Document Type
Book Chapter
Publication Date
2019
Abstract
This chapter assesses the appropriate balance between strengthening tax revenue collection tools to ensure states have adequate resources to meet their human rights obligations, and protecting taxpayer rights to privacy and data security. On the one hand, the ability of rich residents of developing countries and multinational corporations operating in those countries to evade or avoid taxation is directly linked to violations of human rights in those countries, especially from the perspective of social and economic rights like health and education. Providing such countries with the means to fight back and collect adequate revenues is essential in advancing such rights. On the other hand, some of the techniques used to achieve adequate revenue collection, like automatic exchange of information (AEoI) and country-by-country reporting (CbCR), risk violating other human rights like privacy and the legitimate protection of trade secrets.
Publication Information & Recommended Citation
"Taxation and Human Rights: A Delicate Balance." G. Mazzoni, co-author. In Tax, Inequality, and Human Rights, edited by P. Alston and Nikki R. Reisch, 259-77. Oxford, 2019.
Comments
Reproduced with permission of Oxford University Press.