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Tax Avoidance in a global economy Mark Nieuweboer (Institute for Taxation and Economics)
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2.5%
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Subjects Fragmentation and globalisation Aggressive tax planning The case against tax avoidance
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The law applies equally for all Tax system Resistance against paying taxes Free riders If the law applies equally to all, how can one taxpayer legally pay less than the other?
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Fragmentation leads to arbitration Fragmentation State Taxpayer Income Time Arbitration
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Case study: United States v Isham (1873)
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Globalisation World trade agreements Liberalisation of capital markets and the euro Information & communication Technology
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Tax avoidance is profitable Competition between states Competition between companies Tax systems have not globalized
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Base Erosion and Profit Shifting Disconnect real activities from reported income Global value chain Drain profits through funding Profit repatriation schemes
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Connection between profits and activities Global Value Chain Transfer pricing Functions, risks & assets used Disproportional value for intangibles and risks?
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Case study: quality coffee or high value brand?
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Drain profit through debt funding Interest charge is tax deductible Interest income is highly mobile Instruments:- Base companies in ‘real’ tax havens Conduit companies Hybrid mismatches
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Profit repatriation schemes Prevent ‘leakage’ of profits Instruments:- Defer distribution of income () Hybrid mismatches Conduit companies
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Tax avoidance is bad, because it… drains the public budget frustrates economic policy distorts competition is unfair and creates inequality is economically inefficient does not contribute to good citizenship is not transparant is not democratically legitimized
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Tax avoidance is not bad, because it… has minimal effect on budget allows for fiscal price differentiation makes tax competition between states less harmful facilitates foreign direct investments protects the tax revenues protects smaller economies requires less government resources
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Economic effects of anti-avoidance policy Increase in tax revenue Incidence of corporate income tax Capital outflow Elimination of means does not eliminate the needs Decrease welfare
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Initiatives Information Automatically exchange information between authorities Publish what you pay / country-by-country reporting Disclosure rules Harmonisation CCCTB Uniform qualification rules Isolate tax havens Domestic anti-abuse rules
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What can we do? Undo globalisation Change the corporate tax paradigm Eliminate the differences between all tax systems through harmonization Coordinated anti-avoidance rules Uniliateral anti-avoidance rules Nothing…
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“The subjects of every state ought to contribute towards the support of the government, as nearly as possible, in proportion to their respective abilities; that is, in proportion to the revenue which they respectively enjoy under the protection of the state.” Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations (1776)
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