The Troubling Role of Tax Treaties

Kim Brooks, Richard Krever

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

    Abstract

    The notional purpose of tax treaties is to prevent double taxation and tax evasion. The actual purpose is to reallocate taxing rights between an investor’s home jurisdiction (the residence state) and the host jurisdiction (the source state). The effect is to reduce or remove the taxing rights of a source state (a capital importing state) to leave more room for tax in the residence state (a capital exporting state). The revenue costs of agreeing to reduce taxing rights in a treaty are thought to be offset by other benefits. The benefits may be exaggerated. To the extent they may actually be realized, all can likely be achieved more efficiently through unilateral action by the source state.

    Original languageCanadian English
    Title of host publicationThe Troubling Role of Tax Treaties
    Publication statusPublished - Jan. 1 2015

    Keywords

    • Tax Treaties
    • Taxing Rights
    • Jurisdictional Issues
    • Critique

    Disciplines

    • International Law
    • Jurisdiction
    • Law
    • Law and Economics
    • Taxation-Transnational
    • Tax Law

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