Event details

Date

Tuesday June 3rd
Wednesday June 4th

Time

Location

Barcelona

The workshop is organised jointly by the IEB, the University of Barcelona and the EU Tax Observatory. It will take place at the Faculty of Economics and Business of the University of Barcelona on the 3rd and 4th of June 2025.

It will feature presentations by leading economists on various topics related to public economics. The sessions will cover topics ranging from corporate taxation, offshore wealth, wealth taxation, to inheritance taxation, taxes and inequality and the incidence of taxes.

We are also happy to have two keynote speakers: Dina Pomeranz (University of Zurich) and Youssef Benzarti (University of California, Santa Barbara).

 

Call for Papers

We welcome empirical and theoretical submissions on any topic in the economics of taxation. Contributions on tax evasion, tax enforcement, profit shifting, redistribution and inequality are particularly welcome. Completed manuscripts are highly encouraged.

Submission deadline: 14th March 2025
Acceptance decision: 31st March 2025


Completed manuscripts must be submitted here

Scientific committee:

  • Sofía Balladares – University of Barcelona & IEB
  • Dirk Foremny – Universitat de Barcelona & IEB
  • Manon Francois – Stanford Graduate School of Business & Skatteforsk
  • Panayiotis Nicolaides – EU Tax Observatory
  • Luca Salvadori – Autonomous University of Barcelona
  • Gabriel Zucman – UC Berkeley and Paris School of Economics

No registration fee.

Limited financial assistance is available for Ph.D. researchers.

Event details

Date

Friday September 20th
Friday June 6th

Time

12:00 pm - 1:00 pm

Location

Hybrid

Paris School of Economics

Online

The increased global mobility of capital and labour poses a number of challenges to national tax systems: intricate global structures to hide personal wealth from the eyes of tax administrators and regulators, conflicts about the international allocation of taxing rights, a fast-evolving international tax policy landscape. The seminar focuses on the topic of taxation in the global economy and aims to bring together international junior and senior researchers working on international taxation, tax avoidance and evasion, tax competition, tax harmonization and related topics. Presentations can be polished papers or work in progress. The aim is to learn from each other and to discuss in a friendly atmosphere.

The seminar takes place at Paris School of Economics and via Zoom.

Sign-up for the seminar mailing list here.

If you would like to book a private time slot to meet the speaker, please email Ninon Moreau-Kastler ninon.moreau-kastler@psemail.eu or Léo Czajka leo.czajka@psemail.eu specifying which session.

This project has received funding from the European Union (TAXUD/2022/DE/310).

 

2024-25 Calendar

Friday 13 June 2025 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

Ilyana Kuziemko (Princeton)

 

Past seminars:

Friday 23 May 2025 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

Lin Tian (INSEAD): Firm Networks and Tax Compliance: Experimental Evidence from Uganda

 

Friday 16 May 2025 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

Erin Troland (Federal Reserve Board): The Role of Property Assessment Oversight in School Finance Inequality

 

Friday 25 April 2025 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

Isaac Amedanou (Université Jean-Monnet Saint-Etienne, GATE Lyon St-Étienne): Economic Sanctions and Taxation of Natural Resource Rent: Evidence from Spatial Analysis

 

Friday 4 April 2025 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

Sebastian Siegloch (University of Cologne): Welfare Effects of Property Taxation

 

Friday 11 April 2025 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

Antoine Ferey (SciencesPo, CESifo, IPP-PSE): Redistribution and Unemployment Insurance

 

Friday 28 March 2025 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

Isabela Manelici (LSE): The Gains from Foreign Multinationals in an Economy with Distortions

 

Friday 21 March 2025 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

Lucie Gadenne (Queen Mary, IFS): When Private Firms Provide Public Goods: The Allocation of CSR Spending

 

Friday 14 March 2025 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

Isabelle Méjean (Sciences Po): Firms’ Supply Chain Adaptation to Carbon Taxes

 

Friday 7 March 2025 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

Céline Azemar (Rennes School of Business): Controversial Preferential Tax Treatments for Multinational Enterprises in the EU: Evidence from Spain

 

Friday 14 February 2025 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

Bob Rijkers (World Bank, Utrecht University): How (in)efficient are governments? Evidence from matched customs transactions data with Manuel Garcia-Santana and Devaki Ghose

 

Friday 13 December 2024 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

KNEBELMANN Justine (Sciences Po): Discretion versus Algorithms: Bureaucrats and Tax Equity in Senegal

 

Friday 29 November 2024 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

Arthur Guillouzouic Le Corff (CNRS, AMSE, PSE-IPP): Taxing Wealth in the Presence of Liquidity Constraints: Evidence from France

 

Friday 18 October 2024 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

WALLOSSEK Luisa (University of Oslo): The Marriage Earnings Gap

 

Friday 8 November 2024 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

Maarten van’t Riet (Tilburg University): Tax avoidance by redirecting royalty flows: estimating the global revenue loss with Arjan Lejour (Tilburg University)

 

Friday 4 October 2024 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

LANGENMAYR Dominika (KU Eichstätt-Ingolstadt): Navigating the Amazon: The Incidence of Digital Service Taxes

 

Friday 27 September 2024 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

KYSAR Rebecca (Fordham University): The Global Tax Deal and the New International Economic Governance

 

Friday 20 September 2024 12:00-13:00 │ R1-14

GOUPILLE-LEBRET Jonathan (ENS LYON): Tax Design, Information, and Elasticities: Evidence From the French Wealth Tax with Bertrand GARBINTI, Mathilde MUNOZ, Stefanie STANTCHEVA, and Gabriel ZUCMAN

Event details

Date

Tuesday May 13th

Time

Location

Brussels

The EU Tax Observatory’s annual high-level policy event, “Competition or Cooperation? EU Tax Policies for Tomorrow”, will delve into the dynamic relationship between tax policy, competition, and cooperation within the European Union.

Held at a time of renewed momentum following the launch of the EU Competition Compass, this year’s edition will examine how tax policies can help create a fairer and more competitive economic environment. Discussions will focus on how tax coordination can foster inclusive economic growth, support equality, and align with both EU and international frameworks.

The event will feature a series of high-level panels and keynote speeches, including sessions on the shifting dynamics of corporate tax competition, the impact of unfair wealth tax competition, and the role of tax enforcement in a globalized economy. Prominent speakers include representatives from the European Commission and Parliament, civil society, academia, and business, with voices such as Gerassimos Thomas (European Commission), Pasquale Tridico (European Parliament), Gabriel Zucman (EU Tax Observatory), and Marlene Engelhorn (Tax Me Now) contributing to the dialogue.

Bringing together policymakers, experts, and stakeholders, this event offers a timely platform for shaping the future of EU tax policy.

🎥 The video recording is available on our YouTube channel.

Event details

Date

Tuesday May 13th

Time

Location

Brussels

The EU Tax Observatory 

Young Researcher Award in Public Finance

The EU Tax Observatory invites the submission of research papers from PhD students or postdoctoral scholars for its annual Young Researcher Award. The Award encourages and recognizes innovative research in the field of public finance, in particular in the analysis of tax evasion and avoidance, wealth taxation, illicit financial flows, taxation of multinationals and environment related fiscal policies. The nomination of empirical papers with direct implications for EU tax policy is especially encouraged.

Purpose

The increase in global mobility of capital and labour poses significant challenges for national tax systems. Numerous leaks have exposed intricate global structures used to hide personal wealth or avoid corporate income tax. Meanwhile, the rise of the digital economy makes it more difficult to determine the location of value creation, thus fuelling the debate about the international allocation of taxing rights. At the same time, as the risks associated with climate change grow, the need for global, coordinated fiscal policies to reduce environmental externalities has never been more urgent. Governments must work together to implement tax measures that discourage harmful activities, such as carbon emissions and resource depletion, while incentivizing sustainable practices. As a response to these developments, countries have risen to the occasion by reaching international agreements, such as the automatic exchange of information, the global corporate minimum tax or the EU’s carbon border adjustment mechanism. Nevertheless, their effectiveness in tackling tax evasion, tax avoidance, and environmental harm remains to be studied. Early career researchers are at the frontier of this assessment. Exciting times for tax research!

The Prize

Submissions will be evaluated by the EU Tax Observatory’s award committee based on the following selection criteria: 

  • Original research question 
  • Scientific quality
  • Innovative approach
  • Policy relevance

The winner will receive a EUR 2000 award, presented at our high-level event in Brussels on May 13th, 2025.

Who can apply?

Researchers must be nominated by an academic supervisor. All PhD students or postdoctoral scholars in the field of economics of any nationality and country of residence are eligible. The final decision of the committee will be communicated on April 25th at the latest. The award recipient must be available to come present their work during the EU Tax Observatory’s event in Brussels on May 13th, 2025 (accommodation and travel costs will be covered).

How to apply? 

Submit nominations to yr_award@taxobservatory.eu until April 6th, 2025.

Submissions should include (in PDF format):

  • A short recommendation letter by the supervisor (a few paragraphs).
  • The research paper.

Event details

Date

Wednesday April 30th

Time

12:30 pm - 2:00 pm

Location

Room 2-21,Paris School of Economics

The Offshore Talks #3
Offshore: Stealth Wealth and the New Colonialism

 

Special Guest: Brooke Harrington – Professor of Economic Sociology, Dartmouth College.

🎥 The video recording is available on our YouTube channel.

🗓️ 30 April 2025 │12:30-14:00 (CET)

🌐 Language: English

📍 Room R2-21, Paris School of Economics, 48 Bd Jourdan, 75014 Paris

Join us for the third lecture in our Offshore Talks series with Brooke Harrington, author of Offshore: Stealth Wealth and the New Colonialism.

In her latest book, economic sociologist Brooke Harrington exposes how the shadowy global system of offshore finance fuels economic crises and austerity while also undermining democracy and the rule of law. As politicians struggle to address the deepening economic and political inequality destabilizing the world, Harrington’s exposé of the offshore system is a vital resource for understanding the most pressing crises of our time.

This event promises a thought-provoking exploration of the hidden mechanisms that enable wealth to escape taxation, regulation, and accountability. Drawing on years of immersive research, Harrington will reveal how offshore finance shapes global power structures and impacts everyday lives.

Join us for an engaging discussion, followed by a Q&A session, where you’ll have the opportunity to delve deeper into the implications of her research.

📝 Agenda: 

  • 12:00 – 12:30 Lunch
  • 12:30 – 13:15 Lecture
  • 13:15 – 13:45 Panel discussion with Christian Chavagneux (Alternatives Economiques)
  • 13:45 – 14:00 Q&A session

This event is FREE and open to all, but seats are limited! Register to secure your place.

Event details

Date

Tuesday April 8th
Wednesday April 9th

Time

Location

Paris School of Economics

International Conference on “Taxing Billionaires”

The public event is organized by the PSE Stone Center in collaboration with the EU Tax Observatory, the World Inequality Lab, the Institut des Politiques Publiques, and École Normale Supérieure.

About the Conference

The Taxing Billionaires conference brings together leading researchers, legal scholars, and policymakers to advance the discussion on the effective taxation of the super-rich. Over two days, participants will explore methodologies, share research insights, and discuss coordinated policy solutions. This event aims to address the issue of effective tax rates for the super-rich, with a focus on fostering collaboration and actionable insights across the academic, legal and policy communities.

Key Highlights

📌 Opening Remarks by Gabriel Zucman, Director of the EU Tax Observatory

📌 Fireside Chat with Thomas Piketty, Co-director of the World Inequality Lab

📌 Keynotes by Lucas Chancel, Co-Director of the World Inequality Lab Camille LandaisChairman of the Conseil d’analyse économique

📌 Le Grand Débat between Éric Coquerel, MP & the Chair of the Finance Committee and David Amiel, Deputy of the French National Assembly

Day 1: Strengthening Research Collaboration

🔹 Present the latest research on billionaire taxation across multiple countries

🔹 Harmonize methodologies and share best practices

🔹 Explore opportunities for a joint paper or book publication

Day 2: Policy & Legal Perspectives

🔹 Facilitate a dialogue between researchers, legal scholars, and policymakers

🔹 Discuss the feasibility of a coordinated minimum tax on the super-rich

🔹 Engage with policymakers on global and institutional implementation

Participants

Leading researchers from across the world will present country-specific studies on the effective tax rates of billionaires, using consistent methodologies for cross-country comparisons and experts and policymakers from around the globe to help advance actionable steps towards fulfilling this issue.

Why Attend?

✔ Gain insights from cutting-edge research on billionaire taxation
✔ Connect with global experts working on tax fairness and policy reform
✔ Contribute to a discussion on a coordinated minimum tax for billionaires

This event offers a valuable platform to advance the public debate on tax justice and transparency while fostering engagement with key stakeholders, including policymakers and the academic community. Secure your spot today and be part of this important discussion!

Questions? Contact Us: 📧 communication@taxobservatory.eu

🎥 The video recording is available on our YouTube channel.

Event details

Date

Friday March 28th

Time

2:30 pm - 7:30 am

Location

Royal Irish Academy,19 Dawson Street D02 HH58 Dublin 2 Ireland

Profit-shifting in Ireland and Europe: Where do we stand?

About the event

Join us for an insightful session on the critical and timely topic of corporate tax planning and profit shifting by multinational enterprises, with a special focus on Ireland and the European Union. This event brings together leading voices in the field, featuring thought-provoking keynotes from Mairead McGuinness and Gabriel Zucman, followed by a dynamic panel discussion moderated by Financial Times correspondent Jude Webber. Engage with experts, exchange ideas, and continue the conversation during our dedicated networking session. Don’t miss this opportunity to be part of a critical discussion shaping the future of taxation!

Chaired by Ron Davies Professor at the School of Economics, University College Dublin (UCD)

Keynotes from:

  • Mairead McGuinness former Commissioner for Financial Stability, Financial Services and Capital Markets Union between 2020 and 2024
  • Gabriel Zucman Director of the EU Tax Observatory

Panel Discussion moderated by Jude WebberFinancial Times, featuring:

  • Gabriel Zucman Director of the EU Tax Observatory
  • Danny McCoy CEO IBEC, Irish Business & Employers Confederation
  • Aidan Regan Professor of political economy at the School of Politics and International Relations at University College Dublin (UCD)
  • Yota Deli Assistant Professor at the School of Economics, University College Dublin (UCD)

🎥 The video recording is available on our YouTube channel.

Event details

Date

Friday January 31st

Time

12:30 pm - 2:00 pm

Location

Room 2-21,Paris School of Economics

The Offshore Talks #2
Crack-Up Capitalism: Market Radicals and the Dream of a World Without Democracy

🎥 The video recording is available on our YouTube channel.

Special Guest: Quinn Slobodian – Professor of international history at the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies at Boston University.

Join us for the second lecture in our Offshore Talks series with Quinn Slobodian, author of Crack-Up Capitalism: Market Radicals and the Dream of a World Without Democracy. Dr Slobodian will delve into how free marketeers are realizing their ultimate goal: an end to nation-states and the constraints of democracy.

In the past decade, globalization has fragmented the world into diverse legal territories—free ports, tax havens, and special economic zones. These spaces have emboldened ultracapitalists to imagine a future free from the oversight of democratic governance. Crack-Up Capitalism traces the journeys of radical libertarians—from Milton Friedman to Peter Thiel—as they seek out the ideal environments for unrestrained capitalism.

This event promises a thought-provoking exploration of economic and intellectual history. With its rich narratives and sharp analysis, Crack-Up Capitalism offers both a fresh perspective on global dynamics and a stark warning about emerging threats to democracy.

📝 Agenda: 

  • 12:00 – 12:30 Lunch
  • 12:30 – 13:15 Lecture
  • 13:15 – 13:45 Panel discussion with Gabriel Zucman
  • 13:45 – 14:00 Q&A session

This event is FREE and open to all, but seats are limited! Register by January 27th to secure your place.

The Offshore Talks – An Exploration of Tax Avoidance, Tax Evasion and Illicit Financial Flows

How do the wealthy manage to dodge taxes and hide their fortunes in secret jurisdictions? What is the impact of hidden financial flows on the world economy? It’s time to lift the veil! Join us for The Offshore Talks, a groundbreaking lecture series that dives deep into the world of tax avoidance, tax evasion, and illicit financial flows.

🌍 What’s in Store? Leading voices from economics, law, political science, investigative journalism, and beyond will converge to share their latest research and real-world insights. Get ready for an exciting lineup of distinguished speakers who will help you navigate the hidden mechanisms that shape global inequality.

Event details

Date

Thursday October 10th

Time

6:00 pm - 7:30 pm

Location

Room 2-21,Paris School of Economics

The Offshore Talks – An Exploration of Tax Avoidance, Tax Evasion and Illicit Financial Flows

How do the wealthy manage to dodge taxes and hide their fortunes in secret jurisdictions? What is the impact of hidden financial flows on the world economy? It’s time to lift the veil! Join us for The Offshore Talks, a groundbreaking lecture series that dives deep into the world of tax avoidance, tax evasion, and illicit financial flows.

🌍 What’s in Store? Leading voices from economics, law, political science, investigative journalism, and beyond will converge to share their latest research and real-world insights. Get ready for an exciting lineup of distinguished speakers who will help you navigate the hidden mechanisms that shape global inequality.

The Offshore Talks #1
The Golden Passport: Global Mobility for Millionaires

Special Guest: Dr Kristin Surak – Associate Professor of Political Sociology at the London School of Economics

Join us as we launch the series with Dr Kristin Surak, the author of The Golden Passport: Global Mobility for Millionaires. Dr Surak will present her groundbreaking book on the global market for citizenship. In The Golden Passport, Surak reveals how wealthy individuals can now purchase passports from various countries, gaining increased global mobility and opportunities. Based on a decade of extensive research, she uncovers a hidden industry that shapes global inequality, influences international politics, and challenges traditional notions of national belonging.

Dr Dominika Langenmayr, Professor of Economics at KU Eichstätt-Ingolstadt, will also share her insights on the rise of citizenship-by-investment programs and how they are being used to conceal offshore holdings.

Join us for an insightful exploration of this phenomenon that intersects wealth, mobility, and citizenship in our increasingly globalized world.

 

📝 Agenda: 
  • 17:45-18:00 – Registration
  • 18:00-18:45 – Presentation: The Golden Passport by Kristin Surak
  • 18:45-19:15 – Panel Discussion with Dominika Langenmayr
  • 19:15-19:30 – Q&A Session
  • 19:30-21:00 – Networking and Refreshments

This event is FREE and open to all, but seats are limited! Register by October 6th to secure your place.

Event details

Date

Tuesday September 17th

Time

2:00 pm - 3:00 pm

Location

Room R2-21

Paris School of Economics
48 boulevard Jourdan, 75014 Paris

The Paris School of Economics is pleased to invite you to a lecture by Mordecai Kurz (Stanford University) on the relationship between inequality and technological change.

This event is co-hosted by the PSE Stone Center on Global Wealth Dynamics, the World Inequality Lab and the EU Tax Observatory.

 

REGISTRATION VIA THIS LINK

 

Program

14:00 – Welcome by Gabriel Zucman, Director of the PSE Stone Center on Global Wealth Dynamics and the EU Tax Observatory

14:00-14:40 – Lecture by Mordecai Kurz (Stanford University)

14:40-14:50 – Comment by Thomas Piketty, Co-director the World Inequality Lab

14:50-15:00 – Q&A with the audience

Overview

The lecture will be based on Mordecai Kurz’s latest book The Market Power of Technology: Understanding the Second Gilded Age (Columbia University Press, 2023), where he argues that since the 1980s, the United States has regressed to levels of economic inequality not seen since the Gilded Age of the late nineteenth century. Kurz provides a pioneering analysis that quantifies technological market power and its impacts on inequality, innovation, and economic growth. The book also offers detailed proposals to address these inequalities, including restricting corporate mergers and acquisitions, reforming patent law, balancing power in the labor market, increasing taxation, promoting upward mobility, and stabilizing the middle class.

Mordecai Kurz

Mordecai Kurz is Professor Emeritus of Economics at Stanford University. His previous books include Public Investment, the Rate of Return, and Optimal Fiscal Policy (with Kenneth J. Arrow, 1970) and Endogenous Economic Fluctuations: Studies in the Theory of Rational Beliefs (1997), and he has published widely across many fields of economic theory.

Read more

Event details

Date

Wednesday June 5th
Friday June 7th

Time

Location

Paris School of Economics

Paris School of Economics
48 boulevard Jourdan, 75014 Paris

The Paris School of Economics (PSE) and the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR) are glad to organize the second edition of the PSE-CEPR Policy Forum. The 2024 edition will focus on the theme:

Exploring the Science of the Brazil G20: Building a just world and a sustainable planet

  • Dates: From Wednesday, June 5, to Friday, June 7, 2024
  • Venue: Paris School of Economics
    48 boulevard Jourdan, 75014 Paris

The PSE-CEPR Policy Forum 2024 will be devoted to discussing emerging issues among leading researchers and policymakers, reaching a large audience that includes government officials and legislators, the media and the academia.

Program

Wednesday June 5 | International Taxation | Detailed program

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER FOR JUNE 5

Keynote Lecture: Gabriel Zucman (PSE, École normale supérieure – PSLEU Tax ObservatoryCEPR)

Policy Conversation:

Thursday June 6 | Climate Change Compensation | Detailed program

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER FOR JUNE 6

Keynote Lecture: Esther Duflo (PSE, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyCEPR)

Policy Conversation:

Daniel Cohen Prize:
Ceremony Award Winner of the Daniel Cohen Prize

Friday June 7 | Global Poverty | Detailed program

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER FOR JUNE 7

Keynote Lecture:
Abhijit Banerjee (Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyCEPR)

Policy Conversation:


Organizers:
Edouard Challe (PSE, CNRSCEPR)
Esther Duflo (PSE, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyCEPR)
Jean-Olivier Hairault (PSE, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)
Francesco Pappadà (PSE, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)
Beatrice Weder di Mauro (Geneva Graduate InstituteINSEADCEPR)

Event details

Date

Friday June 7th

Time

12:00 pm - 1:00 pm

Location

Hybrid

Paris School of Economics

Online

The increased global mobility of capital and labour poses a number of challenges to national tax systems: intricate global structures to hide personal wealth from the eyes of tax administrators and regulators, conflicts about the international allocation of taxing rights, a fast-evolving international tax policy landscape. The seminar focuses on the topic of taxation in the global economy and aims to bring together international junior and senior researchers working on international taxation, tax avoidance and evasion, tax competition, tax harmonization and related topics. Presentations can be polished papers or work in progress. The aim is to learn from each other and to discuss in a friendly atmosphere.

The seminar takes place at Paris School of Economics and via Zoom.

If you would like to book a private time slot to meet the speaker, please email Manon Francois (manon.francois@psemail.eu) specifying which session.

This project has received funding from the European Union (TAXUD/2022/DE/310).

 

2023-24 Calendar

June 7th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Anne Brockmeyer (World Bank): Algorithms and Bureaucrats: Evidence from Tax Audit Selection in Senegal

September 15th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Francesco Pappadà (PSE): Rethinking the Informal Economy and the Hugo Effect (joint work with Kenneth Rogoff)

September 22nd – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Evgenyia Dubinina (Charles University): Online Cash Register Policy in Russia: Impact on Prices and Exit Decisions

October 6th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Jakob Miethe (LMU):  Lost in Information: National Implementation of Global Tax Agreements (joint work with Annette Alstadsæter, Elisa Casi-Eberhard, and Barbara Stage)

Ocotber 20th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
André Mathias (INSEE): Do I get my moneyback?: A broader approach to inequality and redistribution in France with a monetary valuation of public services (joint work with Jean-Marc Germain and Michaël Sicsic)

November 10th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Ninon Moreau-Kastler (ENS Paris-Saclay) : No blood in my mobile: regulating foreign suppliers

November 24th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14 – CANCELLED
Georg Wamser (Tübingen University): Effective Corporate Income Taxation and Corruption

December 1st – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14 – CANCELLED
Marcel Olbert (London Business School): The Global Network of Oligarch Companies

January 19th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Ninon Moreau-Kastler (ENS Paris-Saclay & Université PSL) : [Post doc JOB TALK] No blood in my mobile: regulating foreign suppliers

February 2nd – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Elisa Navarra (ECARES – Université libre de Bruxelles) : [Post doc JOB TALK] The Effects of Corporate Subsidies Along Supply Chains

February 9th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Léo Czajka (UCLouvain) : [Post doc JOB TALK] Fraud Detection Under Limited State Capacity: Experimental Evidence From Senegal (joint work with Bassirou Sarr and Mattea Stein)

February 16th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Ségal Le Guern Herry (Sciences Po) : Wealth Taxation and Portfolio Allocation

March 1st – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Olivier Marie (Erasmus School of Economics): Tax-Induced Emigration: Who Flees High Taxes? Evidence from the Netherlands

March 15th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Ron Davies (University College Dublin): Tax Haven Use and Employment Decisions: Evidence from Norway with Johannes Scheuerer

March 22nd – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Lorenzo Garlanda-Longueville (University of Paris Nanterre, EconomiX-CNRS): Why do banks have so many debts in tax havens? with Matthias Lé and Kevin Parra-Ramirez

March 29th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
HUGGER FELIX (OECD) and CINTA GONZALES CABRAL Ana (OECD) : The Global Minimum Tax and the taxation of MNE profit with Massimo Bucci, Maria Gesualdo and Pierce O’Reilly

April 5th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Isabel Martinez (KOF (ETH Zurich), CEPR, CESifo): Earnings Responses to Sudden Wealth: Inheritance, Inter-Vivos Gifts, and Lotteries

April 19th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Jacob Brounstein (Institute of Fiscal Studies) : Retaining your corporate income tax base: Effects of a tax haven shareholdership reform in Ecuador with Pierre Bachas and Alex Bajaña

April 26th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Georg Wamser (University of Tübingen): Effective Corporate Income Taxation and Corruption with Peter Egger, Sean Mc Auliffe and Valeria Merlo

May 3rd – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Barbara Stage (WHU): The Value of a Loss: The Impact of Restricting Tax Loss Transfers with Theresa Bührle, Elisa Casi and Johannes Voget

May 17th – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14
Matteo Paradisi (EIEF): Audit Rule Disclosure and Tax Compliance

May 31st – 12:00-13:00 – R1.14 – CANCELLED
Lin Tian (INSEAD): Leveraging Trading Networks to Improve Tax Compliance: Experimental Evidence from Uganda

 

 

Event details

Date

Thursday March 14th
Friday March 15th

Time

Location

Paris School of Economics

48 Bd Jourdan, 75014 Paris, France

Event description

Convening organisations: European Network on Debt and Development (Eurodad), EU Tax Observatory (EUTO), Global Alliance for Tax Justice (GATJ), ICRICT (Independent Commission for the Reform of International Corporate Taxation), Tax Justice Network, World Inequality Lab

International Policy Research Conference

At the end of 2022, the member states of the United Nations passed unanimously a resolution to begin intergovernmental discussions on proposals for a new international framework for tax cooperation under UN auspices that could open the door to major reforms addressing the shortcoming of our international tax system.

Despite a decade of global tax reform, a report drafted by the UN Secretary General outlined how the current tax rules fails to address inequality both within and between countries.

European countries now have a major opportunity to take part in the negotiation of a UN tax convention that could make powerful strides against the scourge of tax abuse, which contributes to damaging inequalities across the continent and beyond. But despite public demands for progress against tax abuse, there are serious questions over whether European governments will engage fully in the process. The important role of some European countries in facilitating cross-border tax abuse may form part of the explanation; but citizens of all European countries stand to gain from progress.

This two-day conference will bring together researchers from across Europe and beyond, to address questions of inequality and the global tax architecture and question the benefits for Europe and beyond. Societies across Europe face dramatic inequalities of income and wealth, undermining human wellbeing and hitting marginalised groups – including women and those facing overlapping inequalities – the hardest. A major component of these uncontrolled inequalities is the failure of governments to tackle tax abuse by elites and major corporations. As a result, tax systems across the continent fail to deliver direct redistribution to damp down extreme wealth and incomes, and also fail to generate the revenues needed to tackle poverty.

The UN Secretary-General has produced a report setting out the main options for reform, following broad consultation. The central option is for a framework convention on tax. This could deliver both concrete progress on specific areas to curb cross-border tax abuse (estimated to cost the world almost half a trillion dollars annually) and other illicit financial flows, and also create a new governance structure for the negotiation of international tax rules.

The current failures in international rules on tax and financial transparency represent a major obstacle to progressive taxation in countries at all levels of per capita income, and therefore contribute powerfully to needlessly high levels of within-country inequality. In addition, the failures are responsible for deeper inequalities in taxing rights between countries, because they result in systematically higher tax losses for lower-income countries as a share of current tax revenues. Establishing the international basis for more effective national taxation is therefore a crucial step to curbing inequalities around the globe. Confronting the climate crisis also requires more effective tax systems, whether in terms of reducing the worst wealth inequalities that appear to be associated with the highest emissions, or ensuring any emissions pricing is effective and fair, for example.

There are three key questions to resolve over the coming period. First, the substance of the convention: what is the appropriate governance structure for future rule-setting that the convention should establish, and which specific areas should be addressed within the convention or its protocols? Earlier work such as Tanzi (1999) outlines the broad scope of potential responsibilities, and a forthcoming report from the EU Tax Observatory will outline some priorities to be addressed globally. Ryding (2022) provides a draft convention text which identifies a range of key issues, and Chowdhary & Picciotto (2021) explore the opportunities of a framework convention in particular. But there is not yet an extensive literature upon which policymakers and negotiators can readily draw to develop a comprehensive agenda, either on specific issues or on the eventual governance structure.

Second, what modalities should be adopted for the negotiations? It seems likely that an ad hoc intergovernmental working group will be established to take these decisions in 2024. The UN Secretary-General’s report points in this direction but does not enter into specifics, while independent analysis (Hugo & Løvold, 2022) indicates a range of possible paths to agreement, as well as multiple instrument types that could be agreed.

The final question is political: with the OECD having largely led the way in setting international tax rules since the 1960s, will its member countries – including those of the EU – accept the shift to a globally inclusive alternative framework? If they oppose it, what are the likely outcomes? Given the central responsibility for cross-border tax abuse of European countries and their dependent territories, what are the likely outcomes of an agreement that includes most European countries, and one that goes ahead without them?

The Africa Group has led the process so far at the UN General Assembly, with strong G77 backing, and the region has detailed common positions that are now being updated by the relevant continental institutions and date back to the original report of the High Level Panel on Illicit Financial Flows out of Africa. The Colombian, Chilean and Brazilian governments are leading a process to explore regional positions, through the recent creation of the Regional Tax Cooperation Platform for Latin America and the Caribbean.

Some OECD members have been the most vocal in opposition (the US, Japan and South Korea in particular). But in Europe, which dominates the OECD’s membership, there has been an almost complete absence of engagement – even as the UN process has moved ahead with growing momentum.

EU countries have also been almost silent, despite being among the largest losers from cross-border tax abuse and often presenting itself as a driver of change. Of the 38 OECD member countries, 22 are EU members. Of the remaining 5 EU members, 3 are in the process of accession to the OECD. The European Parliament has called for the EU and member states to engage fully in the process to negotiate a UN tax convention, but so far to no avail.

This international policy research conference will address these three questions, and has collated a series of papers that explore these questions. The underlying emphasis is on improving the prospects for European engagement in a UN process that can support meaningful progress against tax abuse in European countries and globally, to curb inequalities within and between countries, and to strengthen states’ ability to respond to the climate crisis.

Alongside new research, the conference will include high-level policy panels featuring speakers from the EU, international institutions and global civil society, addressing the future of the international tax architecture.

Who should attend?

This conference is free to attend to everyone and is likely to be of particular interest to academics, journalists, NGOs and policy makers working in the international tax policy space, or with a focus on inequality and human rights.

If you are interested in attending, please register your interest by filling this form. Please note that completing this form does not guarantee attendance. Due to limited venue capacity, attendance will be confirmed to delegates offered a space via email.

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Alongside new research, the conference will include high-level policy panels featuring speakers from the EU, international institutions and global civil society, addressing the future of the international tax architecture.

Chowdhary, A. & Picciotto, S., 2021, ‘Streamlining the Architecture of International Tax through a UN Framework Convention on Tax Cooperation’, Tax Cooperation Policy Brief 21, https://www.southcentre.int/tax-cooperation-policybrief-21-november-2021/.

Hugo, T. & Løvold, M., 2022, A UN Tax Convention? Exploring the merits and feasibility of a new international convention on tax and financial transparency, Norwegian Academy of International Law, https://intlaw.no/en/reports/report-a-un-tax-convention/.

Ryding, T., 2022, Proposal for a United Nations Convention on Tax, Eurodad/Global Alliance for Tax Justice, https://globaltaxjustice.org/news/ground-breaking-civil-society-proposal-for-a-un-convention-on-tax-is-published/.

Tanzi, V., 1999, ‘Is There a Need for a World Tax Organization?’, 173-186 in A, Razin & E. Sadka, The Economics of Globalization: Perspectives from Public Economics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Event details

Date

Monday January 29th

Time

5:30 pm - 7:30 pm

Location

Madrid

Monday, January 29, 2024 the director of the EU Tax Observatory will present the Global Tax Evasion report follow by a panel discussion and Q&A along with a high level political discussion.

Summary

In October 2023, the EU Tax Observatory released the inaugural Global Tax Evasion Report looking at the impact international efforts to fight tax evasion over the past ten years and what remains to be done. The report builds on an unprecedented international research collaboration of more than 100 researchers globally. The report reviews the success of the fight against bank secrecy, the hopes and shortcomings in the fight against corporate tax avoidance and the lack of action regarding the very low taxation of billionaires. This event, organized by the EU Tax Observatory together with IE University brings together Spanish experts from academia, institution, business, civil society and government.

Details

Registration

Registration is free but required to attend. The event is open to the general public.

Event details

Date

Tuesday January 23rd

Time

7:30 pm - 8:30 pm

Location

Paris

Tuesday, January 23, 2024 the director of the EU Tax Observatory will participate in in a debate as part of Le Grand Continent’s “Mardis du Grand Continent” event series at the École Normale Supérieure. The event will be in French.

Summary

What is the current state of tax evasion in the world? Is there a future for the idea of a global minimum tax for multinationals? What would be the most efficient methods and relevant actors to mobilize in the fight against the tax evasion of both companies and individuals? How could the fight against tax evasion help to finance the Green Transition? In an interview with Le Grand Continent, economist Gabriel Zucman discussed the conclusions of the first edition of the EU Tax Observatory’s Global Tax Evasion Report. He returns to discuss these subjects in a debate with a panel.

Details

? January 23, 2024, 19h30 – 20h30

? École Normale Supérieure

Registration

Like all of the “mardis du Grand Continent” events, this event is open to all but registration is required.

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