Document Type
Working Paper
Publication Date
2007
Abstract
This article analyzes a complex line of recent decisions in which the European Court of Justice has set forth its vision of a nondiscriminatory system for taxing corporate income distributed as dividends within the European Union. We begin by identifying the principal tax policy issues that arise in constructing a system for taxing cross-border dividends and then review the standard solutions found in national legislation and international tax treaties. Against that background, we examine in detail a dozen of the Court's decisions, half of which have been handed down since 2006. Our conclusion is that the ECJ is applying a standard of nondiscrimination to evaluate national tax laws in a manner totally divorced from the underlying tax policy norms that produced the legislation at issue. Some, but not all, of the decisions seem to require nondiscrimination based on the destination, but not the origin, of corporate investment. The result is a jurisprudence that fails to hold together substantively, functionally, and rhetorically. In many instances, this result follows from largely formalistic distinctions made by the Court, such as whether a withholding tax on dividends should be considered corporate or shareholder taxation.
Disciplines
Business Organizations Law | European Law | Law | Law and Economics | Taxation-Transnational | Tax Law
Recommended Citation
Alvin C. Warren & Michael J. Graetz,
Dividend Taxation in Europe: When the ECJ Makes Tax Policy,
Harvard Public Law Working Paper No. 07-18; Yale Law School Public Law Working Paper No. 143; Yale Law School John M. Olin Center for Studies in Law, Economics & Public Policy Research Paper No. 354
(2007).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/faculty_scholarship/2556
Included in
Business Organizations Law Commons, European Law Commons, Law and Economics Commons, Taxation-Transnational Commons, Tax Law Commons