Global Histories of Taxation and State Finances Since the Late 19th Century

Global Histories of Taxation and State Finances Since the Late 19th Century

Organizer
Vanessa Ogle (University of Pennsylvania), in cooperation with the Institute for European Global Studies at the University of Basel, the Department of History and the Cluster of Excellence "Asia and Europe in a Global Context" at Heidelberg University and the Laureate Research Program in International History at the University of Sydney
Venue
Institute for European Global Studies, Gellertstrasse 27, CH-4052 Basel
Location
Basel
Country
Switzerland
From - Until
01.12.2016 - 03.12.2016
Website
By
Biehl, Dominique

Taxation has wide-ranging implications for global as well as domestic
orders, ranging from budgets and public finances to inequality, the social
fabric of societies, and worldwide competition for corporate profits.
Since the global financial crisis of 2008 in particular, taxation and
the reform of tax systems have become talking points in many parts of
the North Atlantic world. The current interest in taxation is welcome,
but many of the issues raised more recently have long histories that
deserve to be studied in their own right. This international symposium
calls on historians and historically-minded sociologists and political
scientists with different geographical specializations to engage with
the topic of taxation from a wide variety of angles.

Programm

Thursday, December 1

13:45 – 14:00 Welcome
Venue: Institute for European Global Studies
Madeleine Herren-Oesch, University of Basel

14:00 – 17:00 Session I: The Politics of International Taxation
Chair: Martin Lengwiler, University of Basel

Tax Lawyers of the World, Unite! Mitchell B. Carroll,
Transnational Tax Networks, and International Capital
Matthieu Leimgruber, Zurich University

International Double Taxation and Multinational
Enterprises: A Comparison Between the UK and Japan
(ca. 1920s – 1940s)
Ryo Izawa, Shiga University

15:15 – 15:45 Coffee break

The Ambivalent State: Taxation and Eurodollar Financing
of the British Economy (ca. 1965 – 1971)
Seung-Woo Kim, Cambridge University

Swiss Fiscal Policies, Global Tax Competition, and Notions
of Tax Justice, 1960s – 2010s
Gisela Huerlimann, ETHZ Zurich

17:00 – 18:30 Coffee and light dinner break and transfer to
lecture hall

18:30 – 20:00 Public Lecture
Venue: Kollegiengebäude HS 120
Aristocrats and Taxes: Some Thoughts on the Origins of
Inequality
Jacob Soll, University of Southern California

Friday, December 2

09:00 – 11:30 Session II: The Postwar Moment Around the Globe
Chair: Madeleine Herren-Oesch, University of Basel

States of Occupation: Imposing New Deal Tax Policy on
Germany and Japan, 1945 – 1955
Jason Scott Smith, University of New Mexico

Workers “Long-Held Dream”: The Soviet Attempt to
Abolish Income Taxes, 1960 – 1962
Kristy Ironside, University of Manchester

Walking a Tightrope: Business, the Tax System, and Tax
Conscience in Greece, 1955 – 1989
Zoi Pittaki, University of Glasgow

11:30 – 12:45 Lunch Break

12:45 – 16:30 Session III: From Progressive Taxes to Neoliberalism
Chair: Vanessa Ogle, University of Pennsylvania

Progressivity and Sectionalism in the American
Income Tax
Robin Einhorn, University of California-Berkeley

The Long Twentieth Century of U.S. Progressive Taxation
Joseph Thorndike, Tax Analysts

Taxation and Inequality in the 1980s: A Comparison of
Western European Experiences
Marc Buggeln, Humboldt University Berlin

14:45 – 15:15 Coffee Break

Tax Planning in an Era of High Tax Rates
Steven A. Bank, University of California-Los Angeles

Whitaker & Baxter: Pioneers of the Anti-Tax Revolt in
California from the New Deal to Pat Brown
Matteo Muzio, Università degli Studi di Genova

16:30 – 17:30 Coffee break and transfer to lecture hall

17:30 – 19:00 Conference Keynote
Venue: Kollegiengebäude HS 117
Running to Stay in Place: Money in American Politics
Monica Prasad, Northwestern University

19:30 Conference Dinner

Saturday, December 3

09:00 – 11:00 Session IV: Empire and After
Chair: Corinne Pernet, University of Basel

Customs in the Two Congos (1886 – 1914): How to Control
Uncontrollable Borders to Tax International Trade
Bas De Roo, Ghent University

The Politics of Taxation in the French Colonial Empire,
1900 – 1939
Madeline Woker, Columbia University

Twentieth-Century Innovation in Tax Administration and
Tax Law: Center vs. Periphery (Mandate Palestine, Israel)
Assaf Likhovski, Tel Aviv University Faculty of Law

11:00 – 11:15 Coffee Break

11:15 – 12:15 Final Roundtable Discussion
Madeleine Herren-Oesch, University of Basel
Glenda Sluga, University of Sydney
Vanessa Ogle, University of Pennsylvania

Contact (announcement)

Vanessa Ogle

Vanessa Ogle Julie and Martin Franklin Assistant Professor of History, Department of History School

vogle@sas.upenn.edu


Editors Information
Published on
25.11.2016
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