1,387 research outputs found
Heitler-London model for acceptor-acceptor interactions in doped semiconductors
The interactions between acceptors in semiconductors are often treated in
qualitatively the same manner as those between donors. Acceptor wave functions
are taken to be approximately hydrogenic and the standard hydrogen molecule
Heitler-London model is used to describe acceptor-acceptor interactions. But
due to valence band degeneracy and spin-orbit coupling, acceptor states can be
far more complex than those of hydrogen atoms, which brings into question the
validity of this approximation. To address this issue, we develop an
acceptor-acceptor Heitler-London model using single-acceptor wave functions of
the form proposed by Baldereschi and Lipari, which more accurately capture the
physics of the acceptor states. We calculate the resulting acceptor-pair energy
levels and find, in contrast to the two-level singlet-triplet splitting of the
hydrogen molecule, a rich ten-level energy spectrum. Our results, computed as a
function of inter-acceptor distance and spin-orbit coupling strength, suggest
that acceptor-acceptor interactions can be qualitatively different from
donor-donor interactions, and should therefore be relevant to the control of
two-qubit interactions in acceptor-based qubit implementations, as well as the
magnetic properties of a variety of p-doped semiconductor systems. Further
insight is drawn by fitting numerical results to closed-form energy-level
expressions obtained via an acceptor-acceptor Hubbard model.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures, text revised, figure quality improved,
additional references adde
Limitations on Interest Deductions: A Suggested Perspective for Developing Countries
interest deductions; related-party loans; OECD; base erosion and profit shifting; BEPS; transfer pricing.This paper evaluates the efforts of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), in its project on base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS), to control profit shifting by members of multinational groups through payments of interest on related-party loans. Currently, members of groups appear be shifting large amounts of income from countries around the world to affiliates in zero- or low-tax countries, through the relatively simple expedient of creating loans between identically-owned group members. The resulting revenue losses are especially serious for developing countries, which depend more heavily than other countries on revenue from corporate income taxation; in addition, it appears that groups investing in developing countries sometimes employ tax planning through related-party loans very aggressively.
The paper evaluates the OECD’s proposal for a ‘group-wide’ limitation on interest deductions, under which only loans obtained by group members from unrelated parties would generate deductible interest payments, and the resulting deductions would be apportioned among group members based on measures of their relative levels of economic activity. The paper agrees with the OECD’s conclusion that the group-wide approach should be more difficult to avoid than existing kinds of interest-limitation regimes, including ‘thin capitalisation’ regimes based on debt-to-equity ratios, and limitations on deductions based on percentages of companies’ earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA).
The paper nevertheless concludes that the suggested approach remains vulnerable to very difficult and perhaps intractable problems of identifying ‘interest’ in today’s highly complex international environment. Therefore it will be very difficult at best for revenue agencies to administer successfully, even if the OECD’s approach proves politically feasible. The paper recommends instead that countries devise means of incorporating the control of interest deductions into their generally applicable transfer pricing rules. Under this approach, excessive deductions of all kinds could simultaneously be limited to reasonable amounts. The paper suggests a format for a transfer pricing method that might fulfill this need, a Shared Net Margin Method (SNMM).
The paper concludes that if a more comprehensive approach to transfer pricing rules proves politically infeasible, the OECD’s approach to interest deductions would represent a substantial improvement over current forms of interest limitations, and countries should adopt the OECD approach. For the longer term, however, effective control of interest deductions will probably require a thorough revision of transfer pricing rules, perhaps along the lines of SNMM.DfID, NORAD
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