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Corporate Tax Reform and “Value Creation”: Towards Unfettered Diagonal Re-allocation across the Global Inequality Chain

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  • Quentin David

    (School of Business & Management, Center for Commercial Law Studies, Queen Mary, University of London)

Abstract

Discussion of corporate tax reform loosely uses concepts like “value creation” and “economic substance” as a basis for systematic departures from the tax outcomes that would otherwise eventuate from computational artifacts based on price, but in fact mainstream economics does not have a theory of value creation as distinct from computational artifacts based on price. Corporate tax reform discourse is therefore an unacknowledged exercise in heterodox value theory. This article deploys global value chain theory to question a key assumption in that exercise; the assumption that while intra-group pricing may be modified or ignored for the purposes of reallocating the corporate tax base between jurisdictions for corporate tax purposes, prices arrived at between entities not under common control are sacrosanct. The article proceeds to deploy an expanded version of the global value chain analytic, the “global inequality chain”, to (i) investigate this question using a schematic illustrative case study based around Amazon’s UK/Luxembourg structuring, and (ii) to develop the beginnings of a concept of “unitary taxation by formulary apportionment of the entire value chain”, which would enable unfettered “diagonal” re-allocations across the space which the global inequality chain describes.

Suggested Citation

  • Quentin David, 2017. "Corporate Tax Reform and “Value Creation”: Towards Unfettered Diagonal Re-allocation across the Global Inequality Chain," Accounting, Economics, and Law: A Convivium, De Gruyter, vol. 7(1), pages 1-21, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:bpj:aelcon:v:7:y:2017:i:1:p:21:n:3
    DOI: 10.1515/ael-2016-0020
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Froud, Julie & Johal, Sukhdev & Leaver, Adam & Williams, Karel, 2014. "Financialization across the Pacific: Manufacturing cost ratios, supply chains and power," CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON ACCOUNTING, Elsevier, vol. 25(1), pages 46-57.
    2. Cobham, Alex & Loretz, Simon, 2014. "International Distribution of the Corporate Tax Base: Implications of Different Apportionment Factors under Unitary Taxation," Working Papers 11176, Institute of Development Studies, International Centre for Tax and Development.
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