Book contents
- Tax and Culture
- Tax and Culture
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction: Comparative Law and Its Relevance to the Tax Field
- 2 Tax Anthropology: Attitudes, Behaviors, and the Role of Historical Contingencies
- 3 Tax Sociology: The Significance of Tax Institutions
- 4 Convergence, Divergence, and the Persistence of National Differences
- 5 Case Studies I: The Tax Cultures of Selected Western and Non-Western Countries
- 6 Case Studies II: Progressivity, Tax Avoidance, and Environmental Taxes
- 7 Conclusion: The Limits of Globalization and the Continuing Importance of Culture
- Index
6 - Case Studies II: Progressivity, Tax Avoidance, and Environmental Taxes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 March 2020
- Tax and Culture
- Tax and Culture
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction: Comparative Law and Its Relevance to the Tax Field
- 2 Tax Anthropology: Attitudes, Behaviors, and the Role of Historical Contingencies
- 3 Tax Sociology: The Significance of Tax Institutions
- 4 Convergence, Divergence, and the Persistence of National Differences
- 5 Case Studies I: The Tax Cultures of Selected Western and Non-Western Countries
- 6 Case Studies II: Progressivity, Tax Avoidance, and Environmental Taxes
- 7 Conclusion: The Limits of Globalization and the Continuing Importance of Culture
- Index
Summary
To this point we have proceeded topically and (to a lesser extent) geographically, delineating the field of tax and culture and considering its application to various countries and political systems. But cultural differences matter only to the extent that they produce different outcomes with respect to the same or similar issues. This can be studied, in turn, only by choosing one or more specific tax problems and seeing how they are dealt with in different cultural environments. To put the matter more pithily, this is a work of comparative law, and it is time to make some comparisons; or (with apologies to Clifford Geertz) to proceed from thinner to thicker descriptions of the issues at hand.
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- Information
- Tax and CultureConvergence, Divergence, and the Future of Tax Law, pp. 101 - 127Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020