Australian Tax Treaty Policy: The Dilemma of a Wealthy Capital-Importing Nation
Download FileThis article examines Australia’s tax treaty policy from the perspective of a capital-importing but high-income jurisdiction. It explores the tension between Australia’s interest in protecting its source-country tax base and the constraints imposed by prevailing OECD treaty norms. Through analysis of treaty practice and policy choices, the article highlights structural trade-offs faced by capital-importing countries in negotiating withholding taxes, permanent establishment thresholds, and allocation rules within the existing international tax framework.
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Income Shifting from Transfer Pricing: Further Evidence from Tax Return Data by
Download FileThis article presents new empirical evidence on income shifting through transfer pricing using tax return data. The analysis evaluates the extent to which multinational enterprises continue to reallocate income across jurisdictions despite existing transfer pricing rules and enforcement mechanisms. The findings contribute to ongoing debates about the effectiveness of arm’s-length standards, enforcement capacity, and the empirical foundations underlying international tax reform efforts.
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Citation: McDonald, Michael, Income Shifting from Transfer Pricing: Further Evidence from Tax Return Data, 94 Journal of Public Economics 555 (2010).
Earlier version available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=6022454.
The Pillar Two Regime in the Post-Implementation Era: Structural Mechanics and Geopolitical Fragmentation (2026)
Download FileThis article analyzes the OECD Pillar Two global minimum tax following its initial implementation phase, focusing on the structural mechanics of the regime and emerging signs of geopolitical fragmentation. The author examines how divergent domestic implementation choices, enforcement asymmetries, and coordination challenges affect the operation of the income inclusion rule and undertaxed profits rule. The article highlights risks to coherence and convergence as jurisdictions adapt Pillar Two to local political and fiscal priorities.
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Withholding Taxes in Developing Countries: Relief Method and Tax Sparing in Tax Treaties with OECD Members
Download FileThis article examines how residence-country double tax relief methods and tax sparing provisions shape negotiated withholding tax outcomes in tax treaties between developing countries and OECD member states. Focusing on portfolio dividend withholding taxes, the analysis shows that treaties with credit-method residence countries tend to produce larger gaps between domestic withholding rates and treaty ceilings than treaties with exemption-method partners. The study further demonstrates that tax sparing provisions neutralize this effect, enabling developing countries to sustain higher negotiated withholding taxes. The findings contribute to debates on treaty design, distributive consequences of relief methods, and the role of tax sparing in preserving source-country taxing rights.
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Taxing Mobile Money: Theory and Evidence
Mobile money has become a central digital alternative to traditional banking in developing countries, yet several African governments have introduced taxes on mobile money transactions. This paper develops a model to analyze how such taxes affect payment choices and generate excess burden. The model predicts that taxation reduces mobile money use, with elasticities shaped by access to substitutes and transaction costs. Using the empirical estimates, the excess burden of the tax is quantified at approximately 35 percent of revenue, highlighting both its substantial efficiency costs and its regressive distributional effects.
Pillar Two Side-by-Side Challenges of EU Law, Global Tax Governance, Sovereignty. Comments for a Rational Win-Win Path Forward
The authors argue that the components of the U.S. minimum tax regime in the form of a tax on net CFC tested income, the CAMT and the BEAT, form a dense and overlapping tax structure that imposes significantly higher compliance burdens than EU Pillar Two regimes, undermining any characterization of the U.S. system as a permissive or lightly enforced alternative.
Taxing One Side Hurts the Other: DSTs, BEPS, and Platform Competition
Digital Services Taxes (DSTs) and the OECD/G20 BEPS reforms are central to current efforts to tax multinational digital platforms, yet their interaction remains poorly understood. This article develops a model of a platform that sells hardware to consumers and advertising to firms, with the two sides connected through cross-group network effects. The analysis shows that a DST can produce counterproductive outcomes by reducing domestic tax revenue, weakening downstream price competition, and lowering consumer surplus when the platform shifts activity toward the untaxed side of the market. The analysis further shows that stricter transfer pricing rules, a core component of BEPS, can unintentionally increase profit shifting when network effects are sufficiently strong.
Trade Policy Uncertainty and Supply Chain Disruptions: Firm-Level Evidence from "Liberation Day"
On April 2, 2025, President Donald Trump’s announcement of the “Liberation Day” tariffs created an unexpected and finely targeted episode of trade policy uncertainty, threatening U.S. trading partners with additional tariffs of 10 to 50 percent depending on bilateral negotiations. Using transaction-level U.S. import data, the paper shows that firms responded almost immediately by shifting sourcing away from high-risk countries toward low-risk ones. Total import values remained stable, but this rapid reallocation increased import prices. The adjustment was concentrated among firms with relationship-sticky, contract-dependent, and trade-finance-intensive supply chains, consistent with their elevated exposure had tariffs materialized before renegotiation was possible. These results show that even short-lived episodes of tariff uncertainty can meaningfully disrupt supply chain configurations and raise costs.
Taxing Automation: The Fourth Industrial Revolution in Extractive Industries
The Fourth Industrial Revolution has reshaped extractive industries through automation, remote mining technologies, and artificial intelligence, improving safety and productivity while straining tax frameworks built for human-based operations. This article evaluates how remotely operated mining trucks, autonomous machinery, and robotics complicate payroll taxation, residence taxation, and Value Added Tax (VAT) in South Africa’s extractive sector. Drawing on the Income Tax Act, relevant Double Taxation Agreements, and the OECD Multilateral Instrument, the analysis identifies regulatory gaps in attributing income from automated work, determining corporate residence in digitally mediated operations, and applying VAT to cross-border remote mining services. The article proposes targeted reforms—including a strategic robot-tax design, updated residence guidance for digitally operated enterprises, and refined VAT rules—to preserve revenue, reduce ambiguity, and support inclusive growth amid accelerating technological disruption.
Why EU Revenue Matters: A Case for an EU Digital Levy
This study uses a novel survey of senior German government officials to examine how they systematically adjust fiscal policy in response to economic shocks, particularly a contractionary monetary policy shock. Through randomized vignette treatments, the survey captures how officials update their GDP and inflation expectations under different fiscal-monetary scenarios and identifies their preferred policy responses. The results show that officials tend to react by increasing public debt and cutting government spending, while tax increases play only a limited role, with many opting for a combination of measures rather than a single instrument.
Source: European Law Open, volume 3, issue 4, 2024[