The EU policy against harmful tax competition aims at eliminating tax policies targeted at attracting the internationally mobile tax base. We construct an imperfectly competitive model of costly trade between two countries. In setting their corporate taxes, governments non-cooperatively decide whether to discriminate between internationally mobile and immobile firms. We find the Nash equilibrium tax regimes. When trade costs are high countries impose a uniform tax on all firms while nations will discriminate between mobile and immobile firms when costs are low. At some trade costs, fiscal competition results in tax discrimination despite uniform taxation being socially preferabl
We examine the welfare and other consequences of tax policy in a third market export model where duo...
Abstract: This paper models tax competition for mobile firms that are differentiated by the amount o...
This paper reconsiders the question of whether tax competition for mobile capital leads to tax rates...
The EU policy against harmful tax competition aims at eliminating tax policies targeted at attractin...
We analyze a sequential game between two symmetric countries when firms can invest in a multinationa...
We develop a model of commodity tax competition with monopolistically competitive internationally mo...
In this Paper, we show that with international externalities, different country sizes, imperfect com...
International audienceTrade integration and the increasing mobility of firms have raised the need fo...
If conventional instruments of strategic trade policy are unavailable, the system of foreign profit ...
We set up a simple two-country model of tax competition where firms with different productivity deci...
Current policy initiatives taken by the EU and the OECD aim at abolish-ing preferential corporate ta...
We set up a simple two-country model of tax competition where firms with different productivity deci...
We propose a stylized model of international tax competition between a large coun-try and a tax have...
We consider international labour (entrepreneur) mobility in a two-country overlapping-generations mo...
With international externalities, different country sizes, imperfect competition, and trade costs, t...
We examine the welfare and other consequences of tax policy in a third market export model where duo...
Abstract: This paper models tax competition for mobile firms that are differentiated by the amount o...
This paper reconsiders the question of whether tax competition for mobile capital leads to tax rates...
The EU policy against harmful tax competition aims at eliminating tax policies targeted at attractin...
We analyze a sequential game between two symmetric countries when firms can invest in a multinationa...
We develop a model of commodity tax competition with monopolistically competitive internationally mo...
In this Paper, we show that with international externalities, different country sizes, imperfect com...
International audienceTrade integration and the increasing mobility of firms have raised the need fo...
If conventional instruments of strategic trade policy are unavailable, the system of foreign profit ...
We set up a simple two-country model of tax competition where firms with different productivity deci...
Current policy initiatives taken by the EU and the OECD aim at abolish-ing preferential corporate ta...
We set up a simple two-country model of tax competition where firms with different productivity deci...
We propose a stylized model of international tax competition between a large coun-try and a tax have...
We consider international labour (entrepreneur) mobility in a two-country overlapping-generations mo...
With international externalities, different country sizes, imperfect competition, and trade costs, t...
We examine the welfare and other consequences of tax policy in a third market export model where duo...
Abstract: This paper models tax competition for mobile firms that are differentiated by the amount o...
This paper reconsiders the question of whether tax competition for mobile capital leads to tax rates...