Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference.

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Venue address: United States International University Africa, USIU Road, Off Thika Road (Exit 7, Kenya), P.O. Box 14634, 00800 Nairobi, Kenya

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 9th Oct 2025, 01:15:39am EAT

 
 
Session Overview
Session
D02: Taxpayer Mobility and Evasion
Time:
Thursday, 21/Aug/2025:
4:30pm - 6:30pm

Session Chair: Dirk Foremny, Universitat de Barcelona / IEB
Discussant 1: Salla Mari Annika Kalin, University Of Helsinki
Discussant 2: Dirk Foremny, Universitat de Barcelona / IEB
Discussant 3: Hannah Gundert, ZEW Mannheim
Location: SS5


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Presentations

Free to Roam, Hard to Tax? Assessing the Tax Implications of Digital Nomad Visas in the EU

Hannah Gundert1,2, Julia Spix1,2

1ZEW Mannheim, Germany; 2University of Mannheim

Digital nomad visas (DNVs) offer digital nomads a cost-effective way to strategically choose their tax residence country, in addition to providing other direct tax incentives. This paper examines the effective tax burden of digital nomads under these visas in the EU in a simulation analysis. Our preliminary findings indicate that digital nomads with a taxable nexus in the United States or the United Kingdom can achieve a lower effective personal income tax burden by working from EU countries that offer DNVs. Moreover, we employ travel data of digital nomads to gain insights into their movement patterns and the resulting tax revenue implications. Consistent with the tax advantages associated with these visas, we find that destinations offering DNVs attract digital nomads more frequently than those without such a visa.

Gundert-Free to Roam, Hard to Tax Assessing the Tax Implications-318.pdf


Pensioners Without Borders: Agglomeration and the Migration Response to Taxation

Salla Mari Annika Kalin1,2, Antoine Levy3, Mathilde Muñoz4

1University Of Helsinki, Finland; 2The Labour Institute for Economic Research; 3UC Berkeley Haas; 4UC Berkeley

This paper investigates whether and why pensioners move across borders in response to tax rate differentials. In 2013, retirees relocating to Portugal became eligible to a full tax exemption of foreign-source pensions. Contrary to the broadly held belief that seniors "age in place", we find substantial international mobility responses to the reform, concentrated among wealthy and educated pensioners in higher-tax origin countries. The implied migration elasticity of the stock of foreign pensioners to the net-of-tax rate is large (between 1.5 and 2) and increases at longer horizons. Tax-induced retirement migration clusters in space, and exhibits peer effects, amplification, and hysteresis patterns consistent with agglomeration through endogenous amenities. We show such forces theoretically and empirically have significant implications for optimal tax rates, and for the limited efficacy of unilateral policy responses to tax competition, like the source-based taxation of pensions.

Kalin-Pensioners Without Borders-363.pdf


Golden Visas and Real Estate Markets

Dirk Foremny1, Zhengming Li2, Clara Martínez-Toledano2, Mariona Segú3

1Universitat de Barcelona / IEB, Spain; 2Imperial College London; 3CY Cergy Paris Université

This paper studies the impact of investor citizenship and residence schemes on local real estate markets. We do so by examining the Spanish golden visa programme that was introduced in 2013 and grants visas and full residence rights to foreign investors who invest at least 500,000 Euro in the Spanish real estate market. First, the number of real estate transactions above the threshold increased by 43% more for non-EU relative to EU and Spanish investors after the introduction of the programme. Second, non-EU investors appear to pay a premium of 11,421 Euro around the threshold relative to EU and Spaniards. Finally, we find that the programme had spillover effects on the real estate market. The average increase in golden visa exposure increases overall real estate transaction prices on average by 0.19% after the introduction of the scheme.

Foremny-Golden Visas and Real Estate Markets-202.pdf