What do you think the us government should have done in case


Problem

In 1998, a major dispute broke out between California and the United Kingdom involving taxation of the income of Barclay's Bank, one of the major British banks. California imposed a tax that allocated a fraction of Barclay's income to its activities in California, and taxed that accordingly; Barday's said that the formula used resulted in far too high a fraction. The U.K. government supported Barclay's position and threatened economic retaliation. The United States in its international negotiations over the years had criticized other countries using what are called unitary tax systems, in which simple formulae allocate income on the basis of a formula, as described in the text. It argued for using the transfer price system, in which an attempt is made to estimate the value of the goods and services that a company's plant in one country receives from and delivers to the company's facilities in other countries. (It attempts to "price these transfers.) With the worldwide integration of economic production, such systems appear to be increasingly cumbersome; no state within the United States attempts to use a transfer price system. What do you think the U.S. government should have done in Barclay's case?

The response should include a reference list. Double-space, using Times New Roman 12 pnt font, one-inch margins, and APA style of writing and citations.

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Macroeconomics: What do you think the us government should have done in case
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