Sources of Tax Law and Constitutional Principles Flashcards

1
Q

Is checks and balances respected in new vs. old constitutions?

A

More in old constitutions with old traditions

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2
Q

Constitutional framework of taxation - 5 points that the constitution guides

A
  1. Limiting legislative power - when can the legislative/executive make laws?
  2. Restricting whether the state vs. federal level can levy taxes
  3. Principles with which taxes must comply (equality, ability-to-pay- fairness)
  4. Delimit the competence of the legislature vis-a-vis the executive (e.g., when the executive can make laws - usually temporary power)
  5. Guarantee citizens substantive and procedural rights
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3
Q

Centralized vs. decentralized constitutional review

A

Centralized means constitutional review is exercised by a specialized court

Decentralized means the entire court system exercises constitutional review

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4
Q

Timing of the constitutional review

A

Constitutional reviews can either happen before or after the enactment of the law

Before: asking for advice from constitutional court -> must change before law is introduced

After: constitutional court declares a law unconstitutional after citizen complaints

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5
Q

4 places you can find the principles of taxation

A
  1. Constitution
  2. Declaration of rights
  3. Income tax laws
  4. Administrative tax laws
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6
Q

Tax principle: Ability to pay

A

Tax rates for individuals are based on their ability to pay -> higher-income individuals earn more more, so they have a better ability-to-pay higher taxes

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7
Q

Tax principle: Annuality

A

Taxes are administered/calculated on a yearly basis

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8
Q

Tax principle: Efficiency (two opinions)

A

Citizens are free to arrange their taxes in the way that is most efficient for them, as long as it is in line with the law and constitution -> can set up a subsidiary in tax havens

OR
If the law obtains the objective that it wanted, it is efficient

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9
Q

Tax principle: Equality

A

Equality between citizens; everyone is treated the same

Are specific tax allowances for only certain people or groups allowed?

Equality of what? Opportunities, treatment, between cultures, outcome? Depends on the country

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10
Q

Tax principle: Equity

A

Taxes are imposed in line with ability to pay

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11
Q

Tax principle: Good faith

A

Parties will deal with each other honestly, fairly, and in good faith

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12
Q

Tax principle: Legality

A

Taxes must be imposed by law - no tax can be made, changed, or repealed without law

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13
Q

Tax principle: Legal certainty

A

The time and reason of payment as well as the
amount to be paid by an individual should be well documented and certain
or known -> laws must be made public and easily available for citizens to understand

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14
Q

Tax principle: Legitimate expectations

A

You can expect to be treated the same as others; application of the law is for you because it has been used on others; other cases and laws create legitimate expectations

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15
Q

Tax principle: Necessity (of tax levy)

A

Taxes imposed must be necessary (?)

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16
Q

Tax principle: Non-seizure

A

State cannot seize personal, necessary property

17
Q

Tax principle: (Non-)retroactivity

A

Can a law implemented on a certain date count retroactively? E.g., can you introduce a law to correct technical mistakes, prevent tax avoidance, or reverse a judicial decision that the legislature disagrees with

If retroactive -> law has effect on the date it was made known, not the day it is passed, for example to avoid people changing their income or employment status between law announced and law passed

18
Q

Tax principle: Progressiveness

A

Progressive tax rate -> the more you earn, the more you pay in taxes