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Books > Money & Finance > Public finance > Taxation
Bringing a unique voice to international taxation, this book argues
against the conventional support of multilateral co-operation in
favour of structured competition as a way to promote both justice
and efficiency in international tax policy. Tsilly Dagan analyzes
international taxation as a decentralized market, where governments
have increasingly become strategic actors. While many of the
challenges of the current international tax regime derive from this
decentralized competitive structure, Dagan argues that curtailing
competition through centralization is not necessarily the answer.
Conversely, competition - if properly calibrated and
notwithstanding its dubious reputation - is conducive, rather than
detrimental, to both efficiency and global justice. International
Tax Policy begins with the basic normative goals of income
taxation, explaining how competition transforms them and analyzing
the strategic game states play on the bilateral and multilateral
level. It then considers the costs and benefits of co-operation and
competition in terms of efficiency and justice.
In 1783, a stamp duty was imposed on proprietary or 'quack'
medicines. These largely useless but often dangerous remedies were
immensely popular. The tax, which lasted until 1941, was imposed to
raise revenue. It failed in its incidental regulatory purpose, had
a negative effect in that the stamp was perceived as a guarantee of
quality, and had a positive effect in encouraging disclosure of the
formula. The book explains the considerable impact the tax had on
chemists and druggists - how it led to an improvement in
professional status, but undermined it by reinforcing their
reputations as traders. The legislation imposing the tax was
complex, ambiguous and never reformed. The tax authorities had to
administer it, and executive practice came to dominate it. A minor,
specialised, low-yield tax is shown to be of real significance in
the pharmaceutical context, and of exceptional importance as a
model revealing the wider impact of tax law and administration.
Der Eingriff in private Vermoegensrechte ist nur dann legitimiert,
wenn dem Sozialbeitrag eine teilhabaquivalente Leistung
gegenubersteht. Vor diesem Hintergrund untersucht der Autor
theoretisch, welche Auswirkungen das Absinken der GRV-Leistungen
unterhalb des soziokulturellen Existenzminimums auf das
individuelle Arbeitsangebots- und Sparverhalten hat. Er liefert in
einem verhaltensoekonomisch unterfutterten Mikrosimulationsmodell
der Alterssicherung in Deutschland wichtige empirische Erkenntnisse
zur zukunftigen Verbreitung von Altersarmut im Haushaltskontext und
evaluiert auf dieser Basis einige Reformoptionen. Die Ergebnisse
zeigen, dass sich an individuellen Rentenzahlbetragen orientierende
sozialpolitische Debatten fehlgeleitet sind und sie zukunftig die
Haushaltsebene betrachten mussen.
Taxes and Trust is the first book on taxes to focus on trust and
the first work of social science to concentrate on how tax policy
actually gets implemented on the ground in Poland, Russia and
Ukraine. It highlights the nuances of the transitional Ukraine case
and explains precisely how and why that 'borderland' country
differs from the more ideal-types of coercive Russia and
compliance-oriented Poland. Through nine bespoke taxpayer surveys,
an unprecedented bureaucratic survey and more than fifteen years of
qualitative research, the book emphasizes the building and
accumulation of trust to transition from a coercive tax state to a
compliant one. The context of the book will appeal to students and
scholars of taxation worldwide and to those who study Russia and
Eastern Europe. This title is also available as Open Access.
Nachhaltiges Handeln gewinnt vor allem durch den Klimawandel stark
an Bedeutung. Das Human Resources Management ubernimmt in diesem
Zusammenhang die Verantwortung, Personalprozesse so zu gestalten,
dass eine Win-win-Situation fur Unternehmen, Arbeitnehmende und die
Umwelt generiert wird. Diese Studie stellt den Menschen in das
Zentrum des betrieblichen Handelns. Auf dieser Basis werden
Personalprozesse nach oekonomischen, sozialen und oekologischen
Faktoren untersucht. Kosten- und Nutzenanalysen zeigen den Mehrwert
dieser neu ausgerichteten prozessorientierten Personalfunktionen
auf und regen zu pragmatischen Veranderungen an. Als Ergebnis wird
ein innovatives Konzept vorgestellt, das fur die nachhaltige
Gestaltung operativer Personalmanagementprozesse in der
betrieblichen Praxis anwendbar ist.
Modern-day tax treaties have their foundations in one of the three
Model Tax Treaties developed by the League of Nations in 1928.
Using previously unexplored archival material, Sunita Jogarajan
provides the first in-depth examination of the development of the
League's Models. This new research provides insights into questions
such as the importance of double taxation versus tax evasion; the
preference for source-taxation versus residence-taxation; the
influence of theory and practice on the League's work; the
development of bilateral rather than multilateral treaties; the
influence of developing countries on the League's work; the role of
Commentary in interpreting model tax treaties; and the influential
factors and key individuals involved. A better understanding of the
development of the original models will inform and help guide
interpretation and reform of modern-day tax treaties. Additionally,
this book will be of interest to scholars of international
relations and the development of law at international
organisations.
Seventy-five percent of Americans claim religious affiliation,
which can impact their taxpaying responsibilities. In this
illuminating book, Samuel D. Brunson describes the many problems
and breakdowns that can occur when tax meets religion in the United
States, and shows how the US government has too often responded to
these issues in an unprincipled, ad hoc manner. God and the IRS
offers a better framework to understand tax and religion. It should
be read by scholars of religion and the law, policymakers, and
individuals interested in understanding the implications of
taxation on their religious practices.
In Central America, dynamic economic actors have inserted
themselves into global markets. Elites atop these sectors attempt
to advance a state-building project that will allow them to expand
their activities and access political power, but they differ in
their internal cohesion and their dominance with respect to other
groups, especially previously constituted elites and popular
sectors. Differences in resulting state-building patterns are
expressed in the capacity to mobilize revenues from the most
dynamic sectors in quantities sufficient to undertake public
endeavors, and in a relatively universal fashion across sectors.
Historical, quantitative, and qualitative detail on the five
countries of Central America are followed by a focus on El
Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala. The greatest changes have
occurred in El Salvador, and Honduras has made some advances,
although they are almost as quickly reversed by incentives,
exemptions, and special arrangements for particular producers.
Guatemala has raised revenues only marginally and failed to address
problems of inequity across sectors and between rich and poor.
"Loopholes of the Rich" helps Americans from all walks of life use
the same tax loopholes that the wealthy use to lower their tax
bill. With this handy guide, you won?t need an accountant to find
quick and easy ways to pay less. And there's nothing unethical
about these tax loopholes. In fact, the government wants you to
take advantage of them! These tax-reducing tactics and strategies
can give you the freedom to save for your family's future or for
your own financial independence. Plus, you?ll find a handy
checklist of more than 300 business deductions, real-life tax
strategy examples, useful sample forms, explanations of IRS codes
and rules, and much more.
This book addresses a specific subset of nonprofits that are
chartered with a single mission: decrease the burden of government.
Designing and engaging nonprofits to lessen the burden of
government requires a specific description and acknowledgement of
the burden to be lessened, and these may include the provision of
infrastructure, the relief of debt, or the provision of general
public services that are not motivated by charity. It also requires
the assignment of specific operating powers to the nonprofit
including the power of eminent domain. This book explores these and
other related topics including the avoidance of resource dependence
on government when attempting to reduce its burden. The book is
addressed to the policy makers and rule makers who design policies
that affect the ability of the nonprofit to effectively lessen the
burden of government. It is also addressed to public administrators
in search of innovative ways of implementing these policies
consistent with the laws, and to the creative nonprofit managers
who are charged with carrying out the mission often in
collaboration with the government or other entities. To the
advanced student in all related fields, the author offers not only
material for discussion, but enables discovery of what is possible
by giving key examples of organizations meeting the terms and
objective of lessening a significant burden of government.
This volume of essays explores the history of the US tax mission to
Japan during the occupation following World War II. Under General
MacArthur, economist Carl S. Shoup led the mission with the charge
of framing a tax system for Japan designed to strengthen democracy
and accelerate economic recovery. The volume examines the sources,
conduct and effects of the mission and situates the mission within
the history of international financial and fiscal reform. The book
begins by establishing the context of progressive social
investigations of taxation, including Shoup's earlier tax missions
to France and Cuba. It then goes on to explore the Japanese
background to the Shoup mission and the process by which American
and Japanese tax experts shaped their recommendations. The book
then assesses and explains the mission's accomplishments in the
context of the political economies of the United States and Japan.
It concludes by analyzing the global implications of the mission,
which became iconic among international tax reformers.
This book explores the politics of fiscal authority, focusing on
the centralization of taxation in Latin America during the
twentieth century. The book studies this issue in great detail for
the case of Mexico. The political (and fiscal) fragmentation
associated with civil war at the beginning of the century was
eventually transformed into a highly centralized regime. The
analysis shows that fiscal centralization can best be studied as
the consequence of a bargain struck between self-interested
regional and national politicians. Fiscal centralization was more
extreme in Mexico than in most other places in the world, but the
challenges and problems tackled by Mexican politicians were not
unique. The book thus analyzes fiscal centralization and the
origins of intergovernmental financial transfers in the other Latin
American federal regimes, Argentina, Brazil, and Venezuela. The
analysis sheds light on the factors that explain the consolidation
of tax authority in developing countries.
Mit zwei Urteilen vom 04. Juli 2017 erklarte der Bundesgerichtshof
eine zwischen Kreditinstituten und Unternehmen vereinbarte
Vertragsklausel uber ein "Bearbeitungsentgelt fur Vertragsschluss"
fur unwirksam. Aufgrund der verbreiteten Verwendung solcher
Klauseln in der Unternehmensfinanzierung und deren langjahriger
Billigung durch die Rechtsprechung hat diese Entscheidung
weitreichende Konsequenzen. Vor diesem Hintergrund zeigt der Autor,
dass weiterhin ein praktisches Bedurfnis fur die rechtssichere
Vereinbarung von Bankentgelten besteht. Am Beispiel von
Entgeltklauseln stellt er dar, dass die AGB-Kontrolle im
unternehmerischen Geschaftsverkehr auf flexible Gestaltungen und
einen differenzierten Auslegungsmassstab angewiesen ist.
Commenting on his collaboration with Geoffrey Brennan on "The Power
to Tax," James M. Buchanan says that the book is "demonstrable
proof of the value of genuine research collaboration across
national-cultural boundaries." Buchanan goes on to say that ""The
Power to Tax" is informed by a single idea--the implications of a
revenue-maximizing government."
Originally published in 1980, "The Power to Tax" was a much-needed
answer to the tax revolts sweeping across the United States. It was
a much-needed answer as well in the academic circles of tax theory,
where orthodox public finance models were clearly inadequate to the
needs at hand.
The public-choice approach to taxation which Buchanan had earlier
elaborated stood in direct opposition to public-finance orthodoxy.
What Buchanan and Brennan constructed in "The Power to Tax" was a
middle ground between the two. As Brennan writes in the foreword,
"The underlying motivating question was simple: Why not borrow the
motivational assumptions standard in public-choice theory and put
them together with assumptions about policy-maker discretion taken
from public-finance orthodoxy?"
The result was a controversial book--and a much misunderstood one
as well. Looking back twenty years later, Brennan feels confirmed
in the rightness of the theories he and Buchanan espoused,
particularly in their unity with the public-choice tradition: "The
insistence on motivational symmetry is a characteristic feature of
the public choice approach, and it is in this dimension that "The
Power to Tax" and the orthodox public- finance approach diverge."
James M. Buchanan is an eminent economist who won the Alfred Nobel
Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1986 and is considered one
of the greatest scholars of liberty in the twentieth century.
The entire series will include:
Volume 1 "The Logical Foundations of Constitutional Liberty"
Volume 2 "Public Principles of Public Debt "
Volume 3 "The Calculus of Consent "
Volume 4 "Public Finance in Democratic Process"
Volume 5 "The Demand and Supply of Public Goods"
Volume 6 "Cost and Choice"
Volume 7 "The Limits of Liberty"
Volume 8 "Democracy in Deficit"
Volume 9 "The Power to Tax"
Volume 10 "The Reason of Rules"
Volume 11 "Politics by Principle, Not Interest"
Volume 12 "Economic Inquiry and Its Logic"
Volume 13 "Politics as Public Choice"
Volume 14 "Debt and Taxes"
Volume 15 "Externalities and Public Expenditure Theory"
Volume 16 "Choice, Contract, and Constitutions"
Volume 17 "Moral Science and Moral Order"
Volume 18 "Federalism, Liberty, and the Law"
Volume 19 "Ideas, Persons, and Events"
Volume 20 "Indexes"
Goods and Services Tax (GST) was implemented in India in July 2017,
after four decades of protracted deliberations amid critical
socio-economic and political challenges. GST is a comprehensive
multistage value added tax (VAT) on goods and services where both
central and state governments share the same tax base. Finding a
suitable design for GST that encompasses taxes from both the centre
and the state tax brackets makes the Indian GST unique among GST
implemented in other federal countries. This book is a study of the
evolution of GST in India since the Report of the Indirect Taxation
Enquiry Committee of 1977. It studies the following issues on GST:
a) inclusion and exclusion of taxes, b) finding a suitable
mechanism to handle inter-state transactions, c) finding revenue
neutrality of the tax reform, d) providing compensation to states
for any possible loss of revenue due to its adoption, and e)
possible scope for coordination in GST administration.
You are paying much more in tax than you think you are What
Everyone Needs to Know About Tax takes an entertaining and
informative look at the UK tax system in all its glory to show you
just how much you pay, how the money is collected and how it
affects ordinary people every day. Giving context to recent
controversies including the Panama Papers, tax avoidance by
multinationals, Brexit and more, this book provides a
straightforward explanation of tax and the policy behind it for
non-specialists no accounting or legal knowledge is required. The
system's underlying logic is illustrated through three 'golden
rules' that explain many of the UK tax regime's oddities, and the
discussion focuses on the way things are rather than utopian ideas
about how they might be. Case studies show how the VAT on a
plumber's bill all adds up; why fraudsters made a movie to throw
HMRC off their scent; how a wealthy couple can pay so little tax on
a six-figure income; and the way tracing the money you paid for
your iPad sheds light why the EU is demanding Apple pay billions
extra in tax. Ever the political battlefield, tax is too important
for you to rely on media hype for information. It affects everyone,
every day, and it pays for voters and taxpayers to know more. This
book leaves aside technical detail and the arcana of the tax code
to give you a real-world look at how tax works. * Learn about the
many ways that the tax system separates us from our money *
Discover how Brexit could change the way we pay taxes * Understand
how changing tax policy affects people's everyday lives * See
through the rhetoric surrounding controversies in the media With
tax, we have to admit that there are no easy answers. No one enjoys
paying them, but without them, the Government would shut down.
Seeing through politicians' cant and superficial press coverage is
critical for your ability to make the decisions that benefit you;
What Everyone Needs to Know About Tax gives you the background and
foundational knowledge you need to be a well-informed taxpayer.
The 19 articles in this volume include George Zodrow's most
important contributions to the theory and practice of taxation.
They are organized into five general areas: (1) Optimal tax reform,
or an analysis of the best ways to implement tax reforms taking
into account transitional problems; (2) Consumption-based taxes,
including the economic effects of replacing the current income tax
with a progressive consumption tax; (3) Income tax reform in the
United States and in developing countries; (4) State and local tax
policy, including especially the effects of the local property tax;
and (5) Tax competition, using models that are applicable at both
the state/local and international levels.In the words of Peter
Mieszkowski, Professor Emeritus of Rice University and one of the
world's foremost public finance scholars, 'This volume of important
papers is a capstone to George Zodrow's distinguished research
career. What they reveal is a thinker who works repeatedly on the
analysis of practical and concrete applications. The motivating
force behind these articles is the conviction that for government
to tax appropriately, systems of taxation must be profoundly
understood. This volume is a giant step in that direction.'
At the turn of the twentieth century, the US system of public
finance underwent a dramatic transformation. The late
nineteenth-century regime of indirect, hidden, partisan, and
regressive taxes was eclipsed in the early twentieth century by a
direct, transparent, professionally administered, and progressive
tax system. In Making the American Fiscal State, Ajay K. Mehrotra
uncovers the contested roots and paradoxical consequences of this
fundamental shift in American tax law and policy. He argues that
the move toward a regime of direct and graduated taxation marked
the emergence of a new fiscal polity - a new form of statecraft
that was guided not simply by the functional need for greater
revenue but by broader social concerns about economic justice,
civic identity, bureaucratic capacity, and public power. Between
the end of Reconstruction and the onset of the Great Depression,
the intellectual, legal, and administrative foundations of the
modern fiscal state first took shape. This book explains how and
why this new fiscal polity came to be.
The United States faces enormous challenges in the energy area.
Climate change, biofuels policy, energy security, and environmental
degradation are all intimately bound up with energy production and
consumption. Historically, the federal government has relied on tax
subsidies to effect energy policy. With mounting federal deficits,
policymakers and advocates are increasingly calling for a
rethinking of our energy tax policy. How can the federal tax code
strengthen environmental policy and reduce security concerns in the
area of energy? This book brings together leading tax scholars to
answer this question. The authors tackle such difficult problems as
climate change, efficient taxation of oil and gas, and optimal oil
tax policy in a world with OPEC oil producers dominating world oil
supply. This volume presents a number of innovative policy
suggestions backed by sophisticated and cutting-edge research
carried out by leading scholars in the area of energy taxation.
Scholars and policymakers alike will appreciate the incisive
analysis and discussion of critical issues that are part of the
twenty-first-century energy challenge.
Contents Foreword, ix I. Introductory, 1 II. The Nature of
Protection, 8 III. Critique of Popular, and Fallacious, Arguments
for Protection, 17 IV. The Argument for Free Trade, 50 V. Rational
Protection, 63 VI. Anti-dumping Legislation and Special Forms of
Foreign Trade Control, 89 VII. The Future Commercial Policy of the
United States, 107 Appendix I, 134 Appendix II, 150 Originally
published in 1942. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest
print-on-demand technology to again make available previously
out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton
University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of
these important books while presenting them in durable paperback
and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is
to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in
the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press
since its founding in 1905.
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