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Event

Peter Dietsch: Catching Capital

Monday, November 17, 2014 14:30to17:30
Charles Meredith House IHSP seminar room, 1130 avenue des Pins Ouest, Montreal, QC, H3A 1A3, CA

Join us for the final Spiegel Sohmer Tax Policy Colloquium talk of the year. This time, Stikeman Chair in Tax Law welcomes ProfessorPeter Dietsch,Department of Philosophy, Université de Montréal.

While each presentation takes place in a classroom setting, students, faculty and the general public are welcome to attend.

Abstract

When individuals stash away their wealth in offshore bank accounts and multinational corporations shift their profits or their actual production to low-tax jurisdictions, this undermines the fiscal autonomy of political communities and contributes to rising inequalities in income and wealth. These practices are fuelled by tax competition, with countries strategically designing fiscal policy to attract capital from abroad

Building on a careful analysis of the ethical challenges raised by a world of tax competition, the book puts forward a normative and institutional framework to regulate the practice. In short, individuals and corporations should pay tax in the jurisdictions of which they are members, where this membership can come in degrees. Moreover, the strategic tax setting of states should be limited in important ways. An International Tax Organisation (ITO) should be created to enforce the principles of tax justice.

The author defends this call for reform against two important objections. First, Dietsch refutes the suggestion that regulating tax competition will harm economic efficiency. Second, he argues that regulation of this sort, rather than representing a constraint on national sovereignty, in fact turns out to be a requirement of sovereignty in a global economy. The book closes with a series of reflections on the obligations that the beneficiaries of tax competition have towards the losers both prior to any institutional reform and in its aftermath.

is Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the Université de Montréal, where he works on questions of distributive justice with particular emphasis on the application of philosophical theories through social instruments including the tax system. His work is widely published, including a recent article titled “Tax Competition and Global Background Justice” in The Journal of Political Philosophy. He is also working on a book on tax competition entitled “Catching Capital”.

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