The abstract, which also provides relevant background regarding why I wrote this particular paper, is as follows:
This article,
prepared for presentation on September 23, 2016 at a conference at NYU Law
School, organized by the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice and
entitled "Human Rights and Tax in an Unequal World," mainly takes the
form of a dialogue between two fictional individuals. The conclusions that the discussants reach
(insofar as they are able to agree) can be summarized as follows:
Large-scale tax
avoidance by wealthy individuals and large companies that is legally defensible
under relevant national tax laws can nonetheless have major adverse effects on
social justice and/or public morale.
However, its legal defensibility complicates analyzing its ethical
implications, as compared to the more straightforward case of committing tax
fraud. Legal defensibility also
complicates the analysis of the extent to which human rights advocates should
focus on such desiderata as “good corporate tax behavior” and the ethics of tax
professionals.
Much of this
complexity pertains to (1) issues of ex ante legal uncertainty regarding
whether a defensible position would actually be upheld if closely scrutinized,
(2) the multifaceted character both of tax professionals’ ethical obligations
and of their incentives, and (3) the ambiguity of people’s personal ethical
obligations to act altruistically, rather than just self-interestedly. It also is hard to judge the tactical
questions associated with focusing on these issues, rather than on the tax
rules’ content. Ethical challenges may
help to undermine social acceptance of current practices, but also may distract
from legal reform efforts.
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