Timeless principles of taxpayer protection: how they adapt to digital disruption

Digital transformation will pose growing challenges to tax revenues and systems of taxation that were designed for another century. The tax rules may hasten slowly, but the record of response to the challenges of electronic commerce, and of base erosion and profit shifting, shows that tax administra...

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Veröffentlicht in:eJournal of tax research 2019-01, Vol.16 (3), p.679-713
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description Digital transformation will pose growing challenges to tax revenues and systems of taxation that were designed for another century. The tax rules may hasten slowly, but the record of response to the challenges of electronic commerce, and of base erosion and profit shifting, shows that tax administration is more adaptable. This article identifies the detailed nature of technological changes in electronics and systems; big data, automation and artificial intelligence; and security, including blockchain; as those changes affect tax administration. It highlights the critical taxpayer rights issues and applies accepted taxpayer rights frameworks. The article concludes that taxpayer rights principles are both highly adaptable to a digital world, and provide useful guidance to where urgent action and further research are required.
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subjects 20th century
Artificial intelligence
Automation
Bias
Big Data
Blockchain
Business models
Compliance
Criminology
Decision making
Economic development
Economic forecasts
Economic models
Electronic commerce
Industry 4.0
Intelligence gathering
Labor market
Macroeconomics
Management
Rights
Society
Tax administration
Tax revenues
Tax services
Taxation
Technological change
Trends
title Timeless principles of taxpayer protection: how they adapt to digital disruption
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