Title: Taxation in an integrated world
1Taxation in an integrated world
- Katharina Stemmer I Lisa Kammermeier I Liliana
Marques I Elzbieta Kristen
2Overview
- Introduction
- Labour mobility and personal income taxation
- Trade liberalization and indirect taxation
- Capital income taxation
- Allocation of financial capital
- Conclusion
3Taxation systems
- No harmonized system between countries
- Each country may imply its own rules
- Systems were created mostly after
- World War II, when economies were more
- closed.
4Effect of globalization
- Barriers to the movements of goods across nations
have been falling specially across nations
belonging to free trade area such as EU and
NAFTA. - The barriers to the provision of services across
countries (mainly of banking, insurance, air
transportation) remain significant and have been
given attention by GATT and some governments. - Financial capital now can be shifted across,
countries, facilitated by new tecnologies mainly
in industrial countries almost without barriers.
5Internalization of economic activity
- Affect taxable bases and force some countries to
take a close look in order to prevent the
migration of their taxable capacity (base). - Groups of countries recognize the necessity of
collective actions aimed at coordination. - Increasing the exchange of information.
- Harmonizing tax systems in order to reduce
arbitrage possibilities.
6Taxation and Economic Integration
- Key elements
-
- Competition
- Co-ordination
- Harmonization
7Competition
- Tax Competition high tax rate inhibit
economic growth - encourage
savings and investment to move more easily around
the globe
8Co-ordination
- Contacts among tax officials of different
countries who exchange information about planned
reforms, through meetings in which high tax level
countries representatives announce the tax
reforms that plan to introduce and try to avoid
tax changes that may negatively affect other
countries.
9Form of tax co-ordination
- Committee on Fiscal Affairs on the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development - OECD
- meets twice a year in Paris, attended by
representatives of the tax offices.
10 Harmonization countries agree on tax
systems with equal rates and bases for a relevant
taxes
- ?
- Increases efficiency in allocating international
resources - Better control on taxpayers
- Increases efficiency in governments tax
revenues - Decrease the competitiveness between countries
reducing the incentives to escape of production
factors with high fiscal weight.
- ?
- Consumption
- Low tax in foreign country vs high tax in own
country - Production may decrease
- Investments of financial savings abroad
11Indirect direct taxation
- Trade is influenced by indirect taxes especially
foreign trade taxes - indirect taxes direct
taxes - collected from someone other than collected
from people or organizations - the person who is responsible to pay the tax
-
- general sales taxes excises income
taxes - turnover retail VAT
- tax tax (value added tax)
12Labour mobility and personal income taxation
- Influences of labour mobility Taxes size of
the country - Importance of international cooperations? greater
labor mobility? causes cultural, social
problems in the receiving country - Highly skilled labour is more important for
growth (Murphy, Shleifer, Vishny (1991)BUT
deeper integration raise policy concerns or the
countries, who are the net losers of these
individuals
13Labour mobility and personal income taxation
- Does taxation play a role in labour movements?
- US generally NO
- BUT there is a competition among states in
setting marginal tax rates on individuals - despite low income taxes, labour mobility is may
affected - -- highest marginal personal income tax should
be in line with those of revival states
14Labour mobility and personal income taxation
- Does taxation play a role in labour movements?
- Independent countries pull push is greater
- 1. the linguistic, cultural, and regulatory
obstacles2. importance of income taxes is much
greater - allocation of talent has significant effects on
the growth rate of the economy (Murpher,
Schleifer,Visney) ? creation of the brain drain
phenomen
15Labour mobility and personal income taxation
- Taxes of capital income should be low or even
zero - Taxes of labour need not to be low
- Labour income is taxed in most countries with
progressive rates often the largest part of the
global income tax - main policy conclusion especially small
countries should be careful in taxing individuals
with exceptional talents best solution
reduction of the highest marginal tax rate
16Turnover Tax
- it taxes intermediate and possibly capital goods
( on ad valorem basis) - Example when manufacturing activity is
completed, a tax may be charged on some companies
- still exists in developing countries
- but disappeared in industrial countries
- In Europe replaced by VAT to allow movements of
goods across the countries -
- one of the successful political attempts aimed at
coordinating tax policies
17VAT Value Added Tax
- tax on exchanges
- Applies to all commercial activities involving
the production and distribution of goods and the
provision of services - Example 10 VAT
- manufacturer pays 1.10 (1 10) for raw
materialseller of raw material pays to the
government 0.10 - Manufacturer charges the retailer 1.32 (1.20
10)pays the government 0.02 (0.12 - 0.10) - Retailer charges the consumer 1.65 (1.50
10)pays the government 0.03 (0.15-0.12)
18VAT Value Added Tax
- Trade liberalization introduction of VAT are
closely interrelated - Main reason for introduction of VAT in EU
- Neutrality vis-à-vis trade across member
countries (destination principle consistent
with GATT guidelines) - -- VAT based on the destination principle would
be an ideal tax in a world undergoing a process
of integration - allows governments to tax consumption alone
- independence of countries in setting rates what
they want - export prices do not reflect this tax, they are
not distorted by attempts at manipulating trade - imports and domestic products are taxed in the
same way no discrimination
19VAT Problems
- 1. exceptions given to particular
sector - difficulties of taxing certain sectors
- sectors dont pay taxes on their sales
dont receive rebates for the taxes paid on their
inputs - price of their sales contains tax
element that depends on the ratio of their
own value added and on tax rates on inputs -
ratio varies from sector to sector ? tax
generated distortion in the final price
20VAT Problems
- 2. Need of border controls (destination
principle) - - permit exporters to claim rebate for the
taxes paid on the exported goods - border
controls impose substantial compliance costs
on exporters ? reduction of the beneficial effect
of VAT - deeply integrated areas like US and EU do not
want to - have border controls
21VAT vs Retail Tax
VAT has a considerable advantage as regards
robustness against tax evasion
22VAT system in the EU
- pre 1993 VAT based on destination principle
- 1993 VAT based on origin principle
abolishment of fiscal frontiers - - This was not acceptable of member states,
because taxes of VAT were too different - Commission created Transitional VAT System
- maintains different fiscal systems but without
frontier controls - origin based system for sales to private persons
who can go and buy tax paid anywhere they like in
the Union and take the goods home wihtout having
to pay VAT again. (there are some exceptions) - For transactions between taxable persons it is
still a destination based VAT system.
23European Commission Taxation and Customs
Union Jan. 1, 2007
24Excise Taxes
- Are levied on the sale of particular goods and
services - Can be collected at retail level or at
manufaturing level - Tax fall on specific products
- For which reasons? - to tax individuals, for
benefits they may receive (e.g. gasoline
free use of roads) - to discourage use of some
commoditiy that is damaging health (e.g.
cigarettes) - penalize users of some commodities
for negative externalities they may impose on
society (alcohol) - to attempt to give some
prgressivity to the tax system (luxuary
goods)
25Excise Taxes
- Are used as proxies for import duties ( e.g.
excise tax on bananas imposed by european and
N-American countries) - Borders are more open, people travel more ? more
difficult to keep taxes high competition push
the taxes down - For world at large taxes still remain widely
divergent (e.g. petroleum products)
26Excise Taxes Petroleum products
- Presents enormous differences ? different level
of consumption ? major reallocation of ressourses
on world basis - very large differences in the taxes for gasoline
- Very low level in the United States
- ? increases demand in large country
- ? high petroleum taxes in Europe and Japan
reduce level of consumption
27Capital income tax - main principles
- THE RESIDENCE OF
- TAXPAYER PRINCIPLE
- An investor from a multinational
- pays all capital income taxes in a country where
his company resides. - Implements capital export neutrality.
- The total tax burden should be same, nevertheless
an investor gains his income in a home or in a
foreign country.
- THE SOURCE OF INCOME
- PRINCIPLE
- An investor from a multinational
- pays capital income taxes in every country his
income was generated. - Implements capital import neutrality.
- Branches should be taxed according to national
rules of host countries.
28Capital income tax - controversies
- Enterprises may delay or even avoid some tax
payments many residence countries allow
subsidiaries of a foreign company to postpone its
income tax payments till they repatriate their
profits -
-
- The residence of taxpayer principle
-
29Capital income tax - controversies
- Existence of tax havens
- politically stable countries with low or zero
tax rate, banking secrecy, easy access for
foreign firms, free exchange market and with
established treaties with important countries
from economic point of view (Tanzi, p. 79), - Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Aruba, Bahamas,
Bahrain, Belize, Bermuda, British Virgin
Islands, Cayman Islands, Cook Islands, Cyprus,
Dominica, Gibraltar, Grenada, Guernsey, Isle of
Man, Jersey, Malta, Mauritius, Montserrat,
Nauru, Netherlands Antilles, Niue, Panama
(Spanish), (English), Samoa, San Marino,
Seychelles, St. Lucia, St. Kitts Nevis, St.
Vincent and the Grenadines, Turks Caicos
Islands, US Virgin Islands, Vanuatu (OECD,
www.oecd.org)
30Capital income tax - controversies
- Tax havens companies would escape from taxation
by moving the capital to the legal headquarters
established in tax havens. - Residence of a taxpayer principle
31Capital income tax - controversies
- Double taxation, exchanging information, tax
evasion to prevent them, treaties were
introduced - contain provisions for mutual assistance,
- 2 major models of double-taxation treaties
OECD and UN. - The residence of taxpayer and the source of
income principles
32Capital income tax - controversies
- THE OECD MODEL
- Focuses on the residence rule
- A foreign investor is not supposed to pay (or pay
very low) income tax in a source country, with a
full taxation rate paid in a residence country - Requires a proper exchange of information between
two countries.
- THE UN MODEL
- Focuses on the residence rule AND the source of
income rule - More concerned about developing countries
- A developing country may negotiate capital
incomes tax rates, that are to be paid in another
country.
33Capital income tax - controversies
- Other problems
- legal increasing role of investors rights
(i.e. trade secrets, special administrative
guarantees, tax havens legislation systems), - technical (i.e. different languages),
- political because of the competition between
governments in a global economy, information
about investors is not exchanged.
34 Allocation of Financial Capital
- Origin of cross border portfolio incomes
- Deposits in banks made by nonresident depositors
- Bonds held by nonresident depositors
- Dividends received by shareholders residing
abroad - Dividends received by companies from other
companies - Factors of distortion
- Rate of inflation
- Level of marginal statutory rate
- Way interest incomes are taxed
- Tax treatment of interest expenses
35Remember
- The Fisher Effect
- ? The higher the expected inflation rate
- The higher the nominal interest rate
- And Nominal interest payments are deductible!
- Reallocation From high inflation and high
marginal tax rates to low inflation and low tax
rates
36- Effective marginal tax rate gt 100
- Income tax becomes a capital tax
- Incentive to invest in domestic financial assets
will be much reduced
37- With a high marginal tax rate and high inflation
rate, the real after tax borrowing rate can
easily become negative - Income tax becomes capital subsidy for borrowers
- Demand for credit by individuals will rise
- Country will tend to spend more and suck in
financial capital from other countries
38- Liberalization of capital flows
- creates large movement of financial capital
- residence principle
- countries from where the capital
originates are often unable to tax these
incomes - Countries have to prevent large capital ouflows
by - lowering withholding taxes
- creating tax exempt opportunities
- enforcement
39Taxes on Cross Border Portfolio Incomes
- Residence Principle - countries tend not to tax
the interest income of nonresidents - Strong incentive for financial investments abroad
- Progressive removal of capital restrictions
- Technological innovation increases
- Tax evasion and tax avoidance
40 - Taxes distort the allocation of resources and
impose dead weight losses on the economies,
affect the choice by consumers among products,
producers among factor of production, workers
between work and leisure, savers between
consumption and saving
41Conclusions
- There are inefficiencies in the allocation of the
worlds capital, because tax rates differences
tend to increase - ??Effective progression of the tax systems can
proceed thanks to the possibility for the capital
or labor force to move to lower-tax-rate
countries - Governments have to face limits while thinking
about public expenditures due to the worldwide
trend to lower tax rates (run-to-the-bottom
tendency).
42Thank you for your attention!!!!