13 research outputs found
Corporation taxes in the European Union: Slowly moving toward comprehensive business income taxation?
This paper is a substantial revision of a paper presented at the 71st Annual Congress
of the International Institute of Public Finance (Dublin, 20–23 August, 2015), which was issued under the
title Tackling Spillovers by Taxing Corporate Income in the European Union at Source, as CPB Discussion
Paper 324 (February 2016) and as CESifo Working Paper No. 5790 (March 2016).This paper surveys and evaluates the corporation tax systems of the Member
States of the European Union on the basis of a comprehensive taxonomy of actual
and potential regimes, which have as their base either profits; profits, interest and royalties;
or economic rents. The current regimes give rise to various instate and interstate
spillovers, which violate the basic tenets—neutrality and subsidiarity—of the single
market. The trade-offs between the implications of these tenets—harmonization and
diversity, respectively—can be reconciled by a bottom-up strategy of strengthening
source-based taxation and narrowing differences in tax rates. The strategy starts with
dual income taxation, proceeds with final source withholding taxes and rate coordination,
and is made complete by comprehensive business income taxation. Common
base and cash flow taxation are not favored.http://link.springer.com/journal/10797am2017Economic
Foreign Direct Investment in the Enlarged EU: Do Taxes Matter and to What Extent?
Foreign direct investment is of increasing importance in the European Union. This paper estimates the effect of taxes on foreign direct investment (FDI) flows and on three sub-components of these flows for the countries of the enlarged European Union. The model in the spirit of gravity equations robustly explains FDI flows between the 25 member states. Sample selection needs to be addressed in the estimation. We show that the different subcomponents of FDI should and indeed do react differently to taxes. After controlling for unobserved country characteristics and common time effects, the top statutory corporate tax rate of both, source and host country, turn insignificant for total FDI and investment into equity. However, high source country taxes clearly increase the probability of firms to re-invest profits abroad and lower the percentage of debt financed FDI. This might reflect profit re-allocation to avoid taxes. Market size factors have the expected signs. Copyright Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2007Foreign direct investment, FDI, Corporate taxes, Fixed set-up costs, Sample selection model, F3, F2, F4, E6, H2, H8,
Thigh-length compression stockings and DVT after stroke
Controversy exists as to whether neoadjuvant chemotherapy improves survival in patients with invasive bladder cancer, despite randomised controlled trials of more than 3000 patients. We undertook a systematic review and meta-analysis to assess the effect of such treatment on survival in patients with this disease
Economic Impact of Competition Policy: A Look Beyond Consumer Surplus
Competition authorities try to mitigate negative distortionary effects on the markets by tackling abuse of market power or cartels and by controlling mergers. This study attempts to assess the impact of these endeavours by going beyond calculations of lumpsum effects on consumer surplus. We revise the simulation of Van Sinderen and Kemp (Economist 156(4):365-385, 2008) who use a cut in income taxes as a modelling device to simulate the impact of anti cartel policies. Our approach avoids attributing effects caused purely by changes in taxation to market power and uses changes in the Lerner index as the impuls. We have updated the model to enable simulating the impact of competition policies on productivity and R&D in order to get a balanced view on the effects. We find that the re-distribution of surplus from producers to consumers supported by ACM in this new setting is likely to have a positive effect on productivity, GDP, wages and consumption, and a small positive effect on employment. This differs from the outcome of Van Sinderen and Kemp, who did not find a positive impact on productivity, due to an overestimation of the employment growth