We study the impact of public good spillovers on tax competition between two imperfectly integrated countries with different levels of productivity. We show that international public good spillovers, by reducing the tax gap between countries, strengthen the agglomeration of firms in the most productive country. Then we carry on a welfare analysis. We first assume that governments are engaged in a redistributive tax policy. At the non-cooperative equilibrium, the tax level in the high- productivity country is inefficiently high while it is inefficiently low in the other country. A different conclusion emerges when tax revenues are recycled in a public good provision: taxes are inefficiently low in both countries and public good spillo...
This paper argues that, because governments are able to relax tax competition through public good di...
Larger firms are more likely to use tax haven operations to exploit international tax differences. W...
Agglomeration tendencies of industrial firms significantly affect the nature of tax competition. Thi...
We study the impact of public good spillovers on tax competition between two imperfectly integrated ...
This paper assesses the extent and policy implications of simultaneous competition among countries o...
Impact of positive public good spillovers on international capital tax competition in a spatial econ...
We examine the welfare and other consequences of tax policy in a third market export model where duo...
Two jurisdictions compete to attract shares of the investment budget of a large multinational enterp...
We provide a quantitative assessment of the welfare cost of tax competition or, equivalently, the we...
We set up a simple two-country model of tax competition where firms with different productivity deci...
In our paper we show that when countries compete in taxes and infrastructures, coordination through...
We set up a simple two-country model of tax competition where firms with different productivity deci...
This paper argues that, because governments are able to relax tax competition through public good di...
This paper argues that, because governments are able to relax tax competition through public good di...
We show that, in a setting where tax competition promotes efficiency, variation in the extent to whi...
This paper argues that, because governments are able to relax tax competition through public good di...
Larger firms are more likely to use tax haven operations to exploit international tax differences. W...
Agglomeration tendencies of industrial firms significantly affect the nature of tax competition. Thi...
We study the impact of public good spillovers on tax competition between two imperfectly integrated ...
This paper assesses the extent and policy implications of simultaneous competition among countries o...
Impact of positive public good spillovers on international capital tax competition in a spatial econ...
We examine the welfare and other consequences of tax policy in a third market export model where duo...
Two jurisdictions compete to attract shares of the investment budget of a large multinational enterp...
We provide a quantitative assessment of the welfare cost of tax competition or, equivalently, the we...
We set up a simple two-country model of tax competition where firms with different productivity deci...
In our paper we show that when countries compete in taxes and infrastructures, coordination through...
We set up a simple two-country model of tax competition where firms with different productivity deci...
This paper argues that, because governments are able to relax tax competition through public good di...
This paper argues that, because governments are able to relax tax competition through public good di...
We show that, in a setting where tax competition promotes efficiency, variation in the extent to whi...
This paper argues that, because governments are able to relax tax competition through public good di...
Larger firms are more likely to use tax haven operations to exploit international tax differences. W...
Agglomeration tendencies of industrial firms significantly affect the nature of tax competition. Thi...