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On the Desirability of Tax Coordination When Countries Compete in Taxes and Infrastructure
2013
Social Science Research Network
In our paper, we demonstrate that when countries compete in taxes and infrastructure, coordination through a uniform tax rate or a minimum rate does not necessarily create the welfare effects observed under pure tax competition. The divergence is even worse when the competing jurisdictions differ in institutional quality. If tax revenues are used to gauge the desirability of coordination, our model demonstrates that imposing a uniform tax rate is Pareto-inferior to the non-cooperative
doi:10.2139/ssrn.2261712
fatcat:wp3beji5ivayrftqnqlihr7gm4