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Eight chapters cover short selling and corporate tax avoidance, Fin48 and earnings management, the U.S. Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003, the impact of social identity on reasonable compensation cases, FACTA, corporate tax compliance in Bangladesh, enforced tax compliance behavior in Malaysia, and tax morale in Greece.

Produktbeschreibung
Eight chapters cover short selling and corporate tax avoidance, Fin48 and earnings management, the U.S. Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003, the impact of social identity on reasonable compensation cases, FACTA, corporate tax compliance in Bangladesh, enforced tax compliance behavior in Malaysia, and tax morale in Greece.
Autorenporträt
Since 2011, Dr. John Hasseldine has been a Professor of Accounting and Taxation in the Peter T. Paul College of Business and Economics at the University of New Hampshire. Previously he was a Chair and Head of the Accounting and Finance Department at the University of Nottingham Business School. John, a Kiwi, qualified as a chartered accountant in New Zealand and is a Fellow of the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (FCCA) based in London. John has served on three government committees in the U.K. and was a contributor to the Mirrlees Review of the U.K. tax system conducted by the Institute of Fiscal Studies. He has been an external expert at the International Monetary Fund, a visiting professor at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, and a keynote speaker at several international tax conferences. He travels widely, speaking at national and global conferences, including one on VAT organized by the OECD, World Bank and IMF, and a conference on dealing with the national tax gap held at the U.S. Library of Congress in Washington DC. He is a co-author of Comparative Taxation: Why Tax Systems Differ, Fiscal Publications, 2017. John received his Ph.D in Accounting in 1997 from the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University-Bloomington, and his Master of Commerce in Accounting and Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.