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Citizen Tax Juries: Democratizing Tax Enforcement after the Panama Papers
Author(s) -
Gordon Arlen
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
political theory
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.478
H-Index - 58
eISSN - 1552-7476
pISSN - 0090-5917
DOI - 10.1177/00905917211018007
Subject(s) - tax avoidance , tax reform , politics , economics , law and economics , political economy , tax policy , accountability , political science , public economics , law
Four years after the Panama Papers scandal, tax avoidance remains an urgent moral-political problem. Moving beyond both the academic and policy mainstream, I advocate the “democratization of tax enforcement,” by which I mean systematic efforts to make tax avoiders accountable to the judgment of ordinary citizens. Both individual oligarchs and multinational corporations have access to sophisticated tax avoidance strategies that impose significant fiscal costs on democracies and exacerbate preexisting distributive and political inequalities. Yet much contemporary tax sheltering occurs within the letter of the law, rendering criminal sanctions ineffective. In response, I argue for the creation of Citizen Tax Juries, deliberative minipublics empowered to scrutinize tax avoiders, demand accountability, and facilitate concrete reforms. This proposal thus responds to the wider aspiration, within contemporary democratic theory, to secure more popular control over essential economic processes.

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