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Acting in the interest of their residents, within limits imposed by Federal statute and by the Constitution, states have incentives to impose taxes on the profits of corporations owned by nonresidents. This paper presents a model within which a state, using an apportionment formula that includes...
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This paper investigates the consequences of a series of alternative international tax designs on the strategy of a multinational enterprise regarding the cross border distribution of its investment and the choice of its financing behavior. We start with a world where no international tax rules...
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Trade and investment treaties have proliferated throughout the Asia-Pacific region. Their dispute resolution mechanisms are important in entrenching market access commitments, especially when providing for direct claims by firms against states. But the Global Financial Crisis has also heightened...
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Without a controlled foreign company regime, taxpayers can establish companies in other countries to trap foreign-source income or accept income diverted from domestic sources. At one extreme, a regime may cover all foreign jurisdictions. At another, it may cover only tax havens. Some countries...
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Over the last ten years, legal scholars have begun to use what they describe as "case studies" in an effort to develop better theories about how governments can or should impose taxation on international activities. The attributes and function of case studies, while well-studied and documented...
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The New Zealand tax system allows the possibility of double taxation through the mis-matching of characterisations of business and investment entities in a large number of circumstances. However, practical problems are uncommon. To avoid difficulties, the principle of private international law...
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