2010 UNC Tax Symposium 2010 Participants 2010 Agenda Accommodations Archives
| Name | Affiliation | |
|---|---|---|
| Bob Adams | Internal Revenue Service | [email protected] |
| Rosanne Altshuler | Urban Institute | [email protected] |
| Ben Ayers | University of Georgia | [email protected] |
| Jennifer Blouin | University of Pennsylvania | [email protected] |
| Tom Brennan | Northwestern University | [email protected] |
| Jennifer Brown | Arizona State University | [email protected] |
| Leonard Burman | Syracuse University | [email protected] |
| Robert Bushman | University of North Carolina | [email protected] |
| James Chyz | University of Arizona | [email protected] |
| Beth Collier-Vermeer | Self Employed | [email protected] |
| Dhammika Dharmapala | University of Illinois | [email protected] |
| Shane Dikolli | Duke University | [email protected] |
| Scott Dyreng | Duke University | [email protected] |
| Jesse Edgerton | Federal Reserve Board | [email protected] |
| Merle Erickson | University of Chicago | [email protected] |
| Catherine Farmer | University of Chicago | [email protected] |
| Daniel Feenberg | National Bureau of Economics | [email protected] |
| Mary Margaret Frank | University of Virginia | [email protected] |
| Harry Grubert | Department of the Treasury | [email protected] |
| Michelle Hanlon | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | [email protected] |
| Shane Heitzman | University of Rochester | [email protected] |
| Brad Hepfer | PricewaterhouseCoopers | [email protected] |
| Margot Howard | Deloitte | [email protected] |
| David Cay Johnston | Syracuse University & Tax Notes | [email protected] |
| Hyunseob Kim | Duke University | [email protected] |
| Ken Klassen | University of Waterloo | [email protected] |
| Linda Krull | University of Oregon | [email protected] |
| Eva Labro | University of North Carolina | [email protected] |
| Rick Laux | University of Illinois | [email protected] |
| Hanna (Hyun Ah) Lee | Columbia University | [email protected] |
| Becky Lester | Deloitte | [email protected] |
| Brad Lindsey | College of William & Mary | [email protected] |
| Petro Lisowsky | University of Illinois | [email protected] |
| Alan Macnaughton | University of Waterloo | [email protected] |
| Ed Maydew | University of North Carolina | [email protected] |
| John McClelland | Department of the Treasury | [email protected] |
| Robert McDonald | Northwestern University | [email protected] |
| Peter Merrill | PricewaterhouseCoopers | [email protected] |
| Devan Mescall | University of Hawaii | [email protected] |
| Mike Mikhail | Arizona State University | [email protected] |
| Lillian Mills | University of Texas at Austin | [email protected] |
| Bill Moser | University of Missouri | [email protected] |
| Mike Munger | Duke University | [email protected] |
| Sarah Nutter | George Mason University | [email protected] |
| Ed Outslay | Michigan State University | [email protected] |
| Suzanne Paquette | Laval University | [email protected] |
| George Plesko | University of Connecticut | [email protected] |
| Sue Porter | University of Virginia | [email protected] |
| Jana Raedy | University of North Carolina | [email protected] |
| Leslie Robinson | Dartmouth College | [email protected] |
| John Robinson | University of Texas at Austin | [email protected] |
| Richard Sansing | Dartmouth College | [email protected] |
| Andy Schmidt | Columbia University | [email protected] |
| Casey Schwab | University of Georgia | [email protected] |
| Jim Seida | University of Notre Dame | [email protected] |
| Jeri Seidman | University of Texas at Austin | [email protected] |
| Doug Shackelford | University of North Carolina | [email protected] |
| Daniel Shaviro | New York University | [email protected] |
| G. P. Shukla | Duke University | [email protected] |
| Stephanie Sikes | University of Pennsylvania | [email protected] |
| Alan Stancill | Flanders Corporation | [email protected] |
| Ruediger Stucke | University of Oxford | [email protected] |
| Jessica Tarica | PricewaterhouseCoopers | [email protected] |
| Erin Towery | University of Texas at Austin | [email protected] |
| Allen Wilson | Grant Thornton | [email protected] |
| Robert Yetman | University of California – Davis | [email protected] |
| Ning Zhang | Duke University | [email protected] |
Following the achievements for tax certainty in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), the Tax Foundation, UNC Tax Center, and MIT Sloan School of Management are hosting a joint conference to discuss the value of one of the Tax Foundation’s principles for sound tax policy: stability.
The University of North Carolina Kenan-Flagler Business School is organizing its twenty-nineth annual tax symposium, designed to bring together leading tax scholars from economics, accounting, finance, law, political science, and related fields. The symposium will be held in Chapel Hill, beginning Thursday morning, April 9th and ending at noon on Friday, April 10th, and will be hosted by the UNC Tax Center. The goal is to bring together scholars from different areas who share a common interest in current tax research. Due to high demand and limited seating capacity, attendance is by invitation. Previous conferences have been very successful, and we anticipate the same this year.
PAPER DETAILS: Papers should be well developed, but at a stage where they can still benefit from the group's discussion. We welcome research involving a wide variety of taxes, including taxes not based on income.
PAPER SUBMISSION PROCEDURE:
Please submit an electronic PDF version of the paper no later than December 15th 2025 to: [email protected]
We will select papers by February 1st 2026
The seminar exposes students of all backgrounds to current tax research and is designed for students from doctoral programs without a Ph.D. tax seminar.
On Thursday, April 10th, the Tax Foundation, University of North Carolina Tax Center, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sloan School of Management are hosting a joint conference to discuss New Directions in Tax Policy: Budgetary and Other Challenges of an Increasingly Complex Tax Code. This timely conference will provide members of Congress, the business community, and the American public with timely information regarding the challenges that Congress creates for itself when proposing policies with uncertain economic and budgetary impacts. With current debt and deficit levels, Congress should avoid policies that risk major costs. Recent history has shown that lawmakers have leaned into expensive policies, including major expansions of the child tax credit and renewable energy credits, without fully understanding long-run impacts. Additionally, lawmakers have implemented new business taxes, such as the corporate alternative minimum tax, that involve complex interactions between accounting and tax rules, introducing new challenges and uncertainties both for taxpayers and budget scorekeepers.
The University of North Carolina's 28th Annual Tax Symposium will take place on March 14 & 15, 2025. It is designed to bring together leading tax scholars from economics, accounting, finance, law, political science, and related fields. The 28th Annual UNC Tax Symposium is sponsored by KPMG, the James C. and Ethel M. Crone Fund in Tax Excellence, and Cambridge Business Publishers. The goal is to bring together scholars from different areas who share a common interest in current tax research. Due to high demand and limited seating capacity, attendance is by invitation.
This event is invitation only. The seminar exposes students of all backgrounds to current tax research and is designed for students from doctoral programs without a Ph.D. tax seminar. Students learn the fundamentals of tax research, and some might wind up adding tax to their set of research interests.
The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) was the most significant overhaul of the U.S. tax code in a generation. It cut business and individual income taxes and reformed the international tax system, spurring the U.S. economy and boosting the country’s competitiveness on the world stage. The problem: many provisions are set to expire at the end of 2025.
This event is invitation only. The 27th Annual UNC Tax Symposium will be held at the Rizzo Center in Chapel Hill on Friday, April 12th and Saturday morning, April 13th.
This event is invitation only. The seminar exposes students of all backgrounds to current tax research and is designed for students from doctoral programs without a Ph.D. tax seminar. Students learn the fundamentals of tax research, and some might wind up adding tax to their set of research interests.
Knowledgeable speakers will discuss state and federal tax policy issues and their legal implications. Our keynote speaker will be Internal Revenue Service Commissioner and UNC Alumnus, Danny Werfel.
In its 26th year, the University of North Carolina Tax Symposium is designed to bring together leading scholars from economics, accounting, finance, law, political science and related fields who share a common interest in current tax research.
This event is invitation only. The seminar exposes students of all backgrounds to current tax research and is designed for students from doctoral programs without a Ph.D. tax seminar. Students learn the fundamentals of tax research, and some might wind up adding tax to their set of research interests. The doctoral seminar is sponsored by the KPMG Foundation.
At this 1st annual event, nine prominent tax experts will discuss a broad array of federal and state tax policy issues, with a special session devoted to professional responsibility/ethics.