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International commercial agreements: a primer on drafting, negotiating, and resolving disputes
In: Kluwer Law International
Understanding administrative law
In: The understanding series
Strategic options for urban infrastructure management
In: Urban Management Programme 17
In: Urban management and infrastructure
In: Urban Management Programme policy paper
State Tax Policy: A Political Perspective by David Brunori. Washington, DC: Urban Institute Press, 2001, 156 pp., (USD)25.00
In: Journal of policy analysis and management: the journal of the Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management, Band 22, Heft 1, S. 151-152
ISSN: 0276-8739
The Personal Income Tax as a Component of State Tax Structure
This Article evaluates the pros and cons of a state individual income tax from the perspective of an economist. The Article examines the income tax as one component of a tax structure that is best suited for raising a given level of revenues. The important assumption in the analysis is that the level of state public expenditures is determined by residents' demand for public services. This assumption does not preclude the tax structure from allowing greater or lesser expenditures than are demanded during any single year; rather, the assumption is that over time tax levels provide revenues that are in accord with consumer preferences for public services. There are two basic implications to this assumption. First, it is unnecessary to consider how the revenues will be spent to determine whether an income tax is a desirable revenue generator. Second, based on this assumption, an income tax (or any tax) is most effectively evaluated relative to another tax because the existence of an income tax will result in either a direct replacement of or a decrease in another tax. All taxes are politically and economically disadvantageous when analyzed by themselves, so each tax is best judged relative to other taxes. At the state level, the income tax is best evaluated relative to the sales tax. Thus, the analysis below is frequently a comparison between the characteristics of an income and a sales tax. There are other taxes that could be compared with the income tax, but these levies generally would be limited revenue generators in comparison to sales and income taxes. Part II of this Article is a brief overview of the current practice in state income taxation. Part III considers the pros and cons of using an income tax as a revenue generator, including analysis of the tax's potential as a revenue generator, the economic effects of the tax, the equity implications raised by the tax, and the administrative concerns in using the tax. Part IV draws together these pros and cons to reach a conclusion.
BASE
Human Performance in the Cold
In: Human factors: the journal of the Human Factors Society, Band 9, Heft 3, S. 203-220
ISSN: 1547-8181
The literature dealing with human performance in the cold is reviewed. Seven major areas are discussed: a) tactile sensitivity, b) manual performance, c) tracking, d) reaction time, e) complex behaviors, f) maintaining hand skin temperature (HST) as a means of maintaining operator effectiveness, and g) adaptation and acclimatization to low ambient temperatures. Performance decrements at low ambient temperatures appear to result principally from lowered HST and competing stimuli provided by the cold environment.
Legal aspects of terrorism: conference report
In: Terrorism: an internat. journal, Band 12, Heft 4, S. 297-315
ISSN: 0149-0389
Edited remarks by participants in a symposium sponsored by the Comparative and International Law Program, Columbus School of Law, the Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C., Nov. 7, 1988. Topics include intelligence and counter-terrorism, apprehension, prosecution, and punishment of international terrorists, assassination, problems of international cooperation, and criminal justice action in the US.
Fiscal Federalism in Bosnia-Herzegovina: The Dayton Challenge
SSRN
Working paper
Taxing Goods and Services in a Digital Era
In: CESifo Working Paper No. 8708
SSRN
Working paper
Aid for all: College coaching, financial aid, and post-secondary persistence in Tennessee
In: Economics of education review, Band 51, S. 97-112
ISSN: 0272-7757
Taxes in an E-Commerce Generation
Rapid growth in e-commerce has altered the ability of jurisdictions to enforce commodity taxes on a destination basis. This results in different effective tax rates depending on the way in which goods and services are purchased and the characteristics of both the products and the sellers. We discuss the arguments for the destination principle as the appropriate place-of-taxation rule for consumption taxation of cross-border trade. We analyze various recent reforms to the Value Added Tax in the European Union in response to e-commerce. We then examine various policy options in the United States – maintaining the status quo, changing nexus rules, states adopting information reporting, and national reforms that require firms to remit taxes regardless of physical presence – and relate them to the recent European reforms. We conclude based on our analysis and the recent European Union experience that reforms at the national level appear to be the important next step to enforcing commodity taxes at destination in the U.S.
BASE
Taxes in an E-Commerce Generation
In: CESifo Working Paper Series No. 6050
SSRN
Targeting Federal Assistance to Local Governments in Rural and Low-Income Areas, 1972-1983
In: Publius: the journal of federalism, Band 17, Heft 4, S. 33-33
ISSN: 0048-5950