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Issue 28 (4)/2022

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Publication date: 12.2022

Licence: CC BY-NC-ND  licence icon

Editorial team

Secretary Rafał Mroczkowski

Issue content

Lenka Maličká, Jana Lukáčová, Daniela Hadačová

Financial Law Review, Issue 28 (4)/2022, 2022, pp. 1-13

https://doi.org/10.4467/22996834FLR.22.021.17139

This paper examines how the demographic and economic structure of the municipalities´ population relates to the share of real property tax on local tax revenue in the Slovak republic. Shares of the productive population, unemployed population pupils, the population aged less than 14 years, and the population aged over 65 years in the total municipal population are involved in the regression analysis based on the panel data. The research covers 2,926 municipalities in the period 2005-2020. Estimation results show a positive relationship between the dependent variable and variables referring to the productive population, unemployed population, and population aged less than 14 years. A negative relationship is observed in the case of variables referring to pupils and the population aged over 65 years.

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Filip Baláži, Elena Lazoríková

Financial Law Review, Issue 28 (4)/2022, 2022, pp. 14-31

https://doi.org/10.4467/22996834FLR.22.022.17140

The article focuses on the transfer pricing in the Slovak Republic. The main subject of this article is the analysis of the legal regulation of transfer pricing of controlled transactions between domestic dependents. The authors examine the very essence of the extension of the transfer pricing obligation and the related obligation to maintain transfer pricing documentation to domestic dependants, with a focus on the analysis of the effectiveness of the legislation under review. The authors are also providing suggestions for potential improvements to the legislation, with particular emphasis on reducing the administrative burden on taxpayers and tax administrators.

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Dominik Gajewski, Kamil Joński

Financial Law Review, Issue 28 (4)/2022, 2022, pp. 33-41

https://doi.org/10.4467/22996834FLR.22.023.17192

The goal of this paper is to empirically examine the role of Regulatory Impact Assessments (RIAs) accompanying draft laws submitted by the Council of the Ministers as an input in purpose-oriented interpretation of tax law, carried out by Polish Administrative Courts. To this end, full-text database of the universe of Administrative Courts verdicts (CBOIS) had been queried in order to uncover all court decisions issued from Jan 1st 2001 to Dec 31st 2022 and mentioning RIAs in their written motives. All in all 14 decisions of SAC and 39 decisions of FIACs had been located – the result that can be interpreted as an evidence of scant use of RIA as an input for statutory interpretation of the tax law. Qualitative analysis reported in the paper illustrates what sort of information had been recovered by justices from RIA. Results suggest that potential offered by RIA’s coverage of ‘lawmaker’s intent’ is still not fully utilized in the process of tax law interpretation. However, any reliance on this sort of documents have to be accompanied with critical analysis of their quality and role in lawmaking process. Conditional forecasts (what impact is reasonably expected) should not be mistaken with statements of the intent (what impact is desired). Moreover, perfunctory RIA, prepared as part of window-dressing exercise, not genuine analysis underpinning the decision-making process, could turned out misleading.

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Richard Bartes

Financial Law Review, Issue 28 (4)/2022, 2022, pp. 43-60

https://doi.org/10.4467/22996834FLR.22.024.18142

This article deals with selected aspects of the Europeanization of public finance law. For this reason, the article focuses on some important sources of European public finance law and their impact on the budgetary discipline of member states. In this context, the attention is paid to the Treaty on Stability, Coordination and Governance in the Economic and Monetary Union (TSCG), which is not a normative act, but it is an international treaty outside the EU law whose provisions are binding on the member states that have signed this treaty. The article also presents a seeking for budgetary coherence within the European Union member states and then it presents an evolution of budgetary discipline of member states. The main aim of the article is to confirm or disprove the hypothesis that the compliance with the binding mechanisms of the budgetary discipline of the member states introduced after 2010 is always well enforceable. The scientific methods used in the article are analysis and synthesis, description and comparative methods.

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