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Home >  Books >  Taxing Multinational Corporations
Taxing Multinational Corporations
Print Mail
Edited by R. Glenn Hubbard, Martin Feldstein, James R. Hines Jr.
Posted: Saturday, January 1, 2000
Taxing Multinational Corporations
Dimensions: 9.25'' x 6.35''
124 pages
University of Chicago Press
Publication Date: October 1995
Hardcover
ISBN: 0226240940

In the increasingly global business environment of the 1990s, policymakers and executives of multinational corporations must make informed decisions based on a sound knowledge of U.S. and foreign tax policy.

Written for a nontechnical audience, Taxing Multinational Corporations summarizes up-to-the-minute research on the structure and effects of tax policies. The book covers such practical issues as the impact of tax law on U.S. competitiveness, the volume and location of research and development spending, the extent of foreign direct investment, and the financial practices of multinational companies.

In ten succinct chapters, the book documents the channels through which tax policy in the United States and abroad affects plant and equipment investments, spending on research and development, the cost of debt and equity finance, and dividend repatriations by United States subsidiaries. It also discusses the impact of U.S. firms' outbound foreign investment on domestic and foreign economies.

Especially useful to non-specialists is an appendix that summarizes current United States rules for taxing international income.

The findings of this volume will be of immediate value to executives, lawyers, accountants, and all who seek a concise, thorough overview of international taxation. It is also of long-term value to scholars and policymakers as they debate reforms of international tax rules in the United States and elsewhere.

R. Glenn Hubbard is a visiting scholar at AEI.



Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction

  1. Home-Country Effects of Outward Direct Investment
  2. Tax Rules and the Effect of Foreign Direct Investment on U.S. National Income
  3. Corporate Taxes and the Cost of Capital for U.S. Multinationals
  4. The Importance of Income Shifting to the Design and Analysis of Tax Policy
  5. Alternative Minimum Tax Rules and Multinational Corporations
  6. Taxes, Technology Transfer, and R&D by Multinational Firms
  7. Tax Planning, Timing Effects, and the Impact of Repatriation Taxes on Dividend Remittances
  8. Is Foreign Direct Investment Sensitive to Taxes?
  9. The Tax Treatment of Interest and the Operations of U.S. Multinationals
  10. International Accounting, Asymmetric Information, and Firm Investment

Appendix
Contributors
Author Index
Subject Index

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