Prix bas
CHF131.20
Actuellement épuisé, nouveau tirage/réimpression en novembre
Auteur
Alicia Hinarejos, Full Professor of Law, McGill University, Robert Schütze, Professor of European and Global Law, Durham University and LUISS Alicia Hinarejos is Full Professor at McGill University's Faculty of Law. Before joining McGill in 2021, she was a Reader in European Union Law and Director of the Centre for European Legal Studies at the Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge. Professor Hinarejos's main areas of research are EU law and comparative public law. In recent years, her work has focused on the evolution of the EU's Economic and Monetary Union and its consequences for the EU's constitutional order. She is joint Editor of the European Law Review. Robert Schütze is Professor of European and Global Law at Durham University and LUISS (Rome). He is a permanent Visiting Professor at the College of Europe (Bruges) and co-founded the Global Policy Institute with the political scientist Professor David Held. He is a constitutional scholar with a particular expertise in the law of the European Union and comparative federalism. He is joint editor of the Yearbook of European Law and the Oxford European Union library.
Texte du rabat
EU Fiscal Federalism examines the European Union's fiscal powers and responsibilities within the ever-evolving context of European integration. A group of esteemed international scholars outline the past, present, and future of EU fiscal federalism, including the relationship between the European Union and its Member States in this critical area.
Résumé
Fiscal federalism refers to the division of fiscal powers powers to tax and spend between different levels of government. The European Union (EU) is often seen as a legislative giant on clay feet, and one of the principal reasons for this feebleness is the lack of a significant fiscal capacity at the Union level. EU Fiscal Federalism: Past, Present, Future explores ten aspects of the EU's fiscal constitution relating both to the fiscal limits it imposes on Member States and the evolution of its own fiscal policy. Bringing together an international and distinguished group of scholars, this volume analyses the different legal dimensions of fiscal federalism within the EU, from the various aspects of the single market (free movement, banking union, state aid, tax harmonization) to the EU's budget and Economic and Monetary Union. The essays provide a fascinating overview of the topic as well as a detailed analysis of where EU fiscal federalism stands today and how it might develop in the future. Sweeping and thorough, EU Fiscal Federalism will appeal to academics and students of European Union law as well as to European policymakers.