This Article argues that, while important, efficiency considerations should not function as the sole arbiter of the boundary between corporate and conduit tax treatment. First, classical corporate taxation is, in many ways, deeply embedded within a larger network of legal and social meanings. Classical corporate taxation operates in concert with, rather than separately from, these legal and social meanings. For this reason, the rules governing entities’ tax classification should take these interrelationships into account, if not as a primary norm, then as a secondary consideration when empirical or other uncertainties preclude a clear choice based on efficiency. The social boundaries of corporate taxation refer to the extent to which these ...
corporate taxation concentration inequality capital as power financializationCorporate concentration...
Governments and policy-makers are increasingly faced with the trade-off of protecting their tax reve...
Following an introduction, the paper is divided into two parts followed by a conclusion. Part II rev...
Historically, the tax law distinction between corporate and conduit treatment drew primarily on doct...
This article attempts to provide the first comprehensive rationale for defending the current corpora...
This Article will address the question of whether publicly traded U.S. corporations owe a duty to th...
This article will address the question whether publicly traded US corporations owe a duty to their s...
Companies compete to maximize returns and the public’s opinion about corporations’ social responsibi...
Under the aggregate or nexus of contracts view of the corporation, which is the dominant view among ...
This Article argues that aggressive corporate tax avoidance is legally impermissible based upon the ...
Globalisation has increased corporate tax competition amongst states and facilitated widespread corp...
While academics, practitioners, and the White House have proposed any number of reform measures to d...
This article reviews the corporate tax system within the context of the historical bias and current ...
Reform of the U.S. corporate tax system is again on the agenda. Despite important differences, many ...
Corporate groups are notoriously difficult to tax. At the moment it is not clear whether corporate g...
corporate taxation concentration inequality capital as power financializationCorporate concentration...
Governments and policy-makers are increasingly faced with the trade-off of protecting their tax reve...
Following an introduction, the paper is divided into two parts followed by a conclusion. Part II rev...
Historically, the tax law distinction between corporate and conduit treatment drew primarily on doct...
This article attempts to provide the first comprehensive rationale for defending the current corpora...
This Article will address the question of whether publicly traded U.S. corporations owe a duty to th...
This article will address the question whether publicly traded US corporations owe a duty to their s...
Companies compete to maximize returns and the public’s opinion about corporations’ social responsibi...
Under the aggregate or nexus of contracts view of the corporation, which is the dominant view among ...
This Article argues that aggressive corporate tax avoidance is legally impermissible based upon the ...
Globalisation has increased corporate tax competition amongst states and facilitated widespread corp...
While academics, practitioners, and the White House have proposed any number of reform measures to d...
This article reviews the corporate tax system within the context of the historical bias and current ...
Reform of the U.S. corporate tax system is again on the agenda. Despite important differences, many ...
Corporate groups are notoriously difficult to tax. At the moment it is not clear whether corporate g...
corporate taxation concentration inequality capital as power financializationCorporate concentration...
Governments and policy-makers are increasingly faced with the trade-off of protecting their tax reve...
Following an introduction, the paper is divided into two parts followed by a conclusion. Part II rev...