Clasificación de los Sistemas Fiscales en la OCDE

Autores/as

  • José Alejandro Fernández Fernández Universidad ESERP, Madrid (España)
  • Virginia Bejarano Vázquez Universidad ESERP, Madrid (España)
  • Juan Antonio Vicente Virseda Universidad ESERP, Madrid (España)

Palabras clave:

Sistema tributario, competencia fiscal, análisis de escalamiento multidimesional, crecimiento económico

Resumen

El objeto de este trabajo es obtener una clasificación, por grupos homogéneos de sistemas tributarios, de todos los países integrantes de la OCDE, para los años 2007 y 2014, por coincidir con el inicio y desarrollo posterior de la crisis financiera. Para ello, en primer lugar, se realiza un escalamiento multidimensional aplicando un modelo PROXCAL. A partir de las distancias obtenidas con el modelo, se realiza un análisis clúster jerárquico, que permite agrupar los sistemas tributarios de todos los países de la OCDE en siete clústeres homogéneos. Finalmente, el análisis se completa incorporando las características económicas específicas de los países integrantes de cada grupo, a través de magnitudes como la Deuda Pública, la productividad o los índices de volumen encadenados del PIB, calculados a partir de las recomendaciones del Sistema Europeo de Cuentas (SEC-2010).

Descargas

Los datos de descargas todavía no están disponibles.

Citas

Boss, A., (1999). “Do We Need Tax Harmonization in the EU?”. Kiel Institute of World Economics, Kiel Working Paper (916).

Cantemir, D., (2013). “Tax Competition - Economic and Financial Policy Instruments”. Knowledge Horizons - Economics, 5(3), 90–93.

Devereux, M., y Loretz, S., (2013). “What do we know about corporate tax competition?” National Tax Journal, 3(66), 745–774.

Devereux, M., Lockwood, B., y Redoano, M., (2007). “Horizontal and vertical indirect tax competition: Theory and some evidence from the USA”. Journal of Public Economics (91), 451–479.

Dima, B., Dima, M., y Barna, F., (2014). “The signaling effect of tax rates under fiscal competition: A (Shannonian) transfer entropy approach”. Economic Modelling (42), 373–381.

Dzialo, J., (2015). “Tax Competition or Tax Coordination? What Is Better for the European Union?” Comparative Economic Research, 18(2), 37-55.

Eggert, W., y Genser, B., (2001). “Is Tax Harmonization Useful?” International Tax and Public Finance, 8(4), 511-527.

Eichner, T., (2014). “Endogenizing leadership and tax competition: Externalities and public”. Regional Science and Urban Economics (46), 18-26.

Epstein, B., Mukherjeeb, R., y Ramnathc, S. (2014). “Taxes and international risk sharing”. Journal of International Economics (102), 310–326.

Feld, L., y Reulier, E. (2005). “Strategic Tax Competition in Switzerland: Evidence from Panel of the Swiss Cantons”. Center for Research in Economics, Management and the Arts. Working Paper.

Goodspeed, T. (2002). “Tax competition and tax structure in open federal economies: Evidence from OECD countries with implications for the European Union”. European Economic Review (46), 357-374.

Han, Y., Pieretti, P., y Zou, B. (2014). “Does size asymmetry exacerbate the inefficiency of tax competition?” Economics Letters (122), 16–18.

Tibulca, I. L. (2015). “Is there evidence of tax convergence in the European Union?” Procedia Economics and Finance (32), 194 – 199.

Islam, R., Madsen, J., y Doucouliagos, H. (2018). “Does inequality constrain the power to tax? Evidence from the OECD?” European Journal of Political Economy, (52) 1-17.

Killian, S., (2006). “Where’s the harm in tax competition? Lessons from US multinationals in Ireland”. Critical Perspectives on Accounting (17), 1067–1087.

Kovács, L., (2005). “Tax Harmonisation versus tax Competition in Europe. European Commissioner for Taxation and Customs”. Conference organized by the Austrian Chamber of Professional Accountants and Tax Advisors Vienna.

Liapis, K., Rovolis, A., y Galanos (2013). “Toward a Common Tax Regime for the European Union Countries”.European Research Studies, XVI, (93)116.

Mankiw, N. G., Weinzierl, M. y Yagan, D. (2009). “Imposición óptima: Teoría y práctica”. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 23 (4) 147-174

Mendoza, E., y Tesar, L. (2003). “Winners and losers of tax competition in the European Union”. National Bureau of Economic Research, WP (10051).

Pinto, C. (2002). “Tax Competition and EU Law”. University of Amsterdam. UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository), 81-156.

Redoano, M. (2014). “Tax competition among European countries. Does the EU matter?”. European Journal of Political Economy (34), 353–371.

Reuven, S.-Y. (2007). “Tax competition, tax arbitrage, and the international tax regime”. Oxford University. Centre for Business Taxation. Working paper 07/09.

Simmons, R. (2006). “Does recent empirical evidence support the existence of international corporate tax competition?”. Journal of International Accounting, Auditing and Taxation (15), 16-31.

Szarowska, I. (2010). “Tax burden and competition in the European Union Does it change?” Munich Personal RePEc Archive. Working Paper.

Von Haldenwang, C., y Ivanyna, M. (2012). “A Comparative View on the Tax Performance of Developing Countries: Regional Patterns, Non-Tax Revenue and Governance. Economics”. The Open-Access, Open- Assessment E-Journal, 6 (32).

Zodrow, G., (2003). “Tax Competition and Tax Coordination in the European Union”. International Tax and Public Finance, 6(10), 651-671.

Descargas

Publicado

2021-05-12

Cómo citar

Fernández Fernández, J. A., Bejarano Vázquez, V., & Vicente Virseda, J. A. (2021). Clasificación de los Sistemas Fiscales en la OCDE . Actualidad Económica, 30(100), 45–60. Recuperado a partir de https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/acteconomica/article/view/28764

Número

Sección

Artículos