Fiscal Federalism, Jurisdictional Competition and Tax Coordination: Translating Theory to Policy in the European Union

W. Bratton, J. McCahery
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

This paper applies the economic theories of fiscal federalism and jurisdictional competition to the question whether the juridical presumption favoring decentralization of authority manifested in the European Union's subsidiarity principle has been rebutted in the case the Code of Conduct on Business Taxation. The Code is a pending EU tax coordination initiative that identifies and prohibits a zone of distortionary member state competition respecting taxation of capital. Evaluation of the Code under subsidiarity gives rise to three questions: (1) Whether subsidiarity's decentralization presumption implies a further presumption favoring tax competition; (2) whether subsidiarity's decentralization presumption can be overcome by a purely theoretical showing of distortionary effects of tax competition; and (3) whether, if empirical evidence of distortionary effects is required, the coordination legislation in question must address the empirically-established distortion with adjudicative particularity. The paper reaches a firm answer as to question (1): Subsidiarity does not favor tax competition, remaining neutral on the subject. It brings fiscal federalism theory to bear in reaching this conclusion: Under fiscal federalism the list of legitimate central government functions lengthens as a minimal federation like the EU successfully brings about economic integration by opening national borders to free movement. As member state economies become less heterogeneous and economic interconnections between them increase in number and depth, member state economic policies, particularly taxing and spending policies, cause more fiscal externalities. Fiscal federalism theory also describes allocative inefficiencies in competitive tax systems, particularly with respect to corporate income and commodity taxes, and highlights negative distributional consequences of tax competition. Coordinative initiatives directed to the elimination of resulting inefficiencies in resource allocations therefore hold a legitimate place on the EU's integration agenda. The paper's answers for questions (2) and (3) are more qualified. The strength of both subsidiarity's decentralization presumption and of any rebuttal case depend on political risks and economic factors specific to the situation. In the tax coordination case addressed, the risks turn out to be low, permitting the presumption to be rebutted by a strong theoretical case articulated on a spotty empirical record.
财政联邦制、管辖权竞争与税收协调:欧盟的理论与政策转换
本文运用财政联邦制和管辖权竞争的经济学理论,对欧盟辅助性原则所体现的有利于权力下放的司法推定是否在《营业税行为准则》案例中遭到反驳的问题进行了研究。该准则是一项悬而未决的欧盟税收协调倡议,旨在确定和禁止扭曲的成员国在资本税收方面的竞争区域。对辅助性条件下的《法典》进行评价,可以提出三个问题:(1)辅助性的分权推定是否意味着进一步的有利于税收竞争的推定;(2)是否可以通过对税收竞争扭曲效应的纯理论论证来克服辅助性的分权假设;(3)如果需要扭曲效应的经验证据,那么所讨论的协调立法是否必须以裁决特殊性来解决经验认定的扭曲。本文对问题(1)得出了明确的答案:补贴不利于税收竞争,在这一问题上保持中立。它运用财政联邦制理论得出了这个结论:在财政联邦制下,合法的中央政府职能清单延长了,因为像欧盟这样的最小联邦通过开放国界自由流动成功地实现了经济一体化。随着成员国经济异质性的减少,以及它们之间的经济联系在数量和深度上的增加,成员国的经济政策,特别是税收和支出政策,造成了更多的财政外部性。财政联邦制理论还描述了竞争性税收制度的配置效率低下,特别是在企业所得税和商品税方面,并强调了税收竞争的负面分配后果。因此,旨在消除由此导致的资源分配效率低下的协调行动在欧盟一体化议程上占有合理的地位。本文对问题(2)和(3)的回答更符合要求。辅助机构的分权假设和任何反驳案件的强度取决于具体情况的政治风险和经济因素。在税收协调案例中,风险被证明是低的,这使得假设可以被一个基于零星经验记录的强有力的理论案例所反驳。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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