Taxing Capital Income in the European Union: Issues and Options for Reform

Front Cover
Sijbren Cnossen
Oxford University Press, 2000 - Business & Economics - 302 pages
Following the introduction of the euro, the European Union has started to debate the desirability and feasibility of more co-ordination in the field of capital income taxation. In contrast with product taxes, the EU Treaty does not provide for explicit authority to harmonize income taxes. So far, little co-ordination has taken place, even though the capital income tax base is much more mobile and hence more difficult to tax than consumption. The papers in this volume attempt to foster discussion on whether, where, and how capital income should be taxed.

About the author (2000)

Sijbren Cnossen is Professor of Tax Law and Public Finance at the Economics Faculty of Erasmus University, Rotterdam, and Visiting Global Professor of Law at New York University