Local officials in China have strongly supported new non-state firms, yet other officials in transition countries have often strongly hindered them. We argue that a likely cause of these sharp differences in behavior is differences in the source of government revenue. Local revenue in China came from profits and other taxes on new entrants, while elsewhere in transition countries tax revenue came disproportionately from the old state enterprises. All these officials can easily draw on public funds for personal use. As a result, local Chinese officials have a personal interest in encouraging the development of new firms, while other officials have a financial interest in suppressing new firms. To induce officials to be supportive of new...
This paper explores how fiscal incentives affect capital tax decisions by local governments in the C...
This paper investigates the influence of effective tax payment on the CEO promotion in local State O...
Before 1979, the People’s Republic of China did not have a logical system of taxing foreign business...
Conflicts of interest between local governments and the central administration in China have yielded...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to investigate how Chinese firms' ownership structure is ...
China began its gradual economic reform in the late 1970s; Russia initiated radical reform in the ea...
We analyze how profit reporting and investment behavior of foreign enterprises respond to local tax ...
China like other transition economies needs to establish a tax regime compatible with a market econo...
Public finance pressures are a central concern in developing countries. With large informal economie...
Since the “reform and opening‑up” policy in 1978, Chinese tax incentives have experienced fluctuatio...
This paper shows that tax competition among local governments in China takes place through informal ...
textabstractChina like other transition economies needs to establish a tax system compatible with a ...
textabstractChina like other transition economies needs to establish a tax regime compatible with a ...
Do state-owned enterprises (SOEs) enjoy preferential treatments in China? This thesis extends the po...
This paper investigates how firms manage their earnings to trade off various incentives when tax rat...
This paper explores how fiscal incentives affect capital tax decisions by local governments in the C...
This paper investigates the influence of effective tax payment on the CEO promotion in local State O...
Before 1979, the People’s Republic of China did not have a logical system of taxing foreign business...
Conflicts of interest between local governments and the central administration in China have yielded...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to investigate how Chinese firms' ownership structure is ...
China began its gradual economic reform in the late 1970s; Russia initiated radical reform in the ea...
We analyze how profit reporting and investment behavior of foreign enterprises respond to local tax ...
China like other transition economies needs to establish a tax regime compatible with a market econo...
Public finance pressures are a central concern in developing countries. With large informal economie...
Since the “reform and opening‑up” policy in 1978, Chinese tax incentives have experienced fluctuatio...
This paper shows that tax competition among local governments in China takes place through informal ...
textabstractChina like other transition economies needs to establish a tax system compatible with a ...
textabstractChina like other transition economies needs to establish a tax regime compatible with a ...
Do state-owned enterprises (SOEs) enjoy preferential treatments in China? This thesis extends the po...
This paper investigates how firms manage their earnings to trade off various incentives when tax rat...
This paper explores how fiscal incentives affect capital tax decisions by local governments in the C...
This paper investigates the influence of effective tax payment on the CEO promotion in local State O...
Before 1979, the People’s Republic of China did not have a logical system of taxing foreign business...