Thursday, September 7, 2017
Tax Prof Panel On A U.S. Perspective On Tax Compliance And Tax PrivacyAt Cambridge
William Byrnes (Texas A&M), Michael Hatfield (University of Washington), Leandra Lederman (Indiana-Bloomington), and Adam Thimmesch (Nebraska) participated in a panel on Tax Compliance and Tax Privacy: A U.S. Perspective at the 35th Cambridge International Symposium on Economic Crime yesterday at the University of Cambridge:
This panel of US tax academics explored cutting edge issues in tax compliance, information reporting, and tax privacy. The topics include recent developments in the behavioral economics and psychology of tax compliance, and the rapidly evolving use of technology and big data in tax enforcement and its impact on the privacy of taxpayers
- William Byrnes (Texas A&M) & Robert J. Munro (Texas A&M), Guide to FATCA & CRS Compliance (LexisNexis 5th ed. 2017)
- Michael Hatfield, Cybersecurity and Tax Reform. 92 Ind. L.J. ___ (2017)
- Michael Hatfield, Privacy in Taxation, 43 Fla. St. U. L. Rev. __ (2016)
- Michael Hatfield, Taxation and Surveillance: An Agenda, 17 Yale J. L. & Tech. 319 (2015)
- Leandra Lederman, To What Extent Does Enforcement Crowd Out Voluntary Tax Compliance?
- Leandra Lederman, IRS Reform: Politics As Usual?," 7 Colum. Tax J. 36 (2016)
- Leandra Lederman, Reducing Information Gaps to Reduce the Tax Gap: When Is Information Reporting Warranted?, 78 Fordham L. Rev. 1733 (2010)
- Leandra Lederman, The Interplay Between Norms and Enforcement in Tax Compliance, 64 Ohio State L.J. 1453 (2003)
- Adam Thimmesch, Transacting in Data: Tax, Privacy, and the New Economy, 94 Denv. L. Rev. 145 (2016)
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