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Tax Policy as Competition Policy: Reimagining How the US Tax Code Can Foster a More Equitable and Participatory Economy  

Thursday, April 18
12:00 pm - 1:00 pm ET
Zoom
Register Now
Dear John,

You are invited to an upcoming webinar the Roosevelt Institute is hosting on Tax Policy as Competition Policy: Reimagining how the US tax code can foster a more equitable and participatory economy

Excessive market power by dominant corporations is widely decried across the political divide. Federal and state antitrust agencies have begun to reclaim their rightful roles in checking the power of a few firms to control so much of the economy. Historically, tax policy complemented these antitrust enforcers by leveling the economic playing field. Yet today, taxation remains overlooked both as a driver of current levels of market concentration and as a tool to remedy the problem.

Roosevelt’s Taxing Monopolies series explores how a rewriting of the tax code can work alongside other antimonopoly tools to curb the excessive economic and political power of large corporations and their owners.

Join us for a virtual roundtable discussion bringing together a multidisciplinary circle of authors to present their latest research on how the US tax code affects market concentration and how to reform the tax code in a way that levels the economic playing field.

We hope you will join us.
Register Now

In Conversation: 

Prof. Reuven Avi-Yonah

Irwin I. Cohn Professor of Law at the University of Michigan

Prof. Kimberly Clausing

Eric M. Zolt Chair in Tax Law and Policy at the UCLA School of Law

Dr. Sandy Brian Hager

Senior Lecturer in International Political Economy at City, University of London

Niko Lusiani

Director, Corporate Governance and Anti-Monopoly, Roosevelt Institute [Moderator]
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