Tax and Robotics
Martinus Nijhoff (Verlag)
9789004538504 (ISBN)
Álvaro Falcón Pulido has a bachelor’s degree in Law from the Universidad Pontificia de Comillas (ICADE) (with honors, 2013) and a diploma in Business Studies (2013) as well as a master’s in Taxation and International Tax Law (prize for top-performing student in the class of 2014) from that University. He became a Doctor of Laws at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid (summa cum laude, 2022) with a dissertation titled “Fiscalidad y robótica,” which was published by Tirant lo Blanch and is the basis of this book. He has been a practicing lawyer since 2013 and has written mainly on the topic of taxation and robotics.
Foreword
Part 1
Robots and their Impact
1 Concept and Types
A Legal Concept of a Robot
1 What Is a Robot?
a Appearance of the “Robot” Concept
b Historical Evolution
i Industry Definition of “Robot”
ii Published Academic Definition of “Robot”
2 The Need for a Legal Definition of Robot
a Absence of a Legal Definition of Robot
b Possibility of a Legal-Tax Definition of Robot
c Proposed Legal-Tax Definition of Robot
B Existing Robot Types
1 Criteria for Possible Robot Classification
2 Robotic Archetypes by Characteristics
a Drones
b Autonomous Vehicles
c Softbots and Artificial Intelligence
d Humanoid Robots: Androids and Cyborgs
3 Robotic Archetypes by Use
a Industrial Machinery
b Healthcare Robots
i Prosthetic and Rehabilitation Robots
ii Service and Care Robots
iii Surgical Robots
c Space and Military Robots
C Conclusions
2 The Need for Public Intervention to Face the Challenges Posed by Robotics
A The Impact of Robotics
1 Repercussions of Robotics for the Labor Market
a Percentage of Automation
b Speed and Intensity of Automation
c The Offshoring and Reshoring Phenomenon
2 Repercussions of Robotics for the Economy
a Economic Inequality
B On the Need to Regulate Robots
1 The Legal Framework of Robots
a Adapting the Legal System to New and Emerging Realities
b The Need for Legal Certainty
2 Objectives of Robot Taxation
a Non-fiscal Purposes
b Revenue Needs
i Universal Basic Income
ii Helping Companies and Workers Adapt to the New Labor Market
C General Principles of the Legal Regulation of Robots
1 Principles of Robot Law
2 Principles Inherent to Tax Law
Part 2
Personhood
3 Personhood of Robots
A What Is Personhood?
1 Concept of Personhood
2 Historical Evolution
a Legal Personality in Rome
i Persons
ii Foundations and Associations
iii Slaves
b Legal Personality of Companies
c Animals: From Chattels to Sentient Beings
d Robotic or Electronic Personhood
i Comparison of Persons and Robots
ii Traditional Legal Personhood versus a New Brand of Personhood: the Possibility of Using Existing Types of Legal Entities, such as Companies or Foundations
iii Robotic Personhood as an Evolution of Legal Personhood: the Possibility of Attributing General Legal Capacity to Robots, thereby Creating a New Type of Legal Person
iv Robots’ Capacity to Act and “Capacity of Representation”
B Do Robots Really Need Personhood?
1 The Need to Give Robots Personhood
2 Robots as Taxpayers
a Robots as Entities with Personhood
i Legal Capacity
ii Capacity to Act
b Robots as de facto Entities
i Special Tax Capacity: a Tax Levied on Robots or on Robot Owners? Critique of the Theory of Special Tax Capacity
ii Owners, Users, and Manufacturers as Taxpayers
iii Financial Capacity and Ability to Pay
C Conclusions
Part 3
Taxation and Robotics
4 Current Tax Treatment of Robots
A Comparison of the Tax Situations of Robots and Workers
1 Current Accounting Situation of Robots
2 Corporate Expenses
a Robot Depreciation
b Salaries and Social Security Contributions
B Subject of Subsidies, Deductions, and Tax Incentives for Research, Development, and Innovation (r&d + i)
1 Types
a Direct and Indirect Financing
b Direct and Indirect Tax Incentives
c Input and Output Incentives
2 Tax Incentives in Spain’s Corporate Income Tax Law (lis)
a Reduction of Taxable Income Derived from Certain Intangible Assets
b Deduction for Research and Development and Technological Innovation Activities
c Free Depreciation under lis Article 12.3
3 Tax Incentives for Research, Development, and Innovation (r&d + i) in Comparative Law
a France
b Austria
c Netherlands
d Portugal
e United Kingdom
f Italy
g Chile
4 Coexistence of Tax Incentives and the Robot Tax
5 Tax Incentives for Research, Development, and Innovation in Robotics as a Solution
5 The Question of Taxing Power in Spanish Law
A The Division of Taxing Powers Set out in the Spanish Constitution
B The Need to Avoid the Proliferation of Regional Taxes in Robotics
C Possible Solutions
1 Creating a Federal Tax
2 Amending the Regional Financing Law (lofca)
3 The Alternative of a Ceded Federal Tax
4 The Alternative of an Ordinary Harmonization Law
D Conclusions
6 Robot Tax
A The New Robot Tax
1 Different Types of Taxes
a Direct and Indirect Taxes
b Subjective and Objective Taxes
c Personal and Real Taxes
2 Structure of the Robot Tax
a Subjective Element
b Objective Element
3 The Concept of Theoretical Imputed Income
B International Perspective
1 Impact on dtt s
2 Robots as Permanent Establishments
a Application of the Traditional Concept of Permanent Establishment
b The New Concept of Digital Permanent Establishment
C Other Ways of Taxing Robots: Taxes and Fees
1 Creating New Taxes
2 Adjusting Existing Taxes
a Personal, Corporate, and Non-Resident Income Tax
b vat
c Others
i Special Tax on Certain Modes of Transportation
ii Special Electricity Tax
iii Public Radio-Electric Spectrum Reservation Rate
D Social Security Contributions
1 Concept and Nature of Contributions
2 Adapting the Concept of Contributions to a Potential Social Security Tax on Robots
E Other Solutions
1 Tobin Tax or Financial Transaction Tax
2 Google Tax or Digital Services Tax
3 Related Solutions that Affect Robots
a cctb and ccctb
F Conclusions
Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
| Erscheinungsdatum | 30.08.2023 |
|---|---|
| Reihe/Serie | Nijhoff Law Specials ; 108 |
| Sprache | englisch |
| Maße | 155 x 235 mm |
| Gewicht | 334 g |
| Themenwelt | Recht / Steuern ► EU / Internationales Recht |
| Recht / Steuern ► Öffentliches Recht ► Völkerrecht | |
| ISBN-13 | 9789004538504 / 9789004538504 |
| Zustand | Neuware |
| Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR) | |
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