| Author (Person) | Spengel, Christoph, Zinn, Benedikt |
|---|---|
| Series Title | Intertax |
| Series Details | Vol.39, No.10, October 2011, p494-520 |
| Publication Date | August 2011 |
| ISSN | 0165-2826 |
| Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
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Without any doubt, one of the primary policy issues in public finance in the European Union (EU) is the issue of tax competition, which results in a race to the bottom in statutory tax rates, tax base broadening policies, and potential distortions in firm decisions. The literature focuses mainly on profit taxes; however, as the financial crisis is biting into the real economy, non-profit taxes have become a more important factor in the overall tax burden on companies. In this context, one important question is whether non-profit taxation and tax base broadening policies have accelerated the course of economic downturn. This article analyses the impact of non-profit taxes on the overall tax burdens of companies. It offers not only a broad geographical scope but also great detail in calculations of tax burdens on income-independent taxes. In particular, it reveals that tax regimes characterized by restrictive thin capitalization rules, tightened loss offset rules, or a high proportion of non-profit taxes in the overall tax mix are more severely hit by economic downturns. The various tax measures taken by many EU-27 Member States in response to the crisis are, therefore, looked upon favourably. |
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| Source Link | Link to Main Source http://www.kluwerlawonline.com/index.php?area=Journals |
| Subject Categories | Taxation |
| Countries / Regions | Europe, Germany |