This book explores one of the most significant trends in the evolution of global tax
systems by asking how, within less than half a century, the value-added tax (VAT) has
risen from relative obscurity to become one of the world’s most dominant revenue
instruments. Despite its significance, very little is known about why so many countries
have adopted the VAT and, in particular, why different countries adopt the types of
VAT that they do. The popular mythology provides that the merits of the VAT have
underpinned its global spread; however, this book contends that much scholarship on
the VAT confuses the question of why the VAT has risen to dominance with the issue of
what makes a good VAT. This book combines policy and legal analysis to propose a new
way of understanding the rise of this important revenue instrument so as to better reflect
the realities of the VATs that are actually implemented.
Kathryn James is a lecturer in the Faculty of Law at Monash University. She researches
in the field of comparative tax law and policy, with particular emphasis on the valueadded
tax. She has published in a number of leading journals, including the British Tax
Review and Theoretical Inquiries in the Law.