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What Do We Know and What Should We Do about Tax Justice?

Contributor(s): Cobham, Alex (Author)

ISBN: 9781529667776

Publisher: Sage Publications Ltd

Hardcover
$74.00
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Pub Date: April 9, 2024

Dewey: 336.206

LCCN: 2025421256

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.38" H x 8.27" L x 5.83" W ( 0.74 lbs) 152 pages

Series: What Do We Know and What Should We Do About:

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: An expert and accessible exploration of the scale and impact of global tax avoidance.

Brief description: Alex Cobham is an economist and chief executive of the Tax Justice Network. He is also a founding member of the steering group of the Independent Commission for the Reform of International Corporate Taxation, and of the technical advisory group for the Fair Tax Mark. His work focuses on illicit financial flows, effective taxation for development, and inequality. He has been a researcher at Oxford University, Christian Aid, Save the Children, and the Center for Global Development, and has consulted widely, including for UNCTAD, the UN Economic Commission for Africa, DFID, and the World Bank. He recently published two books: The Uncounted (Polity Press), and Estimating Illicit Financial Flows: A Critical Guide to the Data, Methodologies, and Findings, with Petr Janský (Oxford University Press).

Review Quotes: Overall this book covers a good deal of ground, summarising the authors work, in both the academic field as well as in practice and in understanding the relationship between firms and governments. It also for example highlights the unequal nature of the bargaining arrangements between firms and tax authorities, and the need, for reasons discussed above to end secrecy, not only at the level of the firm, but from banks, and also (typically big 4) auditors and the advice they give on tax avoidance. Overall therefore, Cobham provides an excellent, thought provoking overview of these issues, with many examples that even the casual reader would find interesting. --Professor Nigel Driffield (1/23/2024 12:00:00 AM)

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