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International Tax, Regulatory Arbitrage and the Growth of Transnational Corporations

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  • Picciotto, Sol

Abstract

This paper traces the history of international corporate taxation, discusses how transnational corporations (TNCs), through their tax advisers, have helped to shape the system, and suggests that this is important in understanding the development of TNCs. It argues that a key competitive advantage of TNCs is their ability to exploit differences in corporate tax rules, as a form of regulatory arbitrage, which is facilitated by the inadequate coordination of those rules. It focuses on the divergence between the understanding in business, economics and international studies that TNCs are unitary firms and the principle which has increasingly hardened in international tax rules, especially on transfer pricing, that the various affiliates of TNCs in different countries should be treated as if they were independent entities dealing with each other at arm’s length. It argues that this facilitates tax avoidance, which is one of the strategies of the exploitation of regulatory differences, or regulatory arbitrage, which has contributed to the growth and oligopolistic dominance of large TNCs. While claiming that they merely obey the laws of each country where they do business, TNCs have taken advantage of their global reach to mould laws and normative practices, and develop structures taking maximum advantage of the loose coordination of global governance regimes.

Suggested Citation

  • Picciotto, Sol, 2018. "International Tax, Regulatory Arbitrage and the Growth of Transnational Corporations," Working Papers 14295, Institute of Development Studies, International Centre for Tax and Development.
  • Handle: RePEc:idq:ictduk:14295
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    File URL: https://opendocs.ids.ac.uk/opendocs/handle/20.500.12413/14295
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    Cited by:

    1. Ali Ahmed & Chris Jones & Yama Temouri, . "The relationship between MNE tax haven use and FDI into developing economies characterized by capital flight," UNCTAD Transnational Corporations Journal, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development.
    2. Matti Ylönen & Wolfgang Drechsle & Veiko Lember, . "Online incorporation platforms in Estonia and beyond: How administrative spillover effects hamper international taxation," UNCTAD Transnational Corporations Journal, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development.
    3. Aigul Nukusheva & Gulzhazira Ilyassova & Larisa Kudryavtseva & Zhanna Shayakhmetova & Amina Jantassova & Larisa Popova, 2020. "Transnational corporations in private international law: do Kazakhstan and Russia have the potential to take the lead?," Entrepreneurship and Sustainability Issues, VsI Entrepreneurship and Sustainability Center, vol. 8(1), pages 496-512, September.

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    Keywords

    Finance; Globalisation; Governance;
    All these keywords.

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