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Issues in International Taxation

Issues in International Taxation. UAB 2011 Lecture 1 Gareth Myles University of Exeter and Institute for Fiscal Studies. Introduction. EU policy objectives Single market with efficient trade Free movement of capital and labour Social support (“flexicurity”) Tensions Subsidiarity

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Issues in International Taxation

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  1. Issues in International Taxation UAB 2011 Lecture 1 Gareth Myles University of Exeter and Institute for Fiscal Studies

  2. Introduction • EU policy objectives • Single market with efficient trade • Free movement of capital and labour • Social support (“flexicurity”) • Tensions • Subsidiarity • Competency • Taxation • Provides revenue • Affects efficiency • Symbolizes sovereignty

  3. Introduction • These lectures will review economic analysis of these policy issues • The topics to be covered are: • Tax competition • International taxation • Fiscal federalism • This lecture begins with a review of recent developments in EU policy

  4. Introduction • The basis of indirect taxation in the EU is a VAT system • The key features of VAT: • Producers can claim back VAT charged on inputs • In principle only final consumption is taxed • The theoretical justification for this is described in lecture 2 • This clarity is undermined by exemptions and the treatment of small business

  5. Introduction • In the 1980s the rate of VAT varied quite widely across EU member states • Harmonization has been an EU policy objective since the Neumark Report of 1963 • A harmonization process began in 1992 • This was intended to encourage efficient operation of the single market • It represented an enhancement of competence and a reduction in subsidiarity

  6. Tax Harmonization • Single market requires harmonization • Cross-border shopping • Protectionist use of taxes • Effect on mobile factors • 1987 proposal • Two-rate VAT • A Standard rate (14-20%) and a Reduced rate (4-9%) • In 1993 a minimum rate was introduced • Minimum of 15%, one or two rates of at least 5% • Zero-rating allowed to continue • “Approximation” remains long-term goal

  7. Tax Harmonization Source: Molle (2001) Table 1: VAT rates in Member States

  8. Harmonization • Harmonization of excise duties also proposed • Rejected by Member States • System of minimum rates introduced in 1993 Source: Molle (2001) Table 2: Excise Taxes in Euros, 2000

  9. Harmonization • European Commission, 2000 • Member States have shown little enthusiasm for the proposals in Council meetings and […] have been reluctant to accept the greater harmonisation of VAT rates and tax structures. • 2003 Draft Report of the Committee on Monetary and Economic Affairs • The European Parliament is strongly committed to the introduction of the definitive system of VAT, but given the lack of progress in that regard, there is no urgent need to harmonise rates.

  10. Tax Principle Prior to 1993 the EU operated a destination tax system Goods are taxed in country of consumption The destination system requires border tax adjustments The single market was completed in 1993 This removed borders between member states Conflicts with operation of destination system

  11. Tax Principle • Tax differentials lead to cross-border shopping • This can enhance efficiency in an ideal economy • But is costly in practice: • Direct waste of resources • Environmental costs • Distortion of regional trade patterns • Undermines freedom of governments • Since January 1993 a transitional system in place • Definitive system intended for 1997 but still not constructed

  12. Tax Principle • There are two alternative tax principles • Destination principle • Tax in the country of final consumption (destination country) • A tax on consumption • Origin principle • Tax in the country of production (origin country) • A tax on production • The EU has long favoured a move to a form of origin principle

  13. Tax Principle • The Tinbergen Report of 1953 analyzed the tax implications of the single market • It concluded that an origin system be implemented • The move to the origin principle has remained an EU goal ever since The Community’s long term objective is moving to a definitive VAT system, based on the principle of taxation in the country of origin (2003 Draft Report of the Committee on Monetary and Economic Affairs)

  14. Implementation of VAT • HMRC estimate of VAT tax was £15.2bn in 2008–09 • Missing Trader Intra-Community (MTIC) fraud is a major explanation • Zero rating of goods at export implies large scale reclaims of VAT by exporting companies • If reclaim is accompanied by failure to pay VAT further down the chain the revenue service can pay more in refunds than is collected

  15. Implementation of VAT • European Commission in 2004 reported that losses from fraud were 10 per cent of net VAT receipts in some member states • A carousel fraud is operated as follows: • Importers purchase products that are zero-rated • Sell them on with VAT added to another trader • The purchasing trader reclaims the input VAT • The seller does not pay the VAT due and disappears

  16. Implementation of VAT Figure 7.1: A simple illustration of carousel fraud

  17. Implementation of VAT • This is due to zero rating of exports • Without this the importing company would have been charged VAT by the original exporter • The final exporter would not be entitled to any refund of VAT • The opportunity for this type of fraud would not exist

  18. Mobility • At the centre of EU single market policy is unhindered mobility of capital and labour • Mobility between jurisdictions creates tensions with tax policy • Subsidiarity is constrained • Tax differentials undermined by cross-border shopping • Adoption of additional EU competence is the natural solution • Resisted by some member states

  19. Mobility • Jurisdictions compete for mobile capital • Positive tax externalities imply equilibrium tax rates too low • Revenues are reduced • Social policy is threatened • “Race-to-the-bottom” • Mobile population can seek benefits • Recipients arrive • Contributors leave • Underminesredistribution

  20. Corporate Taxation • The rate of corporation tax has important effects: • Determines return on corporate assets • Internal accounting exploits differentials • Plant location is affected • Statutory tax rates have fallen • This has been explained by tax competition • The EU has implemented policy to control tax competition

  21. Corporate Taxation Source: Devereux et al. (2002) Table.3: Statutory Corporate Income Tax

  22. Corporate Taxation • Current EU policy is based on the Code of Conduct for Business Taxation • Refrain from introducing any new tax measures that may be harmful • Amend any laws or practices that are harmful • Harmful tax laws include: • A tax rate lower than the country’s general level • Tax benefits reserved for non-residents • Tax incentives for activities isolated from the domestic economy • Departure from international accounting rules

  23. Observations • There are many issues in EU tax policy • This is a reflection of the EU as an evolving entity • And one which has a unique structure • Some policy reforms have begun but have not been completed • We remain far from having a finished fiscal structure

  24. Tax Competition Competition ensures efficiency of economic activity Does the same argument extend to competition between governments? Mobility ensures good tax/benefit packages attract population Unattractive jurisdictions will lose population The nature of competition is key to the efficiency of equilibrium

  25. Tax Competition Tax competition is the interaction among governments due to mobility of the tax base A tax on a mobile factor will cause relocation Capital will locate where the net return is highest Labor will seek employment where net wage is highest Loss of tax base by one jurisdiction is a gain for another Mobility causes a tax externality between jurisdictions

  26. Tax Competition Assume that jurisdictions tax capital Assume capital is perfectly mobile but residents are immobile With competitive behavior jurisdictions are “small” and take net return to capital as fixed With strategic behavior jurisdictions are “large” and take account of how tax policy affects the net return to capital In both cases inefficiency occurs in equilibrium

  27. Competitive Behavior A small jurisdiction takes the net return to capital as fixed Let f’(ki) be the marginal product of capital in jurisdiction i where ki is the capital-labor ratio Let ti denote tax rate in i and r the net return to capital outside the jurisdiction Costless mobility of capital equalizes the net return across jurisdictions so arbitrage implies

  28. Competitive Behavior Since f’’(ki)< 0 an increase in ti reduces ki The total income of labor in i is given by output less the reward to capital plus tax revenue Using the arbitrage condition Income is maximized when so ti= 0 No tax should be levied on capital The jurisdiction cannot capture any of the return to capital

  29. Strategic Behavior Now assume there are just two countries so each region is large There is a fixed stock of capital that allocates between the countries Costless mobility equates after-tax returns in the two countries This arbitrage condition determines an allocation of capital that depends on the tax rates

  30. Strategic Behavior Fig. 18.1 represents the allocation of capital between countries Assume that country 1 sets a higher tax rate The tax differential is reflected in the difference in marginal products Country 1 has less capital in equilibrium An increase in tax rate causes capital to move to the other country Figure 18.1: Allocation of capital

  31. Strategic Behavior Each country maximizes the income of workers Since ki depends on t1 and t2 there is strategic fiscal interaction Each country chooses the tax rate to maximize income taking the tax rate of the other country as given The best-response functions of the two countries are and

  32. Strategic Behavior Fig. 18.2 displays the best-response functions The equilibrium occurs where The two countries are identical so the Nash equilibrium is symmetric The equilibrium values of the taxes are Each country has ½ of the capital stock Figure 18.2: Symmetric Nash equilibrium

  33. Strategic Behavior The taxes at the Nash equilibrium are inefficient Capital is a fixed factor from the world perspective If the two countries coordinated they could capture the entire return to capital in taxation The Nash equilibrium taxes do not achieve this The positive fiscal externality results in taxes which are inefficiently low The countries undercut each other to attract mobile capital – the “race to the bottom” Competition between large jurisdictions does not achieve efficiency

  34. Strategic Behavior This argument applies to any tax base which is mobile It also applies to commodity taxation if there is cross-border shopping Cross-border shopping is possible the origin taxation (taxation in country of production) Destination taxation (taxation in country of consumption) prevents cross-border shopping but requires borders to be maintained Borders are inconsistent with a single-market in a federation

  35. Size Matters Asymmetries in size or technology will lead countries to set different taxes This may benefit some countries at the expense of others If the asymmetry occurs in the number of residents then small countries gain The outflow of capital is less severe for the large country for any tax increase The large country sets a higher tax

  36. Size Matters Fig 18.3 shows the advantage of smallness Country 1 has share s > ½ of total population Country 1 sets a higher tax t1 > t2 R is the net return to capital Income per resident plus tax revenue satisfies c2 + g2 > c1 + g1 Residents of the small country are better off Figure 18.3: Advantage of smallness

  37. Public Good Provision • Different conclusions can emerge if the use of tax revenue is considered • Assume a public input is provided with production function f(ki, gi) • An increase in the tax rate now raises gi • This can give an incentive to set taxes above the optimum level

  38. Public Good Provision • The standard model has a positive tax externality • In the modified model • The tax externality then becomes

  39. Public Good Provision • Since • A sufficiently strong complementarity can create a negative externality • This occurs when • In such a case the tax rates will be higher than the efficient level in the Nash equilibrium

  40. Public Good Provision • This condition has been tested by Bénassy-Quéré, Gobalraj, and Trannoy (2007) • They express it as the requirement on an elasticity eK/t > 0 • The regression involves US FDI into Europe on taxes and public input provision • It is concluded that the elasticity is negative • So excessive tax rates (a “race-to-the-top”) are ruled out

  41. Efficient Tax Competition There are circumstances in which tax competition can enhance efficiency It can limit wasteful subsidies designed to give home firms a competitive advantage Tax competition is a commitment device preventing reversion to high tax rates Non-benevolent governments are constrained by tax competition

  42. Race to the Bottom Tax competition suggests mobility will drive down tax rates The reduction in tax rates reduces revenue and limits public expenditure The OECD and the EU have both shown concernabout this race to the bottom OECD 1998 report (20 recommendations) EU Code of Conduct on business taxation whichidentifies harmful tax competition

  43. Race to the Bottom Tab. 18.1 shows the corporate tax rate for some EU and G7 countries All countries except Ireland and Italy have reduces rates Rate in Germany has fallen from 62 to 38 and in the UK from 53 to 30 This seems to be evidence for the race to the bottom Table 18.1:Statutory corporate income taxSource: Devereux et al. (2002)

  44. Race to the Bottom There are many details of tax legislation that result in the statutory tax rate being different to the effective tax rate Tab. 18.2 shows the effective rate fell by less This is evidence that the lower statutory rate has been countered by a broadening of the tax base Table 18.2:Statutory and Effective Corporate Income Tax RatesSource: Devereux et al. (2002)

  45. Race to the Bottom • Net effect of rate reduction and base broadening in Figure 1 • Revenue remained constant until the early 1990s • Strong growth trend from 1990 • Increase in corporate profitability • Revenues not adversely affected by tax competition • Source: Devereux et al. (2002) (using OECD data) (Weighted average for 14 EU countries plus Canada, Japan and the US) Figure 1: Corporate Income Tax Revenue as a Percentage of GDP

  46. Race to the Bottom • Data for the UK in Fig. 2 • Might expect UK to be affected by proximity to Ireland • There is no apparent effect in the data • Revenues were rising from late 1990s • Source: Economic Trends Figure 2: UK tax revenue from capital as a percentage of GDP

  47. Race to the Bottom • Tax competition is harmful if it leads to equilibrium rates of tax below the efficient level • The the fall in statutory corporate income tax rates is often given as evidence for tax competition within the EU • The data shows that corporate tax revenues as a percentage of GDP have not fallen • The EU has a voluntary Code of Conduct designed to lessen tax competition

  48. The Tiebout Hypothesis An alternative perspective on competition between regions We usually assume issues of preference revelation will prevent attainment of efficiency Individuals will have no incentive to truthfully reveal preferences or characteristics The provision of public goods is based on a variety of inefficient mechanisms And financed by distortionary taxation

  49. The Tiebout Hypothesis Does this change when the economy is separated into many jurisdictions? The Tiebout hypothesis argues that efficiency will then be achieved The argument of Tiebout observes Inefficiency arises because of the externalities between consumers This causes free-riding The externality is a consequence of a small-numbers issue

  50. The Tiebout Hypothesis The argument is different if there are many potential communities Assume that different communities offer different packages of taxation and public goods The choice of community reveals preferences There is no incentive to choose strategically Honest revelation takes place and efficiency is achieved

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