Person Profile / Leaders

Christine Kim's metaverse tax paper frames virtual worlds as a policy control point

Kim is a tax law scholar whose research focuses on international tax, business tax, and taxation in the digital economy.

Christine Kim's metaverse tax paper frames virtual worlds as a policy control point

Sources

Public references used for this article.

  • Cardozo LawConfirms Kim's faculty role, tax-law expertise, and scholarship record including Taxing the Metaverse. (source risk: low risk)
  • Cardozo Law repositoryRecords the Taxing the Metaverse article, publication venue, abstract, and publication date. (source risk: low risk)
  • SSRNProvides the paper record and abstract for Kim's argument about metaverse taxation and virtual-world income. (source risk: low risk)
CategoryPerson

Kim is a tax law scholar whose research focuses on international tax, business tax, and taxation in the digital economy.

RegionUnited States

The paper is tracked as a public policy event because it frames metaverse economic activity as taxable income and a potential compliance control surface.

Content TypeProfile

Kim is a tax law scholar whose research focuses on international tax, business tax, and taxation in the digital economy.

Primary DomainMarket

If adopted by policymakers, the paper's argument would shift compliance pressure toward virtual-world platforms, digital-asset ledgers, and income recognition rules.

TopicMetaverse Taxation AND Digital Economy Policy

Young Ran (Christine) Kim's Taxing the Metaverse article is a policy signal for virtual-world income, digital-asset taxation, and platform observability. The argument is not a claim that one platform has failed; it is a legal-policy proposal that virtual economies can create taxable income before a cash-out event. BTW tracks it because tax treatment can become a control surface for metaverse platforms, payment rails, and digital-asset reporting systems.

ImpactMedium

If adopted by policymakers, the paper's argument would shift compliance pressure toward virtual-world platforms, digital-asset ledgers, and income recognition rules.

ConfidenceGood confidence (90%)

Several public sources

Young Ran (Christine) Kim's Taxing the Metaverse article is a policy signal for virtual-world income, digital-asset taxation, and platform observability. The argument is not a claim that one platform has failed; it is a legal-policy proposal that virtual economies can create taxable income before a cash-out event. BTW tracks it because tax treatment can become a control surface for metaverse platforms, payment rails, and digital-asset reporting systems.

Young Ran (Christine) Kim's Taxing the Metaverse article is a policy event because it converts a broad virtual-world debate into a concrete tax-control question. The Cardozo scholarship record places the article in Georgetown Law Journal, and the paper argues that metaverse activity can generate income and wealth inside a virtual economy before a user converts value into conventional currency. The public signal is a legal argument about timing: when should tax law recognize value created, traded, or accumulated in virtual environments?

The control surface is platform observability. Virtual worlds, digital wallets, asset ledgers, marketplaces, and identity systems may record activity more granularly than many offline markets. If tax authorities use that visibility, platforms could become compliance intermediaries for valuation, reporting, withholding, or audit trails. If they do not, the same environments could defer recognition until a cash-out point, leaving room for tax avoidance, weak valuation discipline, and uneven treatment across digital-asset markets.

BTW tracks the article as a source-claim event tied to Kim as the person entity and Cardozo as the institutional context. The watchpoints are policy adoption, not hype around the metaverse label: IRS guidance, OECD or EU treatment of virtual-world income, platform reporting duties, and whether payment or marketplace operators build controls that can support tax administration. The evidence basis is the Cardozo faculty and scholarship records plus the SSRN paper record.

Area of expertise

Young Ran (Christine) Kim's Taxing the Metaverse article is a policy signal for virtual-world income, digital-asset taxation, and platform observability. The argument is not a claim that one platform has failed; it is a legal-policy proposal that virtual economies can create taxable income before a cash-out event. BTW tracks it because tax treatment can become a control surface for metaverse platforms, payment rails, and digital-asset reporting systems.

  • Evidence basis: Young Ran (Christine) Kim is framed by kim is a tax law scholar whose research focuses on international tax, business tax, and taxation in the digital economy. and public market context. Evidence basis: Cardozo Law - Young Ran (Christine) Kim faculty profile; Cardozo Law repository - Taxing the Metaverse
  • Operating Footprint: Metaverse Taxation AND Digital Economy Policy and United States provide the public context for this person profile. Evidence basis: Cardozo Law - Young Ran (Christine) Kim faculty profile; Cardozo Law repository - Taxing the Metaverse

Timeline

  1. Young Ran (Christine) Kim public profile updated

    Public coverage records Young Ran (Christine) Kim as a subject for role, operating context, and evidence review.

Role and Scope

  • Profile: Young Ran (Christine) Kim
  • Current Role: Kim is a tax law scholar whose research focuses on international tax, business tax, and taxation in the digital economy.
  • Analytical Category: Person

Signal Map

  • If adopted by policymakers, the paper's argument would shift compliance pressure toward virtual-world platforms, digital-asset ledgers, and income recognition rules.
  • Decision horizon: Multi-year
  • Operational relevance: Medium

Member Briefing

Deeper Profile Context

Sign in with the right membership level to unlock the full briefing and source notes.

Only for Strategic Circle

Strategic Circle

Open to all readers. Unlock profile briefings after joining and signing in.

Join Strategic Circle

Only for Leadership Alliance

Leadership Alliance

For qualified IP-asset owners and management; sign in to unlock alliance briefings.

Join Leadership Alliance

Public View

The public read of Young Ran (Christine) Kim is limited to visible role, operating context, and relationship evidence.

Watchpoints

  • New public role, affiliation, product, policy, or market disclosures.
  • Verified relationship changes involving named organizations or people.

Caveats

  • Private or unverified claims are excluded from this public view.

FAQ

Why is Young Ran (Christine) Kim included?

Young Ran (Christine) Kim has public evidence that makes the person relevant to BTW's coverage of digital infrastructure, governance, or markets.

What is public about this profile?

The public layer covers visible role, operating context, linked entities, and evidence-backed watchpoints.

What should readers watch next?

Readers should watch for source-backed role changes, new partnerships, regulatory exposure, operating expansion, or evidence that changes the public assessment.

BackAll People