Digitalisation and Tax: Fintech, Digital Assets, and Emerging Business Models
Description
Explore how digitalisation is reshaping tax: fintech products, tokenised assets, DeFi platforms, embedded finance, and data-driven business models. We’ll map common revenue flows to tax characterisation questions (trading vs investment, source, nexus, permanent establishment, VAT/GST) and highlight governance and documentation needed to withstand audits. Case studies show common pitfalls around custody, staking, cross-border services, and valuation. We’ll also touch on e-invoicing and platform reporting rules too.
This webinar provides one-hour of CPD and offers insights and updates from a leading industry-expert speaker.
Delegates places are interchangeable with colleagues from the same organisation.
Content
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Tax characterisation of digital income streams
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Nexus, PE risk, and remote service delivery
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VAT/GST issues in digital supplies
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Governance, controls, and audit trails
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Practical lessons from real-world scenarios
Presenter
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Dr. Marizah Minhat Associate Professor in Finance and Economics at University of Bradford |
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Dr Marizah Minhat is an Associate Professor in Finance and Economics. She holds a PhD, and an MSc in Banking and Finance from University of Stirling, and a Master of Laws in Financial Law and Regulation from London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). She completed her undergraduate studies at Lincoln University, New Zealand. She has published in finance, economics and human rights journals, and wider media. Her latest co-edited book entitled ‘Ethical Discourse in Finance: Interdisciplinary and Diverse Perspectives’ was published by Palgrave Macmillan. Her previous works and/or research interests are related to financial innovations (including stock options, credit derivatives, Islamic finance, microfinance, and cryptocurrencies/cryptoassets/digital assets), financial regulation and governance including human rights, motivated mainly from economic and social perspectives. Beyond academia, she had delivered talks at several institutions including Bank Rakyat Malaysia, Confucius Institute for Scotland, Centre for Sustainability Hong Kong and Treasury Markets Association, Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA). She also participated in stakeholder meetings of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Islamic Finance (APPGIF) at the House of Lords, UK Parliament. Prior to her academic career, she worked in Group Finance of a publicly listed government-linked energy company in Malaysia. |