Ecotaxes to Be Tougher on Polluters Signal

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Ecotaxes to Be Tougher on Polluters Signal 8/31/2015 cp.signals: ecotaxes to be tougher on polluters Subscribe Share Past Issues Translate fiscal reform rebalancing needed for ecotax system to take effect view in browser cp.signals 31 August 2015 ecotaxes to be tougher on polluters signal The shift from arbitrary pollution control fees to a tax framework signals China’s strengthening response to polluters. The draft Environmental Protection Tax Law (EPT Law) released 10 June by MoF, SAT, and MEP also points to a transition from a whack­a­mole approach using administrative decrees, to a legal framework that allows for more rational arbitration of interests. http://us2.campaign­archive1.com/?u=3fd756a9629015f7becc6e127&id=ac870b5ff9&e=f30fe6a933 1/8 8/31/2015 cp.signals: ecotaxes to be tougher on polluters intent Invoking the ‘polluter pays’ principle, the tax encourages heavy polluters to factor externalities into production. Taken alongside other moves in the emerging ecotax framework and likely to come into effect 2016­17, it will: replace existing fees with a heavier tax. Fees, imposed since 2003, have been ineffectual at curbing pollution. They are: arbitrarily levied and misappropriated by EP departments for other uses too low and inconsistent; Beijing fees, for example, are set 9 times higher than Hebei waived in the case of heavy polluters, who pay disposal fees to sewage treatment plants (Water Pollution Prevention and Control Law) crudely calculated: EP departments have frequently charged according to mass balance methods rather than more sophsticated monitoring processes provide a matrix of taxes according to pollution category: air and water pollutants to be based on set value per pollutant; solid waste on tonnage rates; noise pollution on decibels above the standard subject 14 key industries (inc. thermal power, steel, cement) to stricter supervision of pollution data penalise firms that exceed total emission amounts or concentration standards (double/triple tax levied) reward those polluting at less than half the concentration standard (tax levied reduced by half) in a step backwards concessions will apply: carbon dioxide emissions omitted from tax scope; other key emissions included—sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, COD, ammonia nitrogen (TAN), dust (but the framework allows for later introduction) agriculture, auto, and waste treatment industries exempted outlook stronger pollution control promised by the tax will be ineffective without http://us2.campaign­archive1.com/?u=3fd756a9629015f7becc6e127&id=ac870b5ff9&e=f30fe6a933 2/8 8/31/2015 cp.signals: ecotaxes to be tougher on polluters concomitant fiscal reform: local governments still lack adequate capital; little progress on fiscal transfer reform following feb revamp to central­local tax sharing system absent effective fiscal transfers, path dependencies will persist: locally­ determined arbitrary fees likely to reemerge the public lacks trust in state as manager of revenue; misgivings over tax collection and use remain high EPT law: EPT focuses on restricting polluting activities to the exclusion of other relevant concerns, e.g. resources protection: the anti­pollution function of the tax should be clear agency interests militate against cooperation and information sharing between local tax (collection) and EP departments (data verification) enforcement through the stronger agency (SAT) should improve compliance, but only if MEP is properly compensated for income loss through cancelled fees, otherwise expect usual foot dragging a strengthening ecotax framework resource tax: ‘market­based’ 9­10 oct 2014: MoF, SAT, and NDRC release three notices on resource taxes to come into effect 1 Dec 2014: coal resource tax to be calculated based on price rather than production states MoF and SAT. The tax rate to be decided by provincial governments (2­10 percent). Price­based taxes subjects coal use to increasing disincentives to clean up irrational fees, MoF and NDRC state coal, crude oil and natural gas would no longer be subject to resource compensation fees resource tax for crude oil and natural gas to increase from 5 to 6 percent states MoF and SAT 30 apr 2015: resource tax on rare earths, tungsten, and molybdenum to be based on price not volume from 1 May, stipulates notice from MoF and SAT. So as not http://us2.campaign­archive1.com/?u=3fd756a9629015f7becc6e127&id=ac870b5ff9&e=f30fe6a933 3/8 8/31/2015 cp.signals: ecotaxes to be tougher on polluters to increase the burden on firms, tax rates will be reasonably set at: 7.5­11.5 percent for light rare earths; 27 percent for medium­heavy rare earths; 6.5 percent for tungsten; 11 percent for molybdenum. consumption tax: ‘needs expanding’ (separate to VAT) 12 jan 2015: oil consumption taxes raised for the third time by MoF and SAT, following hikes on 29 Nov and 13 Dec 2014. Questions asked whether revenue will be used as promised—for fighting pollution and climate change—or to bulk up state revenue as oil prices take a nosedive. Implemented through administrative decree sidelining the NPC. 10 mar 2015: consumption tax expansion slated for fiscal agenda up to 2020 according to MoF think tanker Liu Shangxi 刘尚希. Currently covering only 14 items, the tax as it stands is insufficient. It will be expanded in 2016 to include energy­intensive, high­polluting, and high­end consumer goods and go through due process via the NPC. VAT: ‘mixed signals’ 12 feb 2014: preferential VAT policy for large hydropower firms extended but diluted by MoF and SAT. Up until end 2015 enjoying rebates if VAT burden exceeds 8 percent, the standards will be set at 12 percent until end 2017. Other clean energy industries also enjoys VAT breaks, PV for example. 12 jun 2015: VAT directory on resources­based products and labour services announced by MoF and SAT that introduces a 30 percent and 50 percent tax on waste water treatment and water recycling, previously tax­free services. 10 aug 2015: resumption of a 13 percent VAT on fertiliser from 1 Sep announces MoF. Moves target overcapacity and excessive use of a major pollutant. carbon tax: ‘on hold’ 13 aug 2014: introducing a carbon tax would affect the competitiveness of China’s industries and stunt growth, argues Jia Kang 贾康 former MoF Fiscal Science Research Institute director, at a time when the growth rate is in decline. Reconsider when the economy stabilises. feb 2015: as part of NRDC’s coal cap project, guidelines on fiscal policy http://us2.campaign­archive1.com/?u=3fd756a9629015f7becc6e127&id=ac870b5ff9&e=f30fe6a933 4/8 8/31/2015 cp.signals: ecotaxes to be tougher on polluters measures appropriate for curbing carbon consumption released by MoF Research Institute for Fiscal Science. A roadmap, it suggests: coal resource tax reform in 2015; environmental protection tax 2016; low­rate carbon tax 2019. roundtable a rational carbon tax and trading system for the power industry Gui Junsong 桂俊松, Fu Yuewen 傅玥雯 | China Energy News Command­and­control regulations such as EIAs, strict emission standards, emission caps, and efficiency targets are strangling the power industry. Rather than overburden firms with overlapping pollution control measures, turn instead to market mechanisms, suggests Wang Zhixuan 王志轩 China Electricity Council. A carbon tax would rein in consumption and production, but is not feasible in the current economic climate. A carbon trading system is superior, but improvements need to be made on: pilots, permit allocation, and the legal framework. ticker MoF expert recommendations on resource tax reform Zhang Xiaoyun 张晓云 Su Jingchun 苏京春 | China Economic Times MoF Research Institute for Fiscal Science experts provide specific recommendations on resource tax reform: collect the tax at the central level but optimise the revenue­sharing system to balance centre­local relations; gradually expand the tax to cover natural resources such as land, forests, grasslands, mountains, marine areas; levy the tax based on price not volume so the tax burden increases as resources become more scarce; collect tax in special­use accounts and earmark revenue for use in environmental protection; use resource tax reform to prompt price reform. ticker VAT on waste water management harms PPP Waste water treatment and water recycling are no longer tax­free. A 30 percent and 50 percent VAT will be collected on those services from 1 July; investment return rates will likely fall by 10 percent and profits by 10­20 percent. Almost two­ thirds of the 4,000 waste water treatment companies in China receive no financial support from government, so the new tax will hit hard. This will negatively impact industrial innovation and discourage PPP in waste water and solid waste http://us2.campaign­archive1.com/?u=3fd756a9629015f7becc6e127&id=ac870b5ff9&e=f30fe6a933 5/8 8/31/2015 cp.signals: ecotaxes to be tougher on polluters treatment, complains Xue Tao 薛涛 Tsinghua University, tight local government fiscal budgets are unlikely to stretch to offsetting the VAT. ticker in the spotlight Su Ming 苏明 | MoF Research Institute for Fiscal Science MoF Research Institute for Fiscal Science deputy head, Su works alongside Liu Shangxi 刘尚希 on fiscal policy, predominantly rural and energy and environmental­related tax policies. A economics PhD, Su has directed over 60 ministerial research projects, cooperating with international financial institutions on issues including fiscal and tax policy for SME development and CDM mechanisms. On the EPT, he advocates including revenue in the general budget; earmarking revenue for EP purposes will only increase administrative costs. His recent book, Carbon tax in China: theory and policy, argues a carbon tax is premature but resource tax reform targeting upstream sectors is more pressing. Set at C¥10 per tonne, a carbon tax introduced around 2019 would encourage Chinese exports by exempting them from carbon tariffs levied by developed countries. Ma Jun 马军 | Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs (IPE) director Well­known environmentalist, Ma has been reporting on the underside of China’s rapid economic growth since the 1990s. His book China’s Water Crisis (1999) was the first domestic publication on the country’s pollution crisis, putting him on the global map.
Recommended publications
  • Creating Market Incentives for Greener Products Policy Manual for Eastern Partnership Countries
    Creating Market Incentives for Greener Products Policy Manual for Eastern Partnership Countries Creating Incentives for Greener Products Policy Manual for Eastern Partnership Countries 2014 About the OECD The OECD is a unique forum where governments work together to address the economic, social and environmental challenges of globalisation. The OECD is also at the forefront of efforts to understand and to help governments respond to new developments and concerns, such as corporate governance, the information economy and the challenges of an ageing population. The Organisation provides a setting where governments can compare policy experiences, seek answers to common problems, identify good practice and work to co-ordinate domestic and international policies. The OECD member countries are: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Chile, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea, Luxembourg, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, the Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States. The European Union takes part in the work of the OECD. Since the 1990s, the OECD Task Force for the Implementation of the Environmental Action Programme (the EAP Task Force) has been supporting countries of Eastern Europe, Caucasus and Central Asia to reconcile their environment and economic goals. About the EaP GREEN programme The “Greening Economies in the European Union’s Eastern Neighbourhood” (EaP GREEN) programme aims to support the six Eastern Partnership countries to move towards green economy by decoupling economic growth from environmental degradation and resource depletion. The six EaP countries are: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Republic of Moldova and Ukraine.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Article (PDF)
    5th International Conference on Accounting, Auditing, and Taxation (ICAAT 2016) TAX TRANSPARENCY – AN ANALYSIS OF THE LUXLEAKS FIRMS Johannes Manthey University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany Dirk Kiesewetter University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany Abstract This paper finds that the firms involved in the Luxembourg Leaks (‘LuxLeaks’) scandal are less transparent measured by the engagement in earnings management, analyst coverage, analyst accuracy, accounting standards and auditor choice. The analysis is based on the LuxLeaks sample and compared to a control group of large multinational companies. The panel dataset covers the years from 2001 to 2015 and comprises 19,109 observations. The LuxLeaks firms appear to engage in higher levels of discretionary earnings management measured by the variability of net income to cash flows from operations and the correlation between cash flows from operations and accruals. The LuxLeaks sample shows a lower analyst coverage, lower willingness to switch to IFRS and a lower Big4 auditor rate. The difference in difference design supports these findings regarding earnings management and the analyst coverage. The analysis concludes that the LuxLeaks firms are less transparent and infers a relation between corporate transparency and the engagement in tax avoidance. The paper aims to establish the relationship between tax avoidance and transparency in order to give guidance for future policy. The research highlights the complex causes and effects of tax management and supports a cost benefit analysis of future tax regulation. Keywords: Tax Avoidance, Transparency, Earnings Management JEL Classification: H20, H25, H26 1. Introduction The Luxembourg Leaks (’LuxLeaks’) scandal made public some of the tax strategies used by multinational companies.
    [Show full text]
  • Denmark Ecotax Rates Green Budget Germany (Gbg)
    DENMARK ECOTAX RATES GREEN BUDGET GERMANY (GBG) EFR in Denmark: General Tax- Tax rate national cur- Tax rate – Name Typ Specific Tax-Base Base rency Euro € Denmark Waste manage- Charge on batte- ment - individual Lead batteries - car 1.61 € per ries Fee/Charge products batteries < 100 Ah 12.00 DKK per unit. unit. Waste manage- Charge on batte- ment - individual Lead batteries - car 3.23 € per ries Fee/Charge products batteries > 100 Ah 24.00 DKK per unit. unit. Waste manage- Charge on batte- ment - individual 2.42 € per ries Fee/Charge products Lead batteries - other 18.00 DKK per unit. unit. Waste manage- 33.6 - Charge on ha- ment - individual 250 - 88,000 DKK 11828 € zardous waste Fee/Charge products Hazardous waste per tonne per tonne. 185.20 € per Charge on mu- household nicipal waste 1378.00 DKK per per year collection / Waste manage- household per year on aver- treatment Fee/Charge ment - in general Municipal waste on average age. 2.20 € per Charge on sewa- Management of 16.40 DKK per m3 m3 on a- ge discharge Fee/Charge water resources Water consumption on average verage Duty on carrier Waste manage- bags made of pa- ment - individual Carrier bags made of 1.34 € pr per, plastics, etc. Tax products paper 10.00 DKK pr kg kg. Duty on carrier Waste manage- bags made of pa- ment - individual Carrier bags made of 2.96 € pr per, plastics, etc. Tax products plastics 22.00 DKK pr kg kg. 0.27 € per kg net Duty on certain 2.00 DKK per kg net weight of chlorinated sol- Hazardous che- weight of the sub- the sub- vents Tax micals Dichloromethane stance.
    [Show full text]
  • Environmental Taxes and Subsidies: What Is the Appropriate Fiscal Policy for Dealing with Modern Environmental Problems?
    William & Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review Volume 24 (2000) Issue 1 Environmental Justice Article 6 February 2000 Environmental Taxes and Subsidies: What is the Appropriate Fiscal Policy for Dealing with Modern Environmental Problems? Charles D. Patterson III Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmelpr Part of the Environmental Law Commons, and the Tax Law Commons Repository Citation Charles D. Patterson III, Environmental Taxes and Subsidies: What is the Appropriate Fiscal Policy for Dealing with Modern Environmental Problems?, 24 Wm. & Mary Envtl. L. & Pol'y Rev. 121 (2000), https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmelpr/vol24/iss1/6 Copyright c 2000 by the authors. This article is brought to you by the William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository. https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmelpr ENVIRONMENTAL TAXES AND SUBSIDIES: WHAT IS THE APPROPRIATE FISCAL POLICY FOR DEALING WITH MODERN ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS? CHARLES D. PATTERSON, III* 1 Oil spills and over-fishing threaten the lives of Pacific sea otters. Unusually warm temperatures are responsible for an Arctic ice-cap meltdown. 2 Contaminated drinking water is blamed for the spread of avian influenza from wild waterfowl to domestic chickens.' Higher incidences of skin cancer are projected, due to a reduction in the ozone layer. Our environment, an essential and irreplaceable resource, has been under attack since the industrial age began. Although we have harnessed nuclear energy, made space travel commonplace, and developed elaborate communications technology, we have been unable to effectively eliminate the erosion and decay of our environment. How can we deal with these and other environmental problems? Legislators have many methods to encourage or discourage individual or corporate conduct.
    [Show full text]
  • FINANCE Offshore Finance.Pdf
    This page intentionally left blank OFFSHORE FINANCE It is estimated that up to 60 per cent of the world’s money may be located oVshore, where half of all financial transactions are said to take place. Meanwhile, there is a perception that secrecy about oVshore is encouraged to obfuscate tax evasion and money laundering. Depending upon the criteria used to identify them, there are between forty and eighty oVshore finance centres spread around the world. The tax rules that apply in these jurisdictions are determined by the jurisdictions themselves and often are more benign than comparative rules that apply in the larger financial centres globally. This gives rise to potential for the development of tax mitigation strategies. McCann provides a detailed analysis of the global oVshore environment, outlining the extent of the information available and how that information might be used in assessing the quality of individual jurisdictions, as well as examining whether some of the perceptions about ‘OVshore’ are valid. He analyses the ongoing work of what have become known as the ‘standard setters’ – including the Financial Stability Forum, the Financial Action Task Force, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. The book also oVers some suggestions as to what the future might hold for oVshore finance. HILTON Mc CANN was the Acting Chief Executive of the Financial Services Commission, Mauritius. He has held senior positions in the respective regulatory authorities in the Isle of Man, Malta and Mauritius. Having trained as a banker, he began his regulatory career supervising banks in the Isle of Man.
    [Show full text]
  • Ecotaxes: a Comparative Study of India and China
    Ecotaxes: A Comparative Study of India and China Rajat Verma ISBN 978-81-7791-209-8 © 2016, Copyright Reserved The Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bangalore Institute for Social and Economic Change (ISEC) is engaged in interdisciplinary research in analytical and applied areas of the social sciences, encompassing diverse aspects of development. ISEC works with central, state and local governments as well as international agencies by undertaking systematic studies of resource potential, identifying factors influencing growth and examining measures for reducing poverty. The thrust areas of research include state and local economic policies, issues relating to sociological and demographic transition, environmental issues and fiscal, administrative and political decentralization and governance. It pursues fruitful contacts with other institutions and scholars devoted to social science research through collaborative research programmes, seminars, etc. The Working Paper Series provides an opportunity for ISEC faculty, visiting fellows and PhD scholars to discuss their ideas and research work before publication and to get feedback from their peer group. Papers selected for publication in the series present empirical analyses and generally deal with wider issues of public policy at a sectoral, regional or national level. These working papers undergo review but typically do not present final research results, and constitute works in progress. ECOTAXES: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF INDIA AND CHINA1 Rajat Verma2 Abstract This paper attempts to compare various forms of ecotaxes adopted by India and China in order to reduce their carbon emissions by 2020 and to address other environmental issues. The study contributes to the literature by giving a comprehensive definition of ecotaxes and using it to analyse the status of these taxes in India and China.
    [Show full text]
  • International Trade, National Treatment, and Domestic Regulation Author(S): Robert W
    The University of Chicago The University of Chicago Law School International Trade, National Treatment, and Domestic Regulation Author(s): Robert W. Staiger and Alan O. Sykes Source: The Journal of Legal Studies, Vol. 40, No. 1 (January 2011), pp. 149-203 Published by: The University of Chicago Press for The University of Chicago Law School Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/658402 . Accessed: 28/09/2011 12:58 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. The University of Chicago Press, The University of Chicago, The University of Chicago Law School are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Journal of Legal Studies. http://www.jstor.org International Trade, National Treatment, and Domestic Regulation Robert W. Staiger and Alan O. Sykes Existing formal models of the relationship between trade policy and regulatory policy suggest the potential for a regulatory race to the bottom. World Trade Organization (WTO) rules and disputes, however, center on complaints about excessively stringent regulations. This paper bridges the gap between the existing formal literature and the actual pattern of rules and disputes. Employing the terms-of-trade framework for the modeling of trade agreements, we show how “large” nations may have an incentive to impose discriminatory product standards against imported goods once border instruments are constrained and how inefficiently strin- gent standards may emerge under certain circumstances even if regulatory discrimination is prohibited.
    [Show full text]
  • Tax Heavens: Methods and Tactics for Corporate Profit Shifting
    Tax Heavens: Methods and Tactics for Corporate Profit Shifting By Mark Holtzblatt, Eva K. Jermakowicz and Barry J. Epstein MARK HOLTZBLATT, Ph.D., CPA, is an Associate Professor of Accounting at Cleveland State University in the Monte Ahuja College of Business, teaching In- ternational Accounting and Taxation at the graduate and undergraduate levels. axes paid to governments are among the most significant costs incurred by businesses and individuals. Tax planning evaluates various tax strategies in Torder to determine how to conduct business (and personal transactions) in ways that will reduce or eliminate taxes paid to various governments, with the objective, in the case of multinational corporations, of minimizing the aggregate of taxes paid worldwide. Well-managed entities appropriately attempt to minimize the taxes they pay while making sure they are in full compliance with applicable tax laws. This process—the legitimate lessening of income tax expense—is often EVA K. JERMAKOWICZ, Ph.D., CPA, is a referred to as tax avoidance, thus distinguishing it from tax evasion, which is illegal. Professor of Accounting and Chair of the Although to some listeners’ ears the term tax avoidance may sound pejorative, Accounting Department at Tennessee the practice is fully consistent with the valid, even paramount, goal of financial State University. management, which is to maximize returns to businesses’ ownership interests. Indeed, to do otherwise would represent nonfeasance in office by corporate managers and board members. Multinational corporations make several important decisions in which taxation is a very important factor, such as where to locate a foreign operation, what legal form the operations should assume and how the operations are to be financed.
    [Show full text]
  • International Journal of Islamic Economics and Finance Studies
    IJISEF INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ISLAMIC ECONOMICS AND FINANCE STUDIES Uluslararası İslam Ekonomisi ve Finansı Araştırmaları Dergisi November 2016, Kasım 2016, Vol: 2, Issue: 3 Cilt: 2, Sayı: 3 e-ISSN: 2149-8407 p-ISSN: 2149-8407 journal homepage: http://ijisef.org/ Islamic Perspective on the Impact of Ethics and Tax for Nigerian Economic Development Almustapha A. Aliyu Department of Accounting, University of Sokoto, [email protected] Mohammed Yusuf Alkali Department of Accounting, Federal Polytechnic Birnin Kebbi, [email protected] Ibrahim Alkali Ministry of Finance Birnin Kebbi, [email protected] ARTICLE INFO ABSTRACT The tax system, policies, and structures have been one of the significant factors that directly affect the social and economic activities of any nation. Despite the importance of tax, the attitude of the taxpayers, their reaction concerning tax, could in greater sense facilitate or draw back the policies Keywords: Ethics, Tax and system from their original intention and purposes, particularly from Evasion, Tax an Islamic perspective. Islamic tax income is for the benefits of poor, Avoidance, Nigerian needy and less privileged people in the society. Even though, policies on Economy, Economic tax approved tax avoidance and made it legal, however, tax evasion is Development illegal in all society because it will deviate from its purpose. The most significant point, however, evading taxes by the people is viewed as unethical behaviour in any economy as the consequences could be greater to the economy and society. Several countries used Islamic system of tax because of the ethics of the system and possibly fewer evasions by the Muslims. Given that, with the number of the Nigerian Muslims, adoption of Islamic tax system will improve the revenue generation, and © 2016 PESA All rights thereby enhance the economic development of Nigerian economy.
    [Show full text]
  • What's Wrong with a Federal Inheritance Tax? Wendy G
    University of Baltimore Law ScholarWorks@University of Baltimore School of Law All Faculty Scholarship Faculty Scholarship Spring 2014 What's Wrong with a Federal Inheritance Tax? Wendy G. Gerzog University of Baltimore School of Law, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.law.ubalt.edu/all_fac Part of the Estates and Trusts Commons, Taxation-Federal Commons, Taxation-Federal Estate and Gift ommonC s, and the Tax Law Commons Recommended Citation What's Wrong with a Federal Inheritance Tax?, 49 Real Prop. Tr. & Est. L.J. 163 (2014-2015) This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Scholarship at ScholarWorks@University of Baltimore School of Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Faculty Scholarship by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@University of Baltimore School of Law. For more information, please contact [email protected]. WHAT'S WRONG WITH A FEDERAL INHERITANCE TAX? Wendy C. Gerzog* Synopsis: Scholars have proposed a federal inheritance tax as an alternative to the current federal transfer taxes, but that proposal is seriously flawed. In any inheritance tax model, scholars should expect to see significantly decreased compliance rates and increased administrative costs because, by focusing on the transferees instead of on the transferor, an inheritance tax would multiply the number oftaxpayers subject to the tax. This Article reviews common characteristics ofexisting inheritance tax systems in the United States and internationally-particularly in Europe. In addition, the Article analyzes the novel Comprehensive Inheritance Tax (CIT) proposal, which combines some elements of existing inheritance tax systems with some features ofthe current transfer tax system and delivers the CIT through the federal income tax system.
    [Show full text]
  • Consumption Taxation
    74 Consumption taxation Consumption taxation interest, debt repayment). This approach is often characterized as the R (for real transactions) base Gilbert E. Metcalf approach, a terminology credited to Meade (Institute Tufts University for Fiscal Studies 1973). Alternatively, one can in- clude all financial transactions (R + F base). Thus, Taxation based on consumption, as opposed all cash proceeds are included as taxable income, to some other measure of ability to pay, and all cash outflows are deducted. So long as the most notably income. same tax rate applies to all transactions, these two approaches generate the same tax consequences to a Forms of consumption taxes firm. The present discounted value of taxes paid on proceeds from borrowing, for example, should just To understand the different ways in which con- equal the present discounted value of taxes saved by sumption taxes can be implemented, it is useful to deducting principal and interest on that debt. The begin with the Haig-Simons definition of income: R + F approach is better suited for use in taxing income (Y ) equals consumption (C ) plus changes in financial services where value added is difficult to wealth (W ) (Y = C + ∆W ) . First, note that the key disentangle from financial activities (borrowing and difference between income and consumption taxa- lending). tion is the inclusion or exclusion of ∆W in the tax As an accounting identity, value added is allo- base. Changes in wealth—or savings—are not taxed cated to workers (wages) and capital owners (divi- by consumption taxes but are taxed by income taxes. dends and retained earnings).
    [Show full text]
  • Financial Transaction Tax: a Discussion Paper on Fiscal and Economic
    Financial transaction tax: A discussion paper on fiscal and economic implications June 2013 The political debate surrounding the financial transaction tax has become fixated on the simplistic common denominator: collecting money, penalising banks, assuaging the markets and establishing justice. These winsome and appealing demands currently enjoy broad support in Germany. With public approval at 82% according to the European Commission's Eurobarometer survey, positive sentiment is highest in Germany ahead of both France and Greece, where approval is at 75%. And so it appears that the political common denominator has been found! However, from a macroeconomic perspective the crux is whether it would ultimately be possible to satisfy regulatory and fiscal demands by introducing the financial transaction tax. Doubts are not unwarranted in this regard. Is the financial transaction tax capable of fulfilling the necessary functions of financing, distribution and steering? Although the specific embodiment of the financial transaction tax remains nebulous for the time being, if one takes a long-term, holistic view, the direct and indirect costs of introducing such a tax appear to outweigh the benefits. The following observations summarise the manifest flaws in the concept, as well as the financial and real economic ramifications of those flaws, which have not been given sufficient consideration. In June 2012, the German federal government and the opposition published a green paper, in which they promised "to assess the impact the tax would have on pension assets, retail investors and the real economy, and to avoid negative consequences".1 It is becoming clear that this promise is untenable. In fact, a financial transaction tax is incapable of sensibly and expediently fulfilling any of the three necessary functions of a tax: financing, distribution and steering.
    [Show full text]