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The Tax System in Industrialized Countries by Ken Messere

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The Tax System in Industrialized Countries

1st Edition

Ken Messere

Oxford University Press · Print & ebook · December 1, 1998

Reading lane: International Taxation

This volume is the only book to provide a comparative and systematic analysis of the tax systems of the major industrialized nations (the G7 plus Netherlands, Spain, and Sweden) over the last decade.

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At a Glance

Who It's For

Reading lane: International Taxation and Corporate Taxation.Publisher: Oxford University Press.

Book Details

Authors
Ken Messere
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Published
December 1, 1998
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
International Taxation · Corporate Taxation
Reading lane
International Taxation

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Publisher Categories

  • International Taxation

About This Book

This volume is the only book to provide a comparative and systematic analysis of the tax systems of the major industrialized nations (the G7 plus Netherlands, Spain, and Sweden) over the last decade. An introductory chapter compares the tax levels, structures, and systems of the ten, notes differences between government preoccupations in mid-1980s and mid-1990s, and unusual tax features of particular countries, before speculating on likely changes in the remaining years of t...

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This volume is the only book to provide a comparative and systematic analysis of the tax systems of the major industrialized nations (the G7 plus Netherlands, Spain, and Sweden) over the last decade. An introductory chapter compares the tax levels, structures, and systems of the ten, notes differences between government preoccupations in mid-1980s and mid-1990s, and unusual tax features of particular countries, before speculating on likely changes in the remaining years of the century. In the ten main chapters, individual national experts providein a standardized format to facilitate comparisondetails of all the significant taxes and important changes in relation to specific policy considerations such as fiscal deficits, savings and investment incentives, income distribution effects, and administrative and compliance costs. The country chapters conclude with a summary of recent and prospective tax reforms, which in each case takes account of the underlying economic conditions and political climate.

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