2017
DOI: 10.1080/09692290.2017.1321569
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Panama and the WTO: new constitutionalism of trade policy and global tax governance

Abstract: Tax havens and tax flight have lately received increasing attention, while interest toward multilateral trade policies has somewhat diminished. We argue that more attention needs to be paid exactly to the interrelations between trade and tax policies. Drawing from two case studies on Panama's trade disputes, we show how World Trade Organization (WTO) rules can be used both to resist attempts to sanction secrecy structures and to promote measures against tax flight. The theory of new constitutionalism can help … Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…The OECD Harmful Tax Competition initiative provided a topic for research on interrelation between the international tax regime and the WTO [59]. The studies were focused on the effects of trade policy on domestic taxes, such as VAT, concluding that trade treaties both fostered and hindered policy options for restricting harmful tax practices.…”
Section: Conclusion and Recommendationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The OECD Harmful Tax Competition initiative provided a topic for research on interrelation between the international tax regime and the WTO [59]. The studies were focused on the effects of trade policy on domestic taxes, such as VAT, concluding that trade treaties both fostered and hindered policy options for restricting harmful tax practices.…”
Section: Conclusion and Recommendationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Elites within these networks have greater opportunities to traverse networks and influence agendas. They also have the capacity to engage in 'epistemic arbitrage' between different pools of professional knowledge (Seabrooke 2014), as a number of cases on transnational policies now demonstrate (Eskelinen and Ylonen 2017;Holzscheiter 2017;Thistlethwaite and Paterson 2016). Importantly, prominent organizational forms, such as global professional service firms, can also foster particular types of elite professionals to influence these networks (Beaverstock 2018;Seabrooke and Sending 2020).…”
Section: The Institutions Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Across global governance, the experience, professionalism and socialisation of skilled individuals can enable lower-income countries to effectively penetrate technical policymaking in international organisations (Apecu 2013). By investing in their experts, countries can actively cultivate this form of influence, which has demonstrably enabled effective representations of their interests in global governance institutions (Eskelinen and Ylönen 2017;Shaffer, Sanchez and Rosenberg 2008).…”
Section: Individual Authoritymentioning
confidence: 99%