We consider the hold-up problem between a foreign direct investor and the government(s) in a host country with weak governmental structure and lack of power to commit. Using "Nash threats," we show that an efficient investment level can be sustained for a sufficiently high discount factor and ask whether a vertically disintegrated government structure makes collusion more or less sustainable. We show that collusion between the government and the investor is easier to sustain if the host country is vertically more integrated. or if the different vertical layers of government can commit to fixed tax-sharing rules. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
The growing globalisation of OECD economies, associated to the progresses in European integration, t...
Oligopoly is empirically prevalent in the industries where MNEs operate and national governments com...
This paper addresses the problem of partial tax coordination among regional or national sovereign go...
We consider the hold-up problem between a foreign direct investor and the government(s) in a host co...
We consider the hold-up problem between a foreign direct investor and the government(s) in a host co...
Purpose: This article deals with the problem of forming Pareto non-optimal norms of mutual behavior ...
We extend our earlier work on the political economy of foreign direct investment (Pinto and Pinto 20...
A multinational corporation engages in foreign direct investment for the extraction of a natural res...
Abstract: Bilateral international tax treaties govern the host country taxation for the vast majorit...
A multinational corporation engages in foreign direct investment for the extraction of a natural res...
Eckhard Janeba (Dec 2000 “Tax Competition when Governments lack Commitment” American Economic Review...
Two jurisdictions compete to attract shares of the investment budget of a large multinational enterp...
A government bargains a mutually convenient agreement with a multinational corporation to extract a ...
This paper analyses the optimal collusion-proof mechanism for the regulation of multinational firms ...
We study cross-country risk sharing as a second-best problem for members of a currency union using a...
The growing globalisation of OECD economies, associated to the progresses in European integration, t...
Oligopoly is empirically prevalent in the industries where MNEs operate and national governments com...
This paper addresses the problem of partial tax coordination among regional or national sovereign go...
We consider the hold-up problem between a foreign direct investor and the government(s) in a host co...
We consider the hold-up problem between a foreign direct investor and the government(s) in a host co...
Purpose: This article deals with the problem of forming Pareto non-optimal norms of mutual behavior ...
We extend our earlier work on the political economy of foreign direct investment (Pinto and Pinto 20...
A multinational corporation engages in foreign direct investment for the extraction of a natural res...
Abstract: Bilateral international tax treaties govern the host country taxation for the vast majorit...
A multinational corporation engages in foreign direct investment for the extraction of a natural res...
Eckhard Janeba (Dec 2000 “Tax Competition when Governments lack Commitment” American Economic Review...
Two jurisdictions compete to attract shares of the investment budget of a large multinational enterp...
A government bargains a mutually convenient agreement with a multinational corporation to extract a ...
This paper analyses the optimal collusion-proof mechanism for the regulation of multinational firms ...
We study cross-country risk sharing as a second-best problem for members of a currency union using a...
The growing globalisation of OECD economies, associated to the progresses in European integration, t...
Oligopoly is empirically prevalent in the industries where MNEs operate and national governments com...
This paper addresses the problem of partial tax coordination among regional or national sovereign go...