ABSTRACT

This study explores the formation of the European Union's tax policy and asks why member states did not raise objections to it. The author's analysis is enriched by two further levels of inquiry. Firstly, he examines the 'Europeanization' of domestic tax policy in Italy and the UK, asking how domestic policy has changed and what is meant by 'Europeanization'. Secondly, he puts the European Union tax policy in the wider context of tax globalization. Will the liberalization of capital movement, tax havens and the flexibility of multinationals in managing their taxable incomes wreck the European Union's fragile tax policies?

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

International tax complexity as a political problem

part |58 pages

Theoretical underpinnings

part |95 pages

Empirical research

part |34 pages

Conclusions and perspectives

chapter |19 pages

Conclusion

Knowledge, institutions and policy change

chapter |13 pages

Corporate tax policy development in the EU

The ‘fiscal federalism' argument