Tackling the International Tax Barriers to Cross-Border Charitable Giving
This research assesses the existing solutions to obtaining a tax incentive on a cross-border charitable donation, in order to tackle the tax barriers involved in international fundraising.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam :
IBFD Publications USA, Incorporated,
2019.
|
Colección: | Doctoral series.
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- IBFD Doctoral Series
- Title
- Copyright
- List of Abbreviations
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- 1.1. Tax incentives and international philanthropy for the arts
- 1.2. Solutions that allow for a tax benefit for cross-border gifts
- 1.3. Research questions, scope and aim of the research
- 1.3.1. Research questions
- 1.3.2. Scope of the research
- 1.3.3. Aim of the research
- 1.4. Definitions
- 1.4.1. Tax incentives for individual philanthropy
- 1.4.2. PBOs and arts organizations
- 1.5. Outline
- Chapter 2: Theoretical Basis: International Philanthropy, Tax Incentives and the Arts
- 2.1. Philanthropy for the arts
- 2.1.1. Philanthropic giving
- 2.1.2. Historic developments in cultural policy and philanthropy for the arts
- 2.1.3. Fundraising
- 2.1.4. Final remarks on the literature on arts philanthropy
- 2.2. Government and the arts
- 2.2.1. Cultural legacy
- 2.2.2. Aesthetic value of art
- 2.2.3. Cultural identity
- 2.2.4. Economic spillover
- 2.2.5. Merit good
- 2.2.6. Income redistribution
- 2.2.7. Public goods
- 2.2.8. External benefits
- 2.2.9. Lack of information
- 2.2.10. Non-market demand
- 2.2.11. Imperfect competition
- 2.2.12. Increasing returns to scale
- 2.2.13. Productivity lag and rising costs
- 2.2.14. Concluding remarks
- 2.3. Indirect support for the arts
- 2.3.1. Tax incentives for philanthropy and price elasticity
- 2.3.2. Composition of the charitable gift
- 2.3.3. PBOs: Eligible recipients
- 2.3.4. Tax incentives for donors
- 2.3.4.1. Deduction of donations from taxable income
- 2.3.4.2. Gift aid, or top-up schemes
- 2.3.4.3. Tax credits
- 2.3.4.4. Tax allocation schemes
- 2.3.5. Concluding remarks
- 2.4. Advantages and disadvantages of indirect subsidies
- 2.4.1. Indirect support crowds in private support
- 2.4.2. Allocation decision by the private sector
- 2.4.3. Involvement of the public with the arts
- 2.4.4. Ability-to-pay principle
- 2.4.5. Efficiency and effectiveness
- 2.4.6. Complex legislation
- 2.4.7. Controlling the size of subsidies
- 2.4.8. Changes in and abolishment of subsidies
- 2.4.9. Final remarks
- 2.5. International philanthropy
- 2.6. Art in a global world
- 2.7. What we know about cross-border donations to the arts
- 2.7.1. Data on grants to the arts from KBFUS
- 2.7.2. Cross-border giving to the arts in media coverage
- 2.7.3. Concluding remarks and opportunities for further research
- 2.8. Barriers to cross-border philanthropy
- 2.8.1. Legal barriers
- 2.8.2. Tax barriers
- 2.8.3. Concluding remarks
- 2.9. Debate on tax incentives for cross-border donations
- 2.9.1. Drainage of tax revenue
- 2.9.2. Anti-abuse arguments
- 2.9.3. Legal differences
- 2.9.4. The political philosophy of pluralism
- 2.9.5. Transnational objectives
- 2.9.6. Healthy international competition