft, sports facilities, etc.;
- subdivision of apartments into title units;
- commercial residential premises;
- construction work;
- cross-border supply of construction work and services; and
- transfer of a going concern.
The discussions also include the practical areas of accounting for VAT, administrative compliance, personal tax liability, and VAT refund and overpayment certification processes, as well as thorough consideration of relevant case law and examination of frequently litigated matters. Each author has designed his or her chapter to ensure that the technical nuances of each system are explained. An introductory chapter outlines economic theory and preferred VAT treatment of real estate transactions, and compares the variety of solutions applied in the six countries covered.
Although a number of legal works exist on real estate under VAT in single jurisdictions, this is the first book to combine a multi-jurisdictional approach with attention to relevant economic theory, allowing for a very useful assessment of best practices. For this reason it is sure to be welcomed by practitioners and academics not only as an overview of the problem areas encountered when designing VAT policy, but also as a reference in applying VAT to real estate transactions.

