Constructing compliance: Another look at game-playing in international taxation.
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Picciotto, Sol
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Centre for Tax System Integrity (CTSI), Research School of Social Sciences, The Australian National University
Abstract
It is now some 200 years since Adam Smith suggested his four `canons’ of a good tax
system: equity, certainty, convenience and economy.1
We are still wrestling with the
problems of achieving these ideals. From one point of view it could be said that tax systems
have become remarkably effective, at least in OECD countries, where tax revenues amounted
on average to some 37% of GDP in 2001. On the other hand, most of those who work with or
study tax systems, let alone the general public who are exposed to them, would probably
think that Smith’s standards are some way from being met.
This paper aims to make a further contribution to some of the recent debates about the
improvement of tax systems and the problem of tax compliance. My own interests are in
international taxation and tax avoidance, but in discussing the issue of compliance and
avoidance in this paper, I will also give some consideration to small business and individual
taxpayers. The first part of the paper explores the question of interpretation of rules and the
problem of avoidance and game-playing. My starting-point is the issue of lack of clarity or
indeterminacy of rules and how they are interpreted, which brings in the question of
creativity. Here I discuss in particular the work of Doreen McBarnet, although I take a
slightly different approach to the issue of creativity. I explore this in the context of the
historical development of international taxation principles.
This leads on to the issue of fairness and complexity in tax law, and the relationship between
the way tax rules are formulated and taxpayer attitudes, and in turn to the issue of the
relationship between detailed rules and broad principles and standards, which has recently
been explored by John Braithwaite, following up work by David Weisbach and others, and
applied to taxation. My approach gives I think added weight to John Braithwaite’s proposal
for the use of broad principles in conjunction with exemplary (but not exhaustive) detailed
rules in tax law. However, I suggest that this approach should not be limited to the adoption
of a broad anti-avoidance principle (usually referred to, confusingly, as a general antiavoidance
rule or GAAR), but should be applied to the tax code more generally. I end by
exploring the issue of improving compliance by the general run of individual taxpayers and
reducing their propensity to game-playing and avoidance, in relation to those taxpayers’
views about the fairness of the tax code in general, and to the ability of large taxpayers to
employ game-playing and avoidance techniques.
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Centre for Tax System Integrity workshop on 'Tax Havens: Too Easy For Whom?'. Canberra, 8 March 2004.
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