By now, it is well understood that aggressive tax planning among high-income individuals and corporations represents a grave threat to the U.S. tax system, and that derivatives are staples of this planning. In response, the usual recommendation is consistency, which means that the same tax treatment should apply to economically comparable bets, regardless of what form is used. Yet because consistency is unattainable, this Article develops an alternative theory: Policymakers should strive instead for balance. This means that for each risky position, the treatment of gains should match the treatment of losses. For example, if the government bears 15% of losses, it has to share in 15% of gains. On a different derivative, if the government bear...
This brief essay outlines three benchmarks for evaluating alternative ways of taxing capital income,...
This Article offers a critical examination of the arguments against CCP clearing and a defense of th...
This article is based on Schizer’s keynote address at the 17th annual NYU-KPMG Tax Symposium on Marc...
It is well understood that aggressive tax planning with derivatives threatens the U.S. income tax sy...
The most important tax problem of recent months is the impact of aggressive tax planning on corporat...
The government often uses narrow tax reforms to target specific planning strategies. Sometimes the t...
In recent years, a consensus has emerged among tax scholars that financial product innovation poses ...
Three years after the seminal work of Black and Scholes [3] on the pricing of European options, Scho...
Wöster C. Pricing Derivatives Under A Gains Tax Regime: New Impacts. Discussion paper / Fakultät für...
Two desirable properties for a tax system that must specify tax treatments for new financial instrum...
This paper introduces new evidence on the extent to which non-financial firms use financial derivati...
This dissertation contains two major parts. In Essay 1, we examine the optimal trading and tax optio...
The conventional wisdom is that derivatives are exotic and uniquely risky, although innovative, fina...
The U.S. tax system, like most in the world, benefits capital gains in two ways. Investors can defer...
ABSTRACT inated in currencies expected to appreci-This paper docunwnts the changes in the ate agains...
This brief essay outlines three benchmarks for evaluating alternative ways of taxing capital income,...
This Article offers a critical examination of the arguments against CCP clearing and a defense of th...
This article is based on Schizer’s keynote address at the 17th annual NYU-KPMG Tax Symposium on Marc...
It is well understood that aggressive tax planning with derivatives threatens the U.S. income tax sy...
The most important tax problem of recent months is the impact of aggressive tax planning on corporat...
The government often uses narrow tax reforms to target specific planning strategies. Sometimes the t...
In recent years, a consensus has emerged among tax scholars that financial product innovation poses ...
Three years after the seminal work of Black and Scholes [3] on the pricing of European options, Scho...
Wöster C. Pricing Derivatives Under A Gains Tax Regime: New Impacts. Discussion paper / Fakultät für...
Two desirable properties for a tax system that must specify tax treatments for new financial instrum...
This paper introduces new evidence on the extent to which non-financial firms use financial derivati...
This dissertation contains two major parts. In Essay 1, we examine the optimal trading and tax optio...
The conventional wisdom is that derivatives are exotic and uniquely risky, although innovative, fina...
The U.S. tax system, like most in the world, benefits capital gains in two ways. Investors can defer...
ABSTRACT inated in currencies expected to appreci-This paper docunwnts the changes in the ate agains...
This brief essay outlines three benchmarks for evaluating alternative ways of taxing capital income,...
This Article offers a critical examination of the arguments against CCP clearing and a defense of th...
This article is based on Schizer’s keynote address at the 17th annual NYU-KPMG Tax Symposium on Marc...