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  1. Essays in Tax Avoidance and Evasion
    Published: 2023

    Taxation is the primary means by which governments engage in the redistribution of resources and in the provision of goods and services. From determining the breadth and generosity of the social safety net to influencing broader societal inequality,... more

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    Taxation is the primary means by which governments engage in the redistribution of resources and in the provision of goods and services. From determining the breadth and generosity of the social safety net to influencing broader societal inequality, taxation plays a central role in shaping our lives. Moreover, for the purposes of fortifying public coffers and promoting different kinds of egalitarian values to varying extents, the burden of taxation has, at least in principle, broadly evolved to fall disproportionately of those with the greatest concentration of resources, which we refer to as progressive taxation.However, taxation also often induces distortions in incentives and behavior; it is not profound to point out that taxpayers do not like paying taxes. Entire disciplines and industries have evolved so as to empower those with the most resources to mitigate their tax obligations. Indeed, much of the history of taxation features a perpetual arms race of tax authorities, who want to tax taxpayers, and taxpayers, who do not want to be taxed by tax authorities. A vast literature spanning many disciplines has studied the countless aspects of this relationship, with an emerging consensus that the combined sophistication of high earning taxpayers in mitigating their tax burdens and advancements in globalization and technology has grown to significantly undermine the process of taxation in facilitating redistribution as well as the provision of goods and services.This dissertation contributes this rich tradition of study in presenting new empirical evidence on the different kinds of activities—both legal (avoidance) and illegal (evasion)—that high-earning individuals and businesses take in order to lower their tax burdens.The first chapter focuses on the role of tax havens in facilitating tax avoidance and evasion, studying a novel policy in the Ecuadorian national setting and its impacts of tax haven usage. Tax haven usage (also referred to as “offshoring”, among other terms) facilitates an important source of tax evasion and avoidance in the world, where taxpayers by legal or illicit means locate their income and wealth in low-to-no-tax jurisdictions that also feature a great deal of financial privacy. Recent work estimates that nearly 10% of global household financial wealth, largely attributable to the wealthiest households, is held in tax havens (Zucman, 2013). However, due to its clandestine nature, tax haven usage is difficult to empirically study. Moreover, in light of the increasing sophistication of taxpayers and their tax preparers as well as the diminishing role of international financial borders, policy aimed at discouraging tax haven usage has seen limited effectiveness.I study a unique policy in Ecuador that adopts an unconventional approach in discouraging tax haven usage. While many policies focus on information sharing and enforcement, in 2008 Ecuador implemented a universal outflows tax that taxes (at least at the inception of the policy) all outflowing transactions. Additionally, the data that underlie the enforcement of the tax as well as subsequent legislative variation in the tax base and rate provide a highly novel environment for studying the behavioral dimensions of the relationship between incentives and tax haven usage. I ultimately produce evidence of an unprecedented success of this policy in reducing tax haven usage and increasing domestic income reporting. In short, individual tax haven users concentrated within the top 0.5% of the income distribution, in response to the imposition of the outflows that reduced the return of locating income/wealth abroad by 5%, increased their domestically reported income by around 40%; through the progressivity of the tax schedule, these individuals increased their personal income tax payments by 55%. The magnitude and persistence of this response is relatively unprecedented within the realm of anti-tax haven policy, and suggests a number of directions for the future research.The second chapter focuses on the roles of charities and nonprofits in facilitating estate tax avoidance in the United States. The US tax code features a wide array of exemptions and considerations for nonprofits in its design so as to encourage charitable activity. To this end, a sizable literature has focused on estimating the precise quantitative relationship between the different tax incentives extended to the nonprofit sector in the US and the amount of observable charitable activity. However, recent work has pointed out the means by which this system of charitability tax preference has been abused for the purpose of facilitating tax evasion and avoidance (e.g. Fack and Landais, 2012). Other work has even called into question the normative desirability of nonprofit activity in light of critiques of the ability of the nonprofit sector to effectively serve as a substitute for state capacity and its potential to facilitate private benefit.A long-standing literature has thoroughly documented a strongly positive, causal relationship between the estate tax rate, and charitable donations (which are fully deductible against the estate tax). The second chapter delves into this relationship, empirically studying recent federal and state estate tax reforms to demonstrate that nearly all of this long-standing relationship is driven by outsized responsiveness of private foundations (privately held nonprofits) as opposed to public charities (nonprofits that source their donations largely from the broader public) to the estate tax rate. The chapter also demonstrates the outsized scope of these private foundations to engage in potentially “privately-benefiting” activities in the form of payments, loans, and other financial relationships with administration and director networks. On a high level, the chapter argues that the private foundation, as a tax exempt vehicle, disproportionately facilitates tax mitigating activity while demonstrating substantial scope for fulfilling private benefit, as opposed to the supposed public benefit that serves as the premise for the broader social desirability of nonprofit entities and their tax privilege.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9798380380539
    Series: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Subjects: Public administration; Inequality; Offshore fiscal havens; Tax avoidance; Tax evasion; Tax havens; Taxation
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (240 p.)
    Notes:

    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 85-03, Section: A. - Advisor: Zucman, Gabriel;Saez, Emmanuel;Auerbach, Alan

    Dissertation (Ph.D.), University of California, Berkeley, 2023

  2. Industrial Organization of Public Institutions
    Published: 2023

    This dissertation consists of two chapters on the industrial organization of public institutions. In the first chapter, Proactive and Reactive Infrastructure Investment, I examine investment decisions of drinking water system managers in the United... more

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    This dissertation consists of two chapters on the industrial organization of public institutions. In the first chapter, Proactive and Reactive Infrastructure Investment, I examine investment decisions of drinking water system managers in the United States. Properly functioning infrastructure is maintained through investment. A proactive investment strategy prevents failures but requires expenditures before quality deteriorates. A reactive investment strategy accepts some risk of failure to avoid unnecessary expenditures. I explore proactive and reactive investments in a newly collected dataset on Kentucky drinking water systems to assess the ability of system managers to maintain infrastructure quality. I establish that proactive and reactive investments differentially reduce the probability of a future system failure, and that both managers and consumers are sensitive to system quality. I construct and estimate a dynamic discrete choice model of system manager infrastructure investment decisions incorporating the empirical relationships and investment strategy intuition. Through simulations, I determine that investment is currently too low to successfully prevent the decline of system quality. Counterfactual policies that promote only proactive projects lead some managers to make unnecessary investments even as other systems become vulnerable to extreme quality decline. By contrast, policies that facilitate more effective reactive investment incorporate more equitable levels of risk, reduce overspending, and enable all managers to maintain system quality.In the second chapter, The Price That Inmates Pay, co-authored with Marleen Marra and Nathan H. Miller, we study the prison phone industry. Incarcerated individuals in the United States purchase goods and services from monopoly vendors selected by their correctional authority. We study the price that inmates pay for phone calls, which the Federal Communications Commission has characterized as "exorbitant.'' We specify an auction model of procurement and estimate it using data from public records requests. Our results indicate that market power contributes to high prices but that more important are kickbacks (or "commissions'') that providers give to the correctional authority. Regulation that substantially lowers price and eliminates commissions can more than double inmate surplus and simultaneously enable providers to recover their costs.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9798379422684
    Series: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Subjects: Public administration; Drinking water systems; Dynamic discrete choice; Industrial organization; Prison systems; Public institutions; Structural estimation
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (123 p.)
    Notes:

    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 84-10, Section: A. - Advisor: Miller, Nathan H.;Rust, John

    Dissertation (Ph.D.), Georgetown University, 2023

  3. Technology and Talent Strategies for Sustainable Smart Cities
    Digital Futures
    Published: 2023; ©2023
    Publisher:  Emerald Publishing Limited, Bingley

    Acknowledging the smart cities phenomenon not as a future goal but as an active part of our present, this book critically examines the strategies, business models, practices, tools, and actions needed to ensure that smart cities deliver the solutions... more

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    Technische Universität Chemnitz, Universitätsbibliothek
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    Max-Planck-Institut zur Erforschung multireligiöser und multiethnischer Gesellschaften, Bibliothek
    No inter-library loan
    Hochschulbibliothek Friedensau
    Online-Ressource
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    Hochschule für Wirtschaft und Umwelt Nürtingen-Geislingen, Bibliothek Nürtingen
    eBook ProQuest
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    Acknowledging the smart cities phenomenon not as a future goal but as an active part of our present, this book critically examines the strategies, business models, practices, tools, and actions needed to ensure that smart cities deliver the solutions they promise.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Jahankhani, Hamid (MitwirkendeR); Bowen, Gordon (MitwirkendeR); Nawaz, Imad Yasir (MitwirkendeR)
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781837530229
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Subjects: Public administration
    Scope: 1 online resource (401 pages)
    Notes:

    Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources

  4. Comment pensera l'État avec ChatGPT?
    les douanes comme illustration de l'intelligence artificielle générative dans les administrations publiques
    Published: 2023
    Publisher:  FERDi, Fondation pour les Études et Recherches sur le Développement International, Clermont-Ferrand Cedex, France

    The paper discusses the implications of General Artificial Intelligence (GAI) in public administrations and the specific questions it raises compared to specialized and « numerical » AI, based on the example of Customs and the experience of the World... more

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    ZBW - Leibniz-Informationszentrum Wirtschaft, Standort Kiel
    DSP 413
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    The paper discusses the implications of General Artificial Intelligence (GAI) in public administrations and the specific questions it raises compared to specialized and « numerical » AI, based on the example of Customs and the experience of the World Customs Organization in the field of AI and data strategy implementation in Member countries. At the organizational level, the advantages of GAI include cost reduction through internalization of tasks, uniformity and correctness of administrative language, access to broad knowledge, and potential paradigm shifts in fraud detection. At this level, the paper highlights three facts that distinguish GAI from specialized AI : i) GAI is less associated to decision-making process than specialized AI in public administrations so far, ii) the risks usually associated with GAI are often similar to those previously associated with specialzied AI, but, while certain risks remain pertinent, others lose significance due to the constraints imposed by the inherent limitations of GAI technology itself when implemented in public administrations, iii) training data corpus for GAI becomes a strategic asset for public administrations, maybe more than the algorithms themselves, which was not the case for specialized AI. At the individual level, the paper emphasizes the "language-centric" nature of GAI in contrast to "number-centric" AI systems implemented within public administrations up until now. It discusses the risks of replacement or enslavement of civil servants to the machines by exploring the transformative impact of GAI on the intellectual production of the State. The paper pleads for the development of critical vigilance and critical thinking as specific skills for civil servants who are highly specialized and will have to think with the assistance of a machine that is eclectic by nature.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: French
    Media type: Book
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    hdl: 10419/276988
    Series: Document de travail / FERDi, Fondation pour les Études et Recherches sur le Développement International ; 330 (Juillet 2023)
    Subjects: Customs; ChatGPT; Public administration; Generative artificial intelligence
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 28 Seiten)