This guest blog is the second in a series exploring the five demands of the 2025 Global Days of Action on Tax Justice for Women’s Rights.
The Tax Justice Network believes our tax and financial systems are our most powerful tools for creating a just society that gives equal weight to the needs of everyone. Every day, we inspire and equip ...
“Tax competition” is a euphemistic term for cutting corporate tax rates and deregulating to attract foreign investment based on the misconception that countries can compete like companies in a market.
Marla Dukharan, a Trinidad-born economist and dynamic leader in Caribbean economic justice, has built a distinguished career addressing the structural challenges impacting the region’s progress. With ...
The most common way multinational corporations abuse or avoid tax is by shifting the profits they make out of the countries where they genuinely do business and into tax havens. This allows the ...
Tax justice supports the realisation of human rights in all countries. It raises revenue, redistributes wealth and income, and reprices public “bads” such environmental pollution. Importantly, and ...
Tax havens are located around the world. Most tax havens are rich countries, like Switzerland, Luxembourg, Britain or the United States, or dependencies of rich countries, like the British Virgin ...
Trusts can be abused to shield the identity of owners of wealth and muddle the status of ownership for the purpose of paying less tax and escaping the rule of law. Trusts have increasingly become one ...
A global asset register is a proposal to create a comprehensive international registry of all wealth and assets in order give policymakers and the public the data needed to tackle global tax abuse and ...
The “axis of tax avoidance” refers to the four countries responsible for over half of all the tax losses that countries lose to tax havens: the UK, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Switzerland.
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