Produktbild: Catching Capital

Catching Capital The Ethics of Tax Competition

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

01.08.2015

Abbildungen

2 illustrations

Verlag

KNV Besorgung

Seitenzahl

280

Maße (L/B/H)

22,2/14,5/2 cm

Gewicht

417 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-025151-2

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

01.08.2015

Abbildungen

2 illustrations

Verlag

KNV Besorgung

Seitenzahl

280

Maße (L/B/H)

22,2/14,5/2 cm

Gewicht

417 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-025151-2

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Catching Capital
    • Acknowledgements

    • Introduction

    • 1. The political philosophy of international taxation

    • 2. A primer on taxation

    • 3. What is at stake

    • 4. Tax competition and the financial crisis

    • 5. A short outline of the book

    • PART I

    • Chapter 1: Fiscal autonomy and tax competition

    • 1. Framing the question as one of autonomy

    • 2. Understanding tax competition...*

    • 3. ... and its corrosive impact*

    • 4. State incentives under tax competition

    • 5. Conclusion

    • Chapter 2: Regulating tax competition

    • 1. Existing reform proposals and where they fall short

    • 1.1. Capital controls

    • 1.2. Unilateral measures to protect one's tax base

    • 1.3. Redefining the corporate tax base

    • 2. Two principles of global tax justice

    • 2.1. The first principle: membership*

    • 2.2. Transparency as a corollary of membership

    • 2.3. The second principle: A constraint on the design of fiscal policy*

    • 3. Implementation*

    • 3.1. Institutionalizing the membership principle*

    • 3.2. Institutionalizing the fiscal policy constraint*

    • 3.3. Enforcement*

    • 3.4. Comparison to the OECD and EU tax agendas and the question of feasibility*

    • 4. Principles for global background justice*

    • 5. Conclusion

    • PART II

    • Chapter 3: Efficiency of what? - Assessing efficiency arguments in the context of tax competition

    • 1. The deadweight loss and its interpretation

    • 2. Two concepts of efficiency

    • 3. Efficiency as a placeholder

    • 3.1. Efficiency as productive Pareto optimality

    • 3.2. Efficiency as general Pareto optimality

    • 3.3. Making sense of the models

    • 3.4. Efficiency as economic growth

    • 3.5. Taking stock

    • 4. Efficiency as an optimal trade-off

    • 5. Conclusion

    • Chapter 4: Rethinking sovereignty in international fiscal policy

    • 1. The many facets of sovereignty

    • 2. Sovereignty with strings attached

    • 3. Back to fiscal policy

    • 4. The twofold conditional nature of sovereignty

    • 5. What about non-democratic regimes?

    • 6. Conclusion

    • Chapter 5: Life with (or after) tax competition

    • 1. Should the winners of tax competition compensate the losers?

    • 1.1. What's the point of compensatory duties?

    • 1.2. Calculating compensatory duties

    • 2. Should low-income countries be allowed to compete on taxes?

    • 3. Unwinding the system of tax havens

    • 3.1. Additional duties towards low-income countries?

    • 3.2. Corporate lobbies - the elephant in the room

    • 4. Conclusion

    • Conclusion

    • Bibliography

    • Index

    • * These sections are largely based on Peter Dietsch and Thomas Rixen, "Tax Competition and Global Background Justice", The Journal of Political Philosophy 22/2 (2014), 150-77. I thank my co-author Thomas Rixen for his permission to use this material here.