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International taxation is a vital issue for a growing number of
business and individuals across the world. The need to understand
how the international system of taxation works is therefore a
subject of importance to many people. The International Taxation
System provides this understanding by bringing together experts
from the most important fields in the subject who have each
authored chapters especially for this book. They each provide
brief, structured and easy to understand explanations of the key
concepts edited together into one volume to provide a unique, very
readable, guide to the field.
While this text is aimed at masters or advanced undergraduate level
students, it will also be of interest to those requiring a
professional understanding of the topic. Each chapter introduces a
different aspect of the international taxation system, explains the
important issues to be understood in each case and provides
suggestions for discussion and further reading.
Advances in Taxation Vol. 23 contains a collection of high-quality
manuscripts addressing problems arising from federal, state local
and international taxation. Using a wide variety of research
methods, the papers address issues concerning challenges in tax
administration, taxpayer decisions, ethical issues in taxation, and
college savings plans.
Advances in Taxation publishes relevant, high-quality manuscripts
from around the world addressing problems arising from federal,
state, local and international taxation. The series uses a wide
variety of research methods, including archival, experimental,
survey, qualitative and legal approaches to address the problems
and issues associated with taxation. Volume 22 of Advances in
Taxation continues this approach to taxation, looking at issues
concerning challenges in tax administration, taxpayer decisions,
ethical issues in taxation, and college savings plans.
In this 30th volume of Advances in Taxation, editor John Hasseldine
includes studies from expert contributors to explore topics such
as: the stock market reaction to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act;
strategic repatriations made by firms; and corporate social
responsibility and tax planning. Three studies separately examine
individual responses to taxation including the renunciation of U.S.
citizenship due to the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, the
imposition of a tax on sugar-sweetened beverages, and the effects
of social media on tax compliance in a developing country.
Reporting peer-reviewed research contributions from the U.S.,
Canada, and Malaysia Advances in Taxation Volume 30 is essential
reading for those looking to keep abreast of the most recent
research, including empirical studies using a variety of research
methods from different institutional settings and contexts
In volume 29 of Advances in Taxation, editor John Hasseldine
includes studies from expert contributors exploring topics such as:
implicit taxes in imperfect markets; repatriation of indefinitely
reinvested earnings; tax compliance in multiple countries; innocent
spouse tax relief decisions; and the pedagogical benefits of
position paper assignments in tax education. Reporting
peer-reviewed research contributions from North America, Africa,
and Asia, Advances in Taxation is essential reading for those
looking to keep abreast of the most recent research, including
empirical studies using a variety of research methods from
different institutional settings and contexts.
In the latest volume of Advances in Taxation, series editor John
Hasseldine compiles cutting-edge, peer-reviewed studies from expert
contributors to explore topics such as: the effects of level of
government on trust in revenue agencies; whether understanding tax
laws reduces charitable giving; the link between distributive
justice and tax fairness judgements; the role of states' R&D
tax credits effectiveness in business location; and consumption tax
collection on cross-border online sales. Two further contributions
separately study the role of designated permanently reinvested
earnings (PRE) in the financial statements of multinational
corporations. This volume is an exploration of the latest issues in
tax and taxation theory, including empirical studies using a
variety of research methods from different institutional settings
and contexts. It is essential reading for anyone interested in tax
policy and its impact in practice.
In the latest volume of Advances in Taxation, series editor John
Hasseldine presents studies from expert contributors exploring
topics such as: corporate tax planning, tax-related accounting
misstatements and uncertain tax positions, financial statement
readability, the tax effects of a major pension scheme change, and
non-professional investor and taxpayer judgments and perceptions.
Reporting peer-reviewed research contributions from North America
and the U.K., this volume is essential reading for those looking to
keep abreast of the most recent research, including empirical
studies using a variety of research methods from different
institutional settings and contexts.
Volume 25 features eight articles. In the lead article, Savannah
Guo, Sabrina Chi, and Kirsten Cook examine short selling as one
external determinant of corporate tax avoidance and find that short
interest is negatively associated with subsequent tax-avoidance
levels and this effect is incremental to other factors identified
by prior research. Next, Mark Bauman and Cathalene Rogers Bowler
examine the effect of FIN48 on earnings management activity, by
focusing on changes in the deferred tax asset valuation allowance.
In the third article, Anthony Billings, Cheol Lee, and Jaegul Lee
study whether the lowering of dividend taxes as part of the U.S.
Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 resulted in
an increase in dividend payouts at the expense of R&D spending.
The fourth article by Brian Dowis and Ted Englebrecht examines
reasonable compensation in closely-held corporations and the impact
of gender, political affiliation, and family makeup on decisions
made in the U.S. Tax Court. Then, a practice-related study by Sonja
Pippin, Jeffrey Wong, and Richard Mason reports on a survey of
Americans living abroad on the impact of tax rules explicitly
designed for these individuals. They find that Americans living
abroad experience the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act as
negatively impacting their lives. The next three articles in this
volume have an international focus. Zakir Akhand investigates the
effects of the corporate sector on the effectiveness of selected
tax compliance instruments in the context of large Bangladesh
corporate taxpayers. K-Rine Chong and Murugesh Arunachalam examine
the determinants of enforced tax compliance behaviour of Malaysian
citizens with trust in the tax agency assumed to be a mediating
variable. Lastly, Bitzenis and Vasileios investigate the effect of
the economic downturn in Greece on the factors determining the
level of tax morale through primary data from a European Union
funded research project on the Greek shadow economy.
Volume 24 of Advances in Taxation contains seven articles, covering
topics such as the impact of FASB Financial Interpretation No. 48
adoption through the lens of debt covenants; conflicting results in
two prior studies on the relation between aggressive financial
reporting and tax reporting; how a firm's external environment
affects its tax avoidance activities; and bonus depreciation. Other
articles use a behavioral research methodology to explore
generational values and attitudes towards tax fairness and tax
compliance; the expectation gap between tax clients' motivations to
hire tax preparers versus tax preparers' perceptions of those
clients' motivations; and evidence on the level and determinants of
corporate income tax compliance costs.
International taxation is a vital issue for a growing number of
business and individuals across the world. The need to understand
how the international system of taxation works is therefore a
subject of importance to many people. The International Taxation
System provides this understanding by bringing together experts
from the most important fields in the subject who have each
authored chapters especially for this book. They each provide
brief, structured and easy to understand explanations of the key
concepts edited together into one volume to provide a unique, very
readable, guide to the field. While this text is aimed at masters
or advanced undergraduate level students, it will also be of
interest to those requiring a professional understanding of the
topic. Each chapter introduces a different aspect of the
international taxation system, explains the important issues to be
understood in each case and provides suggestions for discussion and
further reading.
In the latest volume of Advances in Taxation, editor John
Hasseldine includes studies from expert contributors to explore
topics such as earnings repatriation elections, corporates'
uncertain tax positions reported on Schedule UTP, tax audits,
voluntary and enforced tax compliance, and tax evasion. Reporting
peer-reviewed research contributions from North America and also
including international studies from Indonesia, Bangladesh and
South Africa, this volume is essential reading for those looking to
keep abreast of the most recent research. The empirical research
published by the authors of this volume include archival, survey,
and experimental methods that have been applied to challenges
facing tax systems around the globe. These challenges affect tax
administrators, large corporates, and small and medium-sized
enterprises. The studies contained in this volume will be
influential and help direct future research around the globe.
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