Professor Rachel Griffith gave the annual lecture of the Royal Economic Society on 24 November 2015. The title of the lecture was "Does Starbucks Pay Enough Tax?" How much tax do large multinational firms pay? Where do they pay it and where should they pay it?
This clip about corporate taxation, on the Today programme from 24 November features an interview with Rachel about the location of firms and their taxation.
Rachel is Co-Director of the Centre for the Microeconomic Analysis of Public Policy (CPP) at the Institute for Fiscal Studies and Professor of Economics at the University of Manchester.
News details
- Publisher
- IFS
Related documents
More from IFS
Understand this issue
Spring Budget 2024: What you need to know
podcast
IFS reaction to the Chancellor's Spring Budget.
7 March 2024
Cake or biscuit? The UK's byzantine VAT system explained
podcast
This week, we dive into the oddities of the VAT system.
16 November 2023
Spring Budget 2024: the Chancellor’s options
event
27 February 2024 at 10:00
At this online event, IFS researchers outlined some of the constraints facing the Chancellor ahead of the Spring Budget.
Policy analysis
The IFS Scottish Budget Report – 2024–25
report
This report looks at the key budgetary and public service issues for the Scottish Government for the 2024–25 financial year and beyond.
22 February 2024
Scottish NHS is treating fewer patients than pre-pandemic, despite big increases in staffing
press release
The COVID-19 pandemic is having long-lasting impacts on NHS hospital activity, productivity and performance in Scotland, despite higher funding.
9 February 2024
Is there really an NHS productivity crisis?
comment
It is difficult to measure NHS productivity. But the available evidence strongly suggests that the NHS is less productive now than pre-pandemic.
17 November 2023
Academic research
Fiscal Studies, Volume 44, Issue 1
journal issue
Fiscal Studies, Volume 44, Issue 1: Symposium: the global minimum tax
20 March 2023
House price rises and borrowing to invest
working paper
We propose a borrow-to-invest motive by which house price gains affect household spending on residential investment.
27 March 2024
Understanding Society: the income data
journal article
We introduce the income data of Understanding Society, the UK Household Longitudinal Study.
2 February 2024