Friday February 10, 2012

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Past Event

An Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center and International Tax Policy Forum Event

American Corporate Tax Exceptionalism

Taxes, Tax Reform

Event Summary

The combined U.S. statutory corporate tax rate is more than 12 percentage points higher than the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) average. At the same time, the United States is the only OECD country that does not have a national value-added type tax, and U.S. rules for taxing foreign source income also diverge from common international practice.

Event Information

When

Friday, February 20, 2009
9:00 AM to 1:30 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

Email: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

On February 20, the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center (TPC) and the International Tax Policy Forum held a half-day conference to assess the extent to which the U.S. tax system differs from international norms and whether these differences affect U.S. economic performance.

William Gale, Brookings vice president and director of Economic Studies, and TPC co-director, provided introductory comments.

Presentation Slides:

Taxation of Foreign Income by the U.S. and Other Governments »
by James R. Hines Jr.

Corporate Income Tax Burdens at Home and Abroad »
by Kevin Markle and Douglas A. Shackelford

Comments on “Corporate Income Tax Burdens at Home and Abroad” »
by Martin A. Sullivan

Taxing Multinational Firms: Securing Jobs or the New Protectionism? »
by Alan Auerbach

Transcript

William Gale: Our mandate today is to take on the international tax system and to understand how it works, how it could be modified, especially as it relates to taxation of multinationals. That's a big mandate, but, you know, hey, these are heady times for public policy. Peter Merrill originally wanted to have this conference between the election and the inauguration, and I in my wisdom said no, no, don't do that, the calendar will be too busy; there'll be too much going on with the new administration. Wait till February. Things will have calmed down by then.

Participants

9:00 AM -- Welcome and Introduction

William G. Gale

Vice President and Director, Economic Studies

John Samuels

Vice President & Senior Counsel – Taxes

9:10 -- Panel 1: Taxation of Foreign Income by the U.S. and Other Governments

Michael Graetz (moderator)

Yale Law School

James Hines

University of Michigan

9:50 -- Panel 2: Corporate Tax Burdens at Home and Around the World

Kevin Hassett (moderator)

American Enterprise Institute

Douglas Shackelford

University of North Carolina

Martin Sullivan

Tax Analysts

11:00 -- Panel 3: Is U.S. Corporate Investment Abroad Bad for the U.S. Economy?

Rosanne Altshuler (moderator)

Tax Policy Center, Urban Institute

Alan Auerbach

University of California at Berkeley

Mihir Desai

Harvard Business School

11:45 -- Panel 4: Does It Matter If the United States Deviates from International Tax Norms?

James Hines (moderator)

University of Michigan

Rosanne Altshuler

Tax Policy Center, Urban Institute

Michael Graetz

Yale Law School

Reuven Avi-Yonah

University of Michigan

1:00 PM -- Luncheon Address

Ed Kleinbard

Chief of Staff, Joint Committee on Taxation


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