Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-2008
Abstract
Corporate Charter competition has become an increasingly international phenomenon. The thesis of this article is that this development in the corporate law requires a greater focus on the corporate tax law. We first demonstrate how a tax system’s capacity to distort the international charter market depends both upon its approach to determining corporate location and the extent to which it taxes foreign source corporate profits. We also show, however, that it is not possible to remove all distortions through modifications to the tax system alone. We present instead two alternative methods for preserving an international charter market. The first best solution involves severing the markets for corporate law and corporate tax law through coordination of locational rules under each regime, with a “place of incorporation” rule for corporate law and a “real seat” rule for corporate tax. The second best solution relies on a properly designed federal structure. The crucial design elements for such a federal system are the allocation of substantive law between the federal and subfederal levels, corporate and corporate tax locational rules, and the taxation of corporate migration and foreign source corporate profits. With due attention to these details, an international charter market can be protected from the potentially distorting effects of corporate taxation, but only if considerable care is taken. In the final part of the paper we apply our analysis to the United States, Canada, the European Union, and Israel, and show how difficult it is, in the real world, to separate corporate charter and corporate tax competition.
Keywords
reincorporation, corporate charter competition, corporate tax, international charter market, severing markets, place of incorporation, real seat
Publication Title
Michigan Law Review
Repository Citation
Kane, Mitchell and Rock, Edward B., "Corporate Taxation and International Charter Competition" (2008). All Faculty Scholarship. 162.
https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu/faculty_scholarship/162
Included in
Business Organizations Law Commons, Conflict of Laws Commons, International Business Commons, International Trade Law Commons, Securities Law Commons, Taxation-Federal Commons, Taxation-Transnational Commons, Tax Law Commons
Publication Citation
106 Mich. L. Rev. 1229 (2008)