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Evaluation of the rates and structures of excise duty on alcohol and alcoholic beverages

  • Date:

    7 Dec 2021 - 7 Dec 2022

  • Project duration:

    07.12.2021 - 07.12.2022

  • Projects from this author:

    • VAT compliance gap due to Missing trader intra-community (MTIC) fraud

      Revenues generated by Value-Added Tax (VAT) play an important role in the budgets of European Union (EU) Member States (MS) and the EU; as VAT resource accounts for around 10% of EU own resource revenue and around 26% of MS’s tax revenue. Tax fraud, evasion and avoidance reduce these revenues, and undermine the tax system, affecting &hellip; <a href="https://case-research.eu/project/evaluation-of-the-rates-and-structures-of-excise-duty-on-alcohol-and-alcoholic-beverages/">Continued</a>

    • VAT Gap in the EU

      Description: The core objective of this study is to inform in an accurate, timely, understandable, and attractive manner the national administrations, Commission, academic community, and a broader audience on the value, development over time, and difference across Member States of tax gaps and related parameters. More specifically, the study will cover the VAT compliance gap, &hellip; <a href="https://case-research.eu/project/evaluation-of-the-rates-and-structures-of-excise-duty-on-alcohol-and-alcoholic-beverages/">Continued</a>

    • VAT Gap in the EU

      The 2022 Study will meet new and significant challenges related to accurate and comparable measurement of the VAT Gap in EU Member States. One of these challenges relates to the structural changes in the economies and VAT systems in 2020 and 2021 resulting from the pandemic. Meeting of this challenge will require additional means to &hellip; <a href="https://case-research.eu/project/evaluation-of-the-rates-and-structures-of-excise-duty-on-alcohol-and-alcoholic-beverages/">Continued</a>

    Author’s projects
  • Projects from this author:

    • Strategies for the Evaluation and Assessment of Ocean-based Carbon Dioxide Removal (SEAO2-CDR)

      Strategies for the Evaluation and Assessment of Ocean-based Carbon Dioxide Removal (SEAO2-CDR) is a new European project directed at deepening our knowledge of Ocean-based Carbon Dioxide Removal (OCDR) solutions, their efficacy, benefits and consequences. Led by the British National Oceanography Centre and coordinated by Uniresearch, the project employs thirteen European organisations who will provide scientific, &hellip; <a href="https://case-research.eu/project/evaluation-of-the-rates-and-structures-of-excise-duty-on-alcohol-and-alcoholic-beverages/">Continued</a>

    • Developing a handbook on good practice in countering disinformation at local and regional level

      Project description: Having in mind the established frameworks at European level, it is necessary to ensure that the available tools are utilised at all levels and by all relevant actors that could contribute to the joint aim of empowering citizens in their resilience to disinformation. While it is beneficial to adopt broad strategies, these should &hellip; <a href="https://case-research.eu/project/evaluation-of-the-rates-and-structures-of-excise-duty-on-alcohol-and-alcoholic-beverages/">Continued</a>

    • The territorial dimension of the Conference on the Future of Europe and its follow-ups

      The Conference on the Future of Europe provided an opportunity to reflect in a fundamental way on the most relevant challenges for the future of Europe. Clustered into nine topics, the debates in the CoFoE cover: EU policies and processes; the EU&#8217;s institutional structure; citizens&#8217; expectations towards the EU. For the success of the CoFoE, &hellip; <a href="https://case-research.eu/project/evaluation-of-the-rates-and-structures-of-excise-duty-on-alcohol-and-alcoholic-beverages/">Continued</a>

    Author’s projects

Related projects

VAT gap in Europe – report 2025

The study's primary objective is to collect and supply economic information from existing official economic and statistical databases, as well as to gather primary data from national authorities. The study will also conduct macroeconomic analysis for country-specific VAT compliance and policy gap estimations and the impact of the coronavirus pandemic. Moreover, the study will include up to five case studies on specific countries and/or topics, to be proposed by the contractor in their technical offer. Geographically, the study will cover all EU Member States, subject to quality checks for data reliability and robustness. This includes coverage of the United Kingdom during its time as an EU Member State. In addition, the study will test and implement, where possible, the inclusion of EU candidate countries and possible candidate countries, except for Türkiye. These countries include: • Albania, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Serbia1 (candidate countries at the stage of accession negotiations); • Ukraine, Moldova, and Bosnia and Herzegovina (Candidate countries for which the Council has decided to open accession negotiations); • Georgia (candidate country); • Kosovo (potential candidate country). The study's temporal scope will cover primarily a 6-year period, comprising: • a comprehensive review and revision of ‘full estimates’ for the first four years, i.e., for 2019-2022; • a new ‘full estimate’ for the fifth year, i.e., for 2023; • provisional ‘fast estimates’ for the sixth year based on simplified methodology for 2024. In addition to the 6-year coverage, the study will provide a historical context by reporting on VAT compliance gaps from 2000 onwards, and VAT policy gap estimates, including its components, from 2016 onwards. This will provide a comprehensive timeline of these indicators. The study will also include a review of the economic and policy context, also including an outlook beyond this 6-year period.

Wealth taxation, including net-wealth, capital and exit taxes

The study aims to provide further information regarding the uptake and economic consequences of introducing wealth-related taxes. The purpose of the study is to shed further light firstly into recurrent wealth related taxes by (i) reviewing the conditions for the implementation of a net wealth tax and its consequences, to provide a detailed literature review on recurrent capital taxes in the EU and analyse their economic consequences; and secondly (ii) to provide an overview of existing non-recurrent wealth related taxes, namely, by providing an overview of capital taxes, inheritance and gift taxes and the existing exit tax provisions in the field of personal income taxation (including relevant statutory references), and how these interrelate with and complement the legal framework of taxing net wealth and capital gains. The study builds on previous research work mapping wealth taxes and estimating the consequences of their introduction. It is structured along two parts comprised of two and three workstreams respectively, related to the topics outlined above. Part 1 – Recurrent taxation, Workstream 1 – Net wealth taxes Part 1 – Recurrent taxation, Workstream 2 – Capital taxes Part 2 – Non-recurrent taxation, Workstream 3 – Capital taxes Part 2 – Non-recurrent taxation, Workstream 4 – Inheritance and gift taxes Part 2 – Non-recurrent taxation, Workstream 5 – Exit taxes

Impact assessment support study “Taxation of the Financial Sector”

This study shall provide input for the Impact assessment for a possible legislative proposal for the revision of the VAT exemption as laid down in the VAT Directive 2006/112/EC (1) and a possible legislative proposal for an EU taxation framework for the financial sector (2). The main purpose of this study is to provide an informed analysis of the potential problems arising from the current tax framework applicable to the financial sector in the EU (various sector-specific taxes and the VAT exemption) based on the analysis of the information already available and on the collection of relevant and more up-to-date evidence taking into account the current economic context, notably structural changes that are likely to persist over time, and specific features of the financial sector, notably, its regulatory and supervisory framework. On the basis of this analysis, the objective of the study is to provide insights supporting the potential development of options for an adequate EU taxation framework for the financial sector, which could include amending the current VAT Directive and establishing an EU taxation framework for the financial sector.

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