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Saturday, November 21, 2009
 
 
EVENTS
State Tax Incentives for Business
Healthy Competition or "Race to the Bottom"?
Date: Monday, May 2, 2005
Time: 9:00 AM — 12:00 PM
Location: Wohlstetter Conference Center, Twelfth Floor, AEI 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036
 
 
About This Event

States and even local governments routinely seek to attract businesses through tax incentives, credits, or exemptions. In one of many pending legal challenges, a federal appeals court has declared that many such measures constitute an impermissible, discriminatory interference with interstate commerce. This decision in Cuno v. DaimlerChrysler has prompted a now-pending request for Supreme Court review, as well as demands for federal legislation that would regulate the permissible scope of state tax competition for business.

What do Cuno and its consequences entail for state governments, businesses, and taxpayers—and for the federal architecture? Are tax incentives and exemptions a healthy form of state competition or a destructive industrial policy race to the bottom? What (if anything) should be done to regulate state policy in this area? Leading experts and participants in the judicial and legislative arenas will discuss the legal, economic, and political aspects of the controversy.

 
Agenda
8:45 a.m.

Registration

     
9:00 Panel I: Was Cuno Right?
  Panelists: Brannon P. Denning, Cumberland School of Law
    Peter D. Enrich, Northeastern University School of Law
  Moderator: Michael S. Greve, AEI
10:15 Break  
10:30 Panel II: Economics and Federal Legislation
  Panelists: Loren Chumley, Tennessee Department of Revenue
    John P. James, Lommen, Nelson, Cole & Stageberg 
    Kevin Thompson, Council on State Taxation
  Moderator: Chris Edwards, Cato Institute
     
Noon

Adjournment

 
 
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