Tax Politics in Eastern Europe: Globalization, Regional Integration, and the Democratic Compromise

Tax Politics in Eastern Europe: Globalization, Regional Integration, and the Democratic Compromise

by Hilary Appel
Tax Politics in Eastern Europe: Globalization, Regional Integration, and the Democratic Compromise

Tax Politics in Eastern Europe: Globalization, Regional Integration, and the Democratic Compromise

by Hilary Appel

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Overview

“This is the first book to systematically examine the variation in policies of Eastern European countries. There is a theoretical contribution to understandings of variation in tax policies, but just as impressive is the in-depth empirical analysis and in particular the data from interviews with key players in the process.”
—Yoshiko Herrera, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Post-Communist tax reform, like institutional reform in other areas of the post-Communist transition, holds tremendous material consequences for different groups in society. Consequently, one would expect the allocation of resources and the distribution of the financial burden of that allocation to be highly sensitive to domestic politics. Indeed the political stakes should be especially high since post-Communist tax reform requires not merely a simple adjustment at the margin, but the fundamental reallocation of the responsibility for government revenue. In Eastern Europe, however, important areas of tax policy do not reflect traditional domestic variables (e.g., interest groups and partisanship) so much as the international imperatives associated with regional and global economic integration.

In Tax Politics in Eastern Europe, Hilary Appel analyzes the domestic and international factors that drive tax policy. She begins with a review of the greatest challenges in the initial creation of the capitalist tax systems in former Communist states and then turns to the evolution of specific forms of taxation in order to gauge the relative impact of domestic politics on tax policy. Appel concludes that, although some tax areas, such as personal income taxes, remain politicized, most other taxes, such as corporate income taxes and all forms of consumption taxes, have been less subject to domestic political pressures because of powerful constraints resulting from regional and global economic integration.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780472027514
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Publication date: 07/28/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 189
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Hilary Appel is Professor of Government at Claremont McKenna College.

Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments Chapter 1: The Decline of Tax Politics in Eastern Europe Chapter 2: Creating a Capitalist Tax Structure after Communism Chapter 3: Ceding Control: European Integration and Consumption Taxes Chapter 4: The Race to the Bottom? Corporate Taxes and the Competition for Capital Chapter 5: Politics and Personal Income Taxes Chapter 6: Politics and Taxation in Russia: The Case of an Oil Economy Chapter 7: Globalization, Electoral Politics, and European Taxation Notes Bibliography Index
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