Here are some recent papers of interest:
On the power and role of the state:
On the power and role of the state:
- Bernard Schneider, The End of Taxation without End: A New Tax Regime for U.S. Expatriates, arguing that the US should settle for residence based taxation like everyone else in the world. Has a nice section on the history of the practice.
- Claudia Williamson, Contracting Institutions, asking what constrains the state from plundering its people, if the state has monopoly power, and concluding that cultural norms do.
- Martha Fineman, Beyond Identities: The Limits of an Antidiscrimination Approach to Equality, comparing legal cultures of equality and concluding that in the US, human need is seen as a matter of individual responsibility alone while other constitutional democracies also see it as a state responsibility.
- Fabian Barthel & Eric Neumayer, Competing for Scarce Foreign Capital: Spatial Dependence in the Diffusion of Double Taxation Treaties, when bilateral FDI positions are asymmetric (as between rich and poor countries), capital importers (poorer countries, usually) lose by entering into a tax treaty; they sign anyway because of competition. Studies DTTs between 1969–2005.
- Stephanie Rickard, A Non-Tariff Protectionist Bias in Majoritarian Politics: Government Subsidies and Electoral Institutions. Examines how different governments use trade protection via tariffs and subsidies, and finds that majoritarian systems are biased toward both.
- Tom Ginsburg, Pitfalls of Measuring the Rule of Law, pointing out methodological challenges for rule-of-law scholarship, calling for caution in policymaking (same argument as I made about using "case studies" to advance international tax principles, you can find that here)
No comments:
Post a Comment