International Tax Review is part of the Delinian Group, Delinian Limited, 8 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 00954730
Copyright © Delinian Limited and its affiliated companies 2023

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Global Tax 50 2015: Brigitte Alepin

Author

Brigitte Alepin

Brigitte Alepin is a new entry this year

Brigitte Alepin is the Canadian writer and tax specialist whose book La Crise Fiscale Qui Vient, or The Coming Fiscal Crisis, inspired the film The Price We Pay, which came out in 2015. The film looked at "big-business tax avoidance, which has seen multinationals depriving governments of trillions of dollars in tax revenues by harbouring profits in offshore havens", interviewing tax policy leaders, activists, academics and business people, such as Pascal Saint-Amans, Nick Shaxson, Thomas Piketty and Stuart Fraser, formerly of the City of London Corporation. La Crise Fiscale Qui Vient emerged from her work on how to adapt the tax system to globalisation, which she did for a research contract at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government.

"I graduated at 40 and had time to think more," she says. "The book was about the urgency of adapting the tax system to the fiscal crisis. I felt it should not just be read by tax policymakers but also by taxpayers. Then I thought about doing a film and it didn't take long to get the investment."

Harold Crooks directed The Price We Pay and wrote the script with Alepin. The film was produced by Nathalie Barton, who felt she had to after reading the book one weekend.

"It is the story of MNCs who pay nothing or almost nothing," says Alepin.

The film has been shown all over the world since its first screening at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2014 and was voted the best Canadian documentary of that year by the Vancouver Film Critics' Circle. It had its New York premiere in October 2015. The OECD, the World Bank and UN have highlighted and spoken about the movie, and a presentation to the US Senate is in the offing.

But in case anyone thinks this is a flight of fancy by someone more interested in the drama rather than the facts, Alepin has a serious tax pedigree. She has a master's degree in public administration from Harvard and a master's degree in taxation law from Sherbrooke University. She is also the founder of TAXCOOP, an international conference on tax competition, which was first held in Montreal in November.

And another film is coming from the team behind The Price We Pay. Alepin revealed to International Tax Review that funding has been secured for a movie about the use by the ultra-rich of private foundations, which Alepin covered in a chapter of La Crise Fiscale Qui Vient, but had to be left out of the The Price We Pay.

The Global Tax 50 2015

View the full list and introduction

The top 10 • Ranked in order of influence

1. Margrethe Vestager

2. Pascal Saint-Amans

3. Wang Jun

4. Arun Jaitley

5. Marissa Mayer

6. Will Morris

7. Ian Read

8. Pierre Moscovici

9. Donato Raponi

10. Global Alliance for Tax Justice

The remaining 40 • In alphabetic order

Brigitte Alepin

Andrus Ansip

Tamara Ashford

Mohammed Amine Baina

Piet Battiau

Elise Bean

Monica Bhatia

David Bradbury

Winnie Byanyima

Mauricio Cardenas

Allison Christians

Rita de la Feria

Marlies de Ruiter

Judith Freedman

Meg Hillier

Vanessa Houlder

Kim Jacinto-Henares

Eva Joly

Chris Jordan

Jean-Claude Juncker

Alain Lamassoure

Juliane Kokott

Armando Lara Yaffar

Liao Tizhong

Paige Marvel

Angela Merkel

Zach Mider

Richard Murphy

George Osborne

Achim Pross

Akhilesh Ranjan

Alan Robertson

Paul Ryan

Tove Maria Ryding

Magdalena Sepulveda Carmona

Lee Sheppard

Parthasarathi Shome

Robert Stack

Mike Williams

Ya-wen Yang

more across site & bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Participants in the consultation on the UN secretary-general’s report into international tax cooperation are divided – some believe UN-led structures are the way forward, while others want to improve existing ones. Ralph Cunningham reports.
The German government unveils plans to implement pillar two, while EY is reportedly still divided over ‘Project Everest’.
With the M&A market booming, ITR has partnered with correspondents from firms around the globe to provide a guide to the deal structures being employed and tax authorities' responses.
Xing Hu, partner at Hui Ye Law Firm in Shanghai, looks at the implications of the US Uyghur Forced Labor Protection Act for TP comparability analysis of China.
Karl Berlin talks to Josh White about meeting the Fair Tax standard, the changing burden of country-by-country reporting, and how windfall taxes may hit renewable energy.
Sandy Markwick, head of the Tax Director Network (TDN) at Winmark, looks at the challenges of global mobility for tax management.
Taxpayers should look beyond the headline criteria of the simplification regime to ensure that their arrangements meet the arm’s-length standard, say Alejandro Ces and Mark Seddon of the EY New Zealand transfer pricing team.
In a recent webinar hosted by law firms Greenberg Traurig and Clayton Utz, officials at the IRS and ATO outlined their visions for 2023.
The Asia-Pacific awards research cycle has now begun – don’t miss on this opportunity be recognised in 2023
An intense period of lobbying and persuasion is under way as the UN secretary-general’s report on the future of international tax cooperation begins to take shape. Ralph Cunningham reports.