I am trying (unsuccessfully) to understand your view here.
If a DTA, to which Thailand signs, states a particular pension is ONLY taxable in the source country (which is not Thailand), that you still believe that pension is STILL taxable in Thailand (despite wording in the DTA and wording in Ministerial Decree 18 which covers DTAs) ?
If so, you and I have very different opinions. I believe my view matches that of the Thai revenue department, in part because given a Royal Decree notes the income is exempt (per DTA wording) and that there has since 2017 never been a place on a Thai tax form (neither English nor Thai language) to list exemptions for DTA income/pensions.
I wouldn't, no .
If a family member committed the crimes that Hunter allegedly committed , then I would prefer it if he faced the consequences and I wouldnt get him off the charges, (if I could)
Thanks. It's probably my fate. Why re-invent the wheel?
Actual advice instead of retards pretending that they don't get that the expression "fire" was like, you know, a figure of speech. Like an effing stuck record. Over and over again.
Patting themselves on the back for pretending not to understand. It's an AOL chatroom from the late 90's here, troll-wise.
Bleach-drinking, retard,Trump Trash does in fact have low comprehension on average, so it's a pretty plausible gag.
This is the hamfisted world of Trump 'Tards, where their last verifiable joke was "Orange Man Bad", like a decade ago.
So I can bring my UK government pension into Thailand (leaving my State and private pensions in the UK) and as the Thais don't have a category for that type of pension it will be tax free....bonus....cheers.
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