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Tax justice as social licence: the Fair Tax Mark

In: Business, Civil Society and the ‘New’ Politics of Corporate Tax Justice

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  • Allison Christians

Abstract

Tax justice advocates have spent the past decade building public consciousness about the tax planning practices of financial elites and large MNCs. An important recent development in this campaign was the establishment, in the UK in 2014, of the Fair Tax Mark. The Fair Tax Mark, modelled on the success of the ‘fair trade’ initiative, is a rules-based ethical consumption standard designed to influence firm and consumer behaviour and promote increased corporate transparency. This makes the Fair Tax Mark an emergent quasi-legal regime that has the potential to reach well beyond the UK, with repercussions for consumers, firms and governments around the world. It is thus important to understand not only what the Fair Tax Mark is in terms of the ‘rules’ that make it a quasi-legal regime, but also how it might function as both a quasi-legal tax regime and a strategy for influencing consumer and corporate behaviour. This chapter argues that the creators of the Fair Tax Mark have taken an important step beyond straightforward issue advocacy, developing an alternative tax standard based on their own conceptions of justice. They have done this by creating an independent set of acceptable parameters for tax planning and compliance, defined and measured by a point system that reduces taxpayer behaviour to an observable, quantitative measure.

Suggested Citation

  • Allison Christians, 2018. "Tax justice as social licence: the Fair Tax Mark," Chapters, in: Richard Eccleston & Ainsley Elbra (ed.), Business, Civil Society and the ‘New’ Politics of Corporate Tax Justice, chapter 10, pages 219-246, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:18099_10
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