The project investigates the interplay between capital markets and tax policy in shaping investment patterns, corporate control, market competition and trade policy across multiple jurisdictions, including the United States and Western Europe. Modern corporations operate in increasingly complex and interconnected financial environments where capital mobility, taxation, and regulatory frameworks critically influence corporate decisions, market efficiency, and the distribution of capital investment. Despite their strategic importance, comparative analyses of these dynamics remain limited, particularly when integrating legal, economic, and fiscal perspectives.
The primary objective of this research is to understand how different legal structures and tax policies affect corporate control, financing choices, and the broader competitive landscape of international capital markets. By examining factors such as taxation of income and capital, along with wealth transfer mechanisms and cross-border levies, the project aims to clarify how fiscal and regulatory frameworks can either facilitate or constrain investment, transparency, and operational efficiency.
The project pathway to impact involves generating rigorous, empirically grounded, and policy-relevant insights that can inform both academic discourse and decision-making by regulators and institutions. Anticipated outcomes include enhanced understanding of the structural challenges in European capital markets, evidence-based recommendations for improving corporate governance and taxation policies, and the establishment of international collaborations fostering cross-border trade policy. These impacts are significant at both the scientific and policy level, as they address systemic issues influencing capital allocation, competitiveness, and economic growth in developed economies.