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Taxing Global Digital Commerce

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E-commerce - the use of computer networks to facilitate transactions involving the production, distribution, sale, and delivery of goods and services in the marketplace - has grown from merely streamlining relations between consumer and business to a much more robust phenomenon embracing efficient business processes within a firm and between firms. Inevitably, the related taxation issues have grown as well.



This latest edition of the preeminent text on the taxation of e-commerce transactions - formerly titled Electronic Commerce and International Taxation (1999) and Electronic Commerce and Multijurisdictional Taxation (2001) - revises, updates, and expands the book's coverage, reorganizes its presentation, and adds several new chapters. It includes a detailed and up-to-date analysis of VAT developments regarding e-commerce, and explores the implications of e-commerce for the US state and local sales and use tax regime. It discusses cross-border income tax developments in the United States while continuing to focus on tax developments throughout the world.



Analysing the practical tax consequences of e-commerce from a multijurisdictional perspective and using examples to illustrate the application of different taxes to e-commerce transactions, the book offers in-depth treatment of such topics as:



- how tax rules governing cross-border e-commerce are increasingly applied to all cross-border activities; - how tax rules and institutional processes have evolved to confront challenges posed by e-commerce; - how technology enhances cross-border tax information exchanges; - how technology reduces compliance and enforcement costs; - cross-border consumption tax issues raised by cloud computing; and - different approaches to the legal design of VAT place of taxation rules.

This edition, while building on the analysis of the relationship between traditional tax laws and the Internet in earlier editions, contains a more explicit and systematic consideration of e-commerce issues as well as the ongoing policy responses to them. Tax professionals and academics everywhere will welcome the important contribution it makes towards the design of cross-border tax rules that are both conceptually sound and practical in application.

554 pages, ebook

Published September 23, 2013

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