Abstract

The need to improve existing and develop new special tax regimes determines the need to study the issues of the legal nature and essence of such, their correlation and (or) connection with other tax and legal phenomena (primarily taxes). The aim of this article is to determine the nature of the mutual relationship between taxes and special tax regimes (including addressing the issue of the correctness and scientific permissibility of direct comparison of general, special, and preferential tax regimes). The research was conducted relying on the formal-legal method supplemented by the systemic method. The lack of unified normative and doctrinal positions highlights the pressing need for further scholarly inquiry into this subject matter. Moreover, the author’s assertion regarding the inadmissibility of equating taxes and special tax regimes is compellingly substantiated, emphasizing the distinctiveness of the latter as a tax and legal phenomenon of higher organizational complexity. Special tax regimes, as elucidated, transcend mere tax obligations or mandatory payments, warranting careful consideration and refinement in future tax policy and legal frameworks. This nuanced understanding is essential for fostering effective governance and equitable taxation practices in modern societies.

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