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Fresh Ideas Emerge for New EU Budget Levies

The European Parliament is considering new EU own resources that would tax online gambling, speculative real estate investment, and large companies through a turnover-based CORE contribution. The proposals expose significant legal and institutional constraints, including unanimity requirements, subsidiarity limits, especially for gambling, and unresolved questions about where digitally delivered activity should be taxed. Academic analysis warned that CORE could lead to multiple counting within corporate groups and impose tax liabilities that are disconnected from profitability, raising concerns about neutrality, legal characterization, and enforceability.  

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Impact of Environmental Measures on International Trade (with focus on EU CBAM & WTO law)

  • By Anshita Jain
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This paper examines the interaction between environmental policy and international trade law, focusing on the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM). It analyzes how CBAM may function as a de facto tax on imports and evaluates its compatibility with WTO non-discrimination principles. The piece highlights tensions between climate policy and global trade obligations, raising implications for cross-border tax policy and enforcement. It is particularly relevant for understanding how environmental measures can reshape international tax and trade frameworks.

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Carbon Taxes and ESG Compensation

  • By Rainer Niemann
  • By Anna Rohlfing-Bastian
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This paper examines how carbon taxation interacts with executive compensation structures tied to ESG performance metrics. It highlights how environmental tax policies influence firm-level incentives and cross-border corporate behavior. The analysis is relevant to international tax discussions as carbon taxes increasingly function as quasi-border adjustments and interact with global tax coordination efforts. It contributes to broader debates on how tax systems incorporate sustainability objectives and affect multinational decision-making.

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Dynamic Adjustment to Trade Shocks

  • By Junyuan Chen
  • By Carlos Góes
  • By Marc-Andreas Muendler
  • By Fabian Trottner
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This study examines how firms and economies adjust over time to trade shocks, including tariffs and global supply disruptions. It provides empirical evidence on how trade policy changes influence production, investment, and cross-border economic activity. The findings are relevant to international tax policy because trade shocks often trigger changes in profit allocation, transfer pricing strategies, and jurisdictional tax bases. The paper helps contextualize how tax systems respond to shifting global trade dynamics.

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Tax Compliance Costs of Pillar Two – A Qualitative Study

  • By Sarah Daxenberger
  • By Frank Hechtner
  • By Marius Weiß
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This paper evaluates the administrative and compliance burdens associated with the OECD’s Pillar Two global minimum tax regime. Through qualitative analysis, it highlights the complexity multinational enterprises face in implementing new reporting and calculation requirements. The study raises concerns about disproportionate compliance costs relative to expected revenue gains. It contributes to ongoing discussions about the practicality and efficiency of global minimum tax rules in international tax policy.

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OECD Pillar Two and U.S. GILTI: Comparative Analysis and Policy Implications for Multinational Tax Compliance

  • By Sourav Kumar Gupta
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This paper analyzes the interaction between OECD Pillar Two and the U.S. GILTI regime, evaluating their combined impact on multinational tax compliance and global minimum tax policy.

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The Sovereignty Paradox: Digital Services Taxes, Political Jurisprudence and the Limits of State Power in the Digital Economy

  • By Arif Ansari
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This paper explores the tension between national tax sovereignty and global digital markets, analyzing how digital services taxes challenge traditional limits on state power.

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How the U.S. Constitution Shapes International Tax Law: Instrument Choice in Tax Agreements

  • By Noam Noked, Young Ran (Christine) Kim, and Reuven S. Avi-Yonah
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The authors explore how constitutional constraints influence the United States’ approach to international tax agreements, particularly the choice between treaties and executive agreements.

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Digital Services Taxes and the WTO

  • By Reuven S. Avi-Yonah
  • By Doron Narotzki
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This paper examines whether digital services taxes comply with WTO obligations and analyzes their role in the broader landscape of international tax coordination. 

Citation: Avi-Yonah, Reuven S. and Narotzki, Doron, Digital Services Taxes and the WTO (March 14, 2026). U of Michigan Law & Econ Research Paper Forthcoming, 121 Tax Notes Int’l 1223 (2026)

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International Tax Reform and Multinational Corporate Behavior: Conceptual Insights from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act

  • By Sourav Kumar Gupta
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The paper explores how recent international tax reforms could influence the behavior of multinational corporations, focusing on incentives related to profit shifting, investment location, and tax competition.

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Fiscal Limits to Protectionism: The 2025 U.S. Tariff Laffer Curve

  • By Pau Pujolas
  • By Jack Rossbach
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This paper examines whether increasing tariffs can eventually reduce government revenue by shrinking trade flows, applying the concept of a Laffer Curve to recent U.S. tariff policy and global trade dynamics.

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