Allocating rights between nations: Legitimacy and justice in international tax policy
Type de ressource
Auteurs/contributeurs
- Ozawa Ozai, Ivan (Auteur)
- Christians, Allison (Collaborateur)
Titre
Allocating rights between nations: Legitimacy and justice in international tax policy
Résumé
Although extreme poverty has decreased in the last decades, we are a long way from eradicating global poverty. Similarly, the world has seen a considerable decrease in global inequality due to recent developments in emerging economies, but overall inequality between nations has risen in the last decades. International tax law may have a relevant role in improving or worsening global inequality. Extensive research has shown that the present international tax system was designed in a way that tends to benefit high-income economies. However, there has been no significant discussion about whether and how international tax law rules should be changed to address global inequality. The main goal of this thesis is to analyze the existing legitimacy and distributive justice issues that limit the ability of lower-income countries to raise tax revenues and consider what can be done to make the current international tax regime more aligned with global justice principles.The thesis builds on the contemporary literature in international political economy and global distributive justice and puts forth a normative framework for allocating the international tax base among states. First, it analyzes some of the legitimacy deficits of the present international tax system. In contrast to prevailing views about improving legitimacy, it demonstrates the shortcomings of focusing solely on making international tax policymaking processes more inclusive and argues for a greater focus on global distributive justice. It then analyzes the main tax theories that have defined international tax relations to date and demonstrates some of their limitations. The final part of the thesis puts forth normative principles that integrate distributive justice and considers the practical implications of the proposed normative framework for some of the most recent issues discussed in international tax policy
Type
Doctoral Thesis
Université
McGill University
Lieu
Montréal
Date
2021
Langue
EN
Titre abrégé
Allocating rights between nations
Extra
Publisher: McGill University
Identifier: https://escholarship.mcgill.ca/concern/theses/rf55zd52x
Référence
Ozawa Ozai, I. (2021). Allocating rights between nations: Legitimacy and justice in international tax policy [Doctoral Thesis, McGill University]. https://escholarship.mcgill.ca/downloads/3n2043814?locale=en
Thèses et Mémoires
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