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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

The battle between multinaional sic] tax avoidance and corporate competitiveness

Koop, Nico 01 May 2011 (has links)
In the past decade, there has been a significant decrease in US corporate tax revenues. Multinational companies have been employing several different techniques of tax avoidance to get around paying corporate taxes. Tax avoidance is used by any large multinational corporation for a variety of reasons. The US has one of the highest corporate tax rates in the world and is seeing many companies relocate their operations abroad to lower their tax expenses. The different methods of tax avoidance are discussed in this thesis, as well as the different reasons behind their use. To understand how companies implement tax avoidance techniques, it is necessary to understand US corporate taxes. I have researched the few key items of US corporate taxes, which are vital to understanding the implementation of tax avoidance techniques. Through different examples you will see how tax avoidance occurs and how it benefits multinational companies.
12

Daňové ráje a způsoby jejich využití v mezinárodním daňovém plánování / Tax havens and their uses in international tax planning

Martínek, Ondřej January 2012 (has links)
Diplomová práce Ondřej Martínek Abstract Tax havens are thorn in the eye of the OECD countries, nonetheless they emerged originally on europian soil and on the ruins of british empire. Classical accusation argues, the tax havens are supposed to earn on luring foreign capital that is enabled to evade taxation and by that they breach the balance of national budgets and tax justice in developed countries, enwiden social imbalance and speed up global tax competition. There are many forms of tax avoidance via tax havens: transfer pricing, holding structures, trusts, foundations or offshore business. Although many of these forms remain illegal, for certain other ones the states are the ones responsible for - e.g. generous web of double tax treaties. Global shortage to national budgets is estimated at around 3% of total revenues. Tax competition exists and global tax rates are in fact decreasing, however national tax revenues are, in absolute terms, rising. Because of this ambiguous effect on global economy and near impossibility to distinguish "real" tax havens, the developed countries are choosing rather careful policy to the tax havens and concentrate on negotiations and concluding TIEA's.
13

Do foreign tax evaders use the United States as a tax haven?

Tuinsma, Tijmen January 2019 (has links)
Tax havens are of signicant importance in the current global economy. The wealth hidden in these havens is estimated to add up to $6000 billion and this issue is linked with wealth inequality and money laundering. Identication of tax havens differs between sources, and blacklists are often politicised. Activists, experts and academics have claimed recently that the US serves as a tax haven for foreign tax-evading households. The tax environment in the US does favor foreigners; they are for example exempt from paying taxes on interest income generated by bank deposits and it is easy to set up entities hiding the identity of the ultimate owner. The effects of two international initiatives implemented to battle tax evasion in offshore centres are studied in this paper. These are the European Savings Directive and the Common Reporting Standard, under which the US does not cooperate. Using bilateral cross-border bank deposit data, it is estimated whether tax evaders moved their wealth to the US as a result of these measures. The results of the difference-in-difference approach neither confirm nor reject the claims that the US is being used as a tax haven by foreign households. Estimates on the effects in cooperating tax havens can not rule out the possibility that the Common Reporting Standard did not have its intended effect on tax evaders.
14

O fim do paraíso fiscal Sul-Americano: o processo decisório uruguaio / The end of the tax haven South American: The uruguayan decisin-making process

Barbosa, Márcio Roberto da Costa 05 June 2014 (has links)
Submitted by Luanna Matias (lua_matias@yahoo.com.br) on 2015-02-03T20:52:54Z No. of bitstreams: 2 Dissetação - Márcio Roberto da Costa Barbosa - 2014.pdf: 900808 bytes, checksum: f26a3a2e63584d0fe4cd10d0dd6747ea (MD5) license_rdf: 23148 bytes, checksum: 9da0b6dfac957114c6a7714714b86306 (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Luciana Ferreira (lucgeral@gmail.com) on 2015-02-04T14:02:05Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 2 Dissetação - Márcio Roberto da Costa Barbosa - 2014.pdf: 900808 bytes, checksum: f26a3a2e63584d0fe4cd10d0dd6747ea (MD5) license_rdf: 23148 bytes, checksum: 9da0b6dfac957114c6a7714714b86306 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2015-02-04T14:02:05Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 Dissetação - Márcio Roberto da Costa Barbosa - 2014.pdf: 900808 bytes, checksum: f26a3a2e63584d0fe4cd10d0dd6747ea (MD5) license_rdf: 23148 bytes, checksum: 9da0b6dfac957114c6a7714714b86306 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2014-06-05 / Uruguay, previously known as the “South American Switzerland”, adopted the tax haven model. Nevertheless, with the Tax Reform (Law No. 18.083) passed in 2007, the country abandoned this model. The question that this paper aims to answer is the reason for the political decision taken by the country to stop being a tax haven. The hypothesis raised for this investigation was subdivided in two planes. Externally, the scenario was one of version to tax havens and the pressure exerted over them. Internally, the motive would be the difficulty of establishing compatibility between a leftist government and a tax haven model. It was exactly when a political party with this ideology came into power that the reform was accomplished. This case study used documents as supporting data. The theory that erved as basis for this analysis is found on the work An Economic Theory of Democracy, by Anthony Downs and such theory was in part confirmed empirically. Regarding the ypothesis, and taking into consideration the international standpoint, an adverse nternational scenario served as confirmation of the country‟s decision. The same cannot be said about the internal scenario, in which the issue of ideology was not shown to be a determining factor for the decision which is the object of this study. / O Uruguai, antes conhecido como a “Suíça sul-americana”, adotava o modelo de paraíso fiscal. Não obstante, com a Reforma Tributária (Lei nº 18.083) aprovada em 2007, este modelo foi abandonado. A pergunta que este trabalho visa responder é sobre a motivação da decisão política uruguaia de deixar de ser um paraíso fiscal. A hipótese levantada se subdividiu em dois planos que teriam contribuído para a mudança institucional. Externamente, havia um cenário de grande aversão aos paraísos fiscais e pressão sobre os mesmos. Internamente, a motivação seria a difícil compatibilização entre um governo de esquerda e o modelo de paraíso fiscal. Foi justamente quando um partido com esta ideologia chegou ao poder que a reforma foi levada a cabo. O método utilizado é o estudo de caso e a fonte de dados empregada é a documental. Teoricamente, a presente pesquisa se ampara na obra Uma Teoria Econômica da Democracia, de Anthony Downs. A teoria utilizada parcialmente se confirmou empiricamente. Em relação à hipótese, no que se refere ao prisma internacional, houve a confirmação, com a influência de um cenário externo adverso. O mesmo não se pode dizer do prisma interno, no qual a questão da ideologia não se mostrou determinante para a decisão analisada.
15

L'attractivité des pays à fiscalité privilégiée pour les acteurs économiques internationaux / The attractiveness of tax-havens for international economics actors

Engel, Marie-Katrin 15 December 2014 (has links)
Si la notion de pays à fiscalité privilégiée est souvent employée, il reste malaisé de définir ce qu'elle désigne. Au sens le plus général, il s'agit des pays dans lesquels des résidents étrangers placent leur argent, afin d'éviter d'être imposés sur leur territoire d'origine. L'histoire des pays à fiscalité privilégiée n'est ni linéaire ni continue. Elle est faite de ruptures et de mutations. Ces territoires off-shore jouent ainsi des rôles économiques et politiques différents selon les époques. Leur évolution a été telle qu'ils sont devenus les piliers de la mondialisation économique contemporaine construite depuis près d'un siècle autour de pays, d'acteurs et de stratégies différentes.Ainsi, les acteurs économiques internationaux profitent, à bien des égards, de l'attractivité de ces territoires. Les outils mis à leur disposition sont nombreux et les montages d'optimisation fiscale complexes. Au cours des derniers siècles, les États ont tenté de maîtriser puis de diminuer le rôle des territoires off-shore, sans une grande conviction, ni une persévérance notable. La crise des subprimes a cependant donné lieu à l'émergence d'une lutte accrue contre les pays à fiscalité privilégiée, notamment, par le G20. L'objectif est de mettre fin à toutes formes de secret à des fins fiscales. Une évolution, est, incontestablement en cours, mais ses résultats sont loin d'être garantis. A ce jour, les pays à fiscalité privilégiée et les outils qui y sont associés demeurent très attractifs pour les acteurs économiques internationaux. / While the concept of tax haven is a term used extensively, it remains difficult to define. It general terms, it refers to countries where foreign companies and individual alike invest their money in order to avoid tax in their home country. The history of tax haven is neither linear nor continuous. It is made of ruptures and mutations. These offshore jurisdictions are playing different economics and politics roles. Their evolution has been such that they have become the pillars of the economic globalization built since a century around different countries, actors and strategies. International economic actors benefit in many ways from the attractiveness of tax havens. International companies, individuals and banks use offshore tax haven to reduce their tax burden, avoid regulatory pressures, or hide a high level of debts in order to provide supposedly healthy financial statements. Many and complex tools are available to them in order to lower their burden. Evolution is undoubtedly underway but the results are far from guaranteed. Until now, tax havens remain attractive for international economic actors.
16

Tax Havens and Its Impact on Economic Growth / Tax Havens and Its Impact on Economic Growth

McClellan, Collin January 2011 (has links)
This thesis focuses on the effects tax havens have on both developed and developing countries. The work is presented in four chapters. The first chapter builds a framework of the subject by focusing on tax havens and the issues they create. A brief history of tax havens is discussed and essential statistics are presented. The second chapter discusses the effects tax havens have on developing countries. The link between transfer pricing and tax havens is also analyzed. The third chapter identifies the effects tax havens have on developed countries and its role in the financial crisis. The last chapter explores the current fight against tax havens and their likely impact in the future.
17

Optimalizace daňové povinnosti / Optimalization of the tax liability

Kmoníčková, Martina January 2011 (has links)
This work analyses tax-favored areas which are used in international tax planning. The first part of this work contains information about corporate tax in the Czech Republic and characterizes tax havens in general. The second part presents tree states -- The Bahamas, Cyprus and Great Britain and describes an establishment of model society in these countries. The cost of setting up a company and taxation are compared with a fictive limited company which is based in the Czech Republic. In the conclusion, there are some additional information - for instance arrangements against tax havens, tax havens of the world and czech firms in tax havens.
18

Globalization and Tax haven countries : A study on the relationship between globalization and the use of tax havens

Pitkänen, Hannes, Ronnerstam, Linus January 2021 (has links)
Tax havens have long been a subject of concern and were nutritiously used mostly by the rich elite and gangsters. In the wake of the financial crisis in 2008 more light was shed on tax havens and it has become an unanticipated central part of the global economy. This study investigates if globalization has a significant effect on the use of tax havens. The question is analyzed through the lens of fiscal policies and the political economy as well as some further interesting dichotomies and dilemmas. The debate of globalizations and its various effects in the world is still ongoing. While the world economy becomes more mobilized the lack of transparency in countries with higher secrecy becomes more apparent. We measure tax haven activity with foreign direct investment and look at both trade-and financial globalization as well as include a set of key control variables. Using a panel data analysis, we find that globalization has a significant positive effect on tax haven activity. However, in our results we also observe a continuing downward trend in FDI since 2015 which could be indicative of a potential upcoming paradigm shift. Findings in this paper facilitate the understanding of both benefits and concerns with tax havens, it shows how tax havens have been affected by globalization but also an estimation for the uncertain future of tax havens.
19

OUTLAW HEAVEN: WHY STATES BECOME TAX HAVENS

Dainoff, Charles A. 01 January 2018 (has links)
It is the argument of this dissertation that states become tax havens as a conscious economic development strategy. These states – more properly referred to as "jurisdictions" because some lack the sovereignty of the traditional Westphalian state – do not have the natural resources or the population to pursue more traditional economic development strategies, but they do have the ability to write or implement laws that create a virtual resource: banking secrecy. These jurisdictions are able to carry out this strategy because they tend to be well-governed, stable, and relatively wealthy, making them attractive partners for the international banking, legal, and accounting firms that drive offshore finance, and then for their customers – both individual and corporate – as well. The qualities tax havens possess also enable them to calculate that the benefits they reap from pursuing this strategy outweigh any penalties assessed by anti-tax haven international collective action activities, such as the naming and shaming campaigns of 2000.
20

Does Exchange of Information between Tax Authorities Influence Multinationals' Use of Tax Havens?

Braun, Julia, Weichenrieder, Alfons 23 February 2015 (has links) (PDF)
Since the mid-1990s, countries offering tax systems that facilitate international tax avoidance and evasion have been facing growing political pressure to comply with the internationally agreed standards of exchange of tax information. Using data of German investments in tax havens, we find evidence that the conclusion of a bilateral tax information exchange agreement (TIEA) is associated with fewer operations in tax havens and the number of German affiliates has on average decreased by 46% compared to a control group. This suggests that firms invest in tax havens not only for their low tax rates but also for the secrecy they offer. (authors' abstract) / Series: WU International Taxation Research Paper Series

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