ID - 16122087 TI - EU Citizenship and Direct Taxation. PY - 2017 VL - 54 SN - 9789041185846 9789041185853 9789041185860 9041185844 PB - Alphen aan de Rijn: Kluwer Law International ; DB - UniCat KW - personenbelasting KW - impot des personnes physiques KW - vrij verkeer KW - libre circulation KW - impots directs KW - union europeenne KW - liberté de circulation KW - directe belastingen KW - europese unie KW - vrijheid van verkeer KW - Tax law KW - European law KW - European Union KW - liberté de circulation KW - Libre circulation des personnes. KW - Citoyenneté (droit européen) KW - Droit fiscal. KW - Droit européen et droit interne. KW - Direct taxation KW - Citizenship KW - direct tax KW - domestic tax law KW - ECJ case law KW - fundamental freedoms KW - Bürger. KW - Staatsangehörigkeit. KW - Direkte Steuer. KW - Unionsbürgerschaft. KW - Union européenne. KW - Europäische Union. KW - Europe UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:16122087 AB - EU Citizenship and Direct Taxation is the first book to investigate in detail how the Court of Justice of the European Union (ECJ) has tried to reconcile specific national direct tax rules with the general European Union (EU) principle of free movement of persons from the perspective of EU citizenship. Freedom of movement is a key principle of the EU resulting in the right of every EU citizen to move and reside freely within the EU. Many EU citizens work in the other Member States than their Member State of origin. Direct taxes are not as such covered in the treaties and therefore have a much smaller basis for harmonization at EU level than indirect taxes. As a result, decisions of ECJ on the clash between the EU principle of free movement and Member States’ direct tax rules have a significant effect on national direct tax systems. This book focuses on the relation between free movement rights of EU citizens and the legal autonomy of Member States in the area of direct taxation.What’s in this book:The book’s incomparably thorough analysis of the distinctive evolution, mainly via ECJ case law, of the relation between the EU principle of free movement of persons and Member States’ direct tax rules includes in-depth discussion of the following elements and more:the concept of EU citizenship in the EU’s constitutional and institutional development;how the ECJ has interpreted the concept of free movement with regard to economically inactive persons;how the notion of EU citizenship has widened the ECJ’s view on treaty access;how the ECJ has addressed the clash between free movement of persons and direct taxation in the EU’s constitutional context; andnumerous tax policy initiatives with regard to EU citizens before and after the Treaty of Lisbon.The willingness at EU level to make EU citizenship a key driver behind the European integration process relates to the purpose of this study. This book explains that the ECJ is reconceptualizing the market freedoms relating to the free movement of persons as part of a broader EU citizenship right for all economically active EU citizens to pursue an economic activity in a cross-border context; a right beyond the aim of realization of the internal market.How this will help you:This book proceeds confidently through the maze of rules that relate to the notion of EU citizenship and gives a broad understanding of the concept of EU citizenship in the EU’s constitutional and institutional development. As an extremely important analysis of the influence of EU law on the direct tax autonomy of Member States, this book will be a great influence in the practice and study of taxation in the EU. ER -