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Incoming Resources
- Taxing corporate income in the 21st century, Alan J. Auerbach, James R. Hines, Jr., Joel Slemrod
- Investment tax incentives and frequent tax reforms
- A Multinational Perspective on capital structure choice and internal capital markets
- Copycatting, fiscal policies of states and their neighbors
- International joint ventures and the boundaries of the firm
- Repatriation taxes and dividend distortions
- Exchange rates and tax-based export promotion
- Taxing multinational corporations, edited by Martin Feldstein, James R. Hines, Jr., and R. Glenn Hubbard
- Expectations and expatriations, tracing the causes and consequences of corporate inversions
- "Basket" cases, international joint ventures after the tax reform act 1986
- Understanding tax evasion dynamics
- International taxation
- Excess capital flows and the burden of inflation in open economies
- Foreign direct investment in a world of multiple taxes
- Perfect taxation with imperfect competition
- The uneasy marriage of export incentives and the income tax
- Dividend policy inside the firm
- Comparative fiscal federalism, comparing the European Court of Justice and the US Supreme Court's tax jurisprudence, [edited by] Reuven S. Avi-Yonah, James R. Hines Jr. and Michael Lang
- Capital flight and tax competition, are there viable solutions to both problems?
- Interest allocation rules, financing patterns and the operations of US multinationals
- Capital flight and tax competition, are there viable solutions to both problems?
- Chains of ownership, regional tax competition, and foreign direct investment
- Taxation and economic efficiency
- Fiscal paradise, foreign tax havens and American business
- Dividends and profits, some unsubtle foreign influences
- The transfer pricing problem, where the profits are
- No place like home, tax incentives and the location od R&D by American multinationals
- Tax policy and the activities of multinational corporations
- Taxes, technology transfer and the R&D activities of multinational firms
- Taxed avoidance, American participation in unsanctioned international boycotts
- On the timeliness of tax reform
- Coming home to America, dividend repatriations by US multinationals
- Altered states, taxes and the location of foreign direct investment in America
- Three sides of Harberger triangles
- Credit and deferral as international investment incentives
- Another look at whether a rising tide lifts all boats
- "Tax sparing" and direct investment in developing countries
- From each according to his surplus, equi-proportionate sharing of commodity tax burdens
- On the sensitivity of R & D to delicate tax changes, the behavior of US multinationals in the 1980s