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Full-Text Articles in Tax Law

A Cost Of Tax Planning, Yoram Margalioth, Eyal Sulganik, Rafael Eldor, Yoseph M. Edrey Prof. Dec 2008

A Cost Of Tax Planning, Yoram Margalioth, Eyal Sulganik, Rafael Eldor, Yoseph M. Edrey Prof.

Yoseph M. Edrey

Tax planning is an area of growing interest and this paper is an attempt to contribute to the small formal literature on this topic. The paper analyzes the case of tax planning that manipulates the tax system to impose lower effective tax rates on gains than on losses, and proves that such tax planning may provide firms with an incentive to produce more than the social optimum. This inefficiency is different from the general inefficiency entailed by income taxation, captured by the conventional notion of excess burden. A low asymmetric tax may be more distortive than a high symmetric tax …


Tax Planning, Imbalance And Production, Yoseph M. Edrey Prof., Yoram Y. Margaliot, Eyal Sulganik, Rafael Eldor Jan 2004

Tax Planning, Imbalance And Production, Yoseph M. Edrey Prof., Yoram Y. Margaliot, Eyal Sulganik, Rafael Eldor

Yoseph M. Edrey

The paper analyzes the case of tax planning that tilts the government gain/loss ratio below one, and provides a proof of a certain type of inefficiency caused by tax planning. As the paper shows, the tax imbalance distorts the firm's output level, providing the firm with an incentive to produce more than the social optimum. This inefficiency is different from the general inefficiency entailed by income taxation, captured by the conventional notion of excess burden. The paper also examines the determinants of this type of distortion and offers some policy implications.


What Are Capital Gain And Capital Loss Anyway, Yoseph M. Edrey Prof. Jan 2004

What Are Capital Gain And Capital Loss Anyway, Yoseph M. Edrey Prof.

Yoseph M. Edrey

I will try to offer a more analytical definition for capital gains and losses. Such definition, which relies on the economic process that creates the gain or loss, is based on a distinction between what I call “actual/genuine capital gain” and “disguised capital gain.” Such suggested analysis might change the traditional discussion and enable us to appreciate that the actual (genuine) capital gain component is much smaller than what we are normally accustomed to and, hence, the lock-in and risk-taking problems on the one hand, and the possibilities of “cherry-picking” losses on the other hand, are almost nonexistent. Furthermore, the …


Equitable Implementation Of Tax Expenditures, Yoseph M. Edrey Prof., Howard Abrams Associate Prof. Dec 1988

Equitable Implementation Of Tax Expenditures, Yoseph M. Edrey Prof., Howard Abrams Associate Prof.

Yoseph M. Edrey

No abstract provided.