E-Book, Englisch, 424 Seiten
E-Book, Englisch, 424 Seiten
Reihe: EUCOTAX Series on European Taxation
ISBN: 978-90-411-8585-3
Verlag: Wolters Kluwer
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
The book’s incomparably thorough analysis of the distinctive evolution, mainly via ECJ case law, of the relation between the EU principle of free movement of persons and Member States’ direct tax rules includes in-depth discussion of the following elements and more:
- – the concept of EU citizenship in the EU’s constitutional and institutional development;
- – how the ECJ has interpreted the concept of free movement with regard to economically inactive persons;
- – how the notion of EU citizenship has widened the ECJ’s view on treaty access;
- – how the ECJ has addressed the clash between free movement of persons and direct taxation in the EU’s constitutional context; and
- – numerous tax policy initiatives with regard to EU citizens before and after the Treaty of Lisbon
This is the first book to investigate in such detail how the ECJ has tried to reconcile specific national direct tax rules with the general EU principle of free movement of persons from the perspective of EU citizenship. This book explains that the ECJ is in the process of reconceptualizing the market freedoms relating to the free movement of persons, also in the area of direct taxation, as part of a broader EU citizenship right for all economically active EU citizens to pursue an economic activity in a cross-border context; a right beyond the aim of realization of the internal market. As an extremely important analysis of the influence of EU law on the direct tax autonomy of Member States, this book is sure to be itself of great influence in the practice and study of taxation in the EU.