“…The OECD model reflects the interests of capital exporting countries, because it imposes a solution to the double taxation problem that imposes a larger share of the costs onto the capital importing country (Brooks & Krever, 2015;Dagan, 2000;Genschel & Rixen, 2015;Irish, 1974;Paolini, Pistone, Pulina, & Zagler, 2016;Thuronyi, 2010). Capital-importing developing countries nonetheless seek tax treaties with OECD states as the price of attracting inward investment and because they can ameliorate some of the bias through bilateral negotiations (Barthel & Neumayer, 2012;Chisik & Davies, 2004;Hearson, 2018;Rixen & Schwarz, 2009). 3 Because they primarily constrain states' ability to tax inward investment, tax treaties are potential instruments of tax competition, offering inward investors a more credible commitment to a lower effective tax rate in the future than domestic law alone would provide (Baistrocchi, 2008;Barthel & Neumayer, 2012).…”