538 research outputs found
Tax Competition in an Expanding European Union
This paper empirically examines whether expansion of the EU has increased international tax competition. To do so, we use a market potential weighting scheme to estimate the slope of best responses. We find robust evidence for tax competition. In particular, our estimates suggest that EU membership affects responses with EU members responding more to the tax rates of other members. This lends credence to the above noted concerns.Tax Competition; Foreign Direct Investment; Spatial Econometrics
Tax competition and tax evasion in a multi-jurisdictional world
As an alternative to taxation of capital income at the corporate level, countries could instead tax their individual residents on their worldwide capital income. Information exchange on individualsâ foreign investment income is absolutely necessary for this approach to be effective. The second part of this thesis empirically and theoretically analyzes the circumstances under which countries would be willing to share information with each other so that residence-based capital income taxation becomes a viable option.
SAFE RTP: An open source reference tool platform for the safety modeling and analysis
International audienceSeamless modeling and implementation from requirements down to SW code-generation of safety critical systems in the automotive industry is still a challenge. Often, neither the modeling principles nor the tools are consistent. This paper will introduce Eclipse based platform implementations Artop, EATOP and SAFE RTP and will show how a seamless modeling of a safety related automotive system can be realized by using the composite of all three platforms
Headquarter Relocations and International Taxation
This paper examines the extent of international headquarter relocations worldwide. About 6 percent of all multinationals relocated their headquarter to another country in the 1997-2007 period. The paper presents empirical evidence on the role of tax in these relocation decisions. It considers a sample of 140 multinationals that relocated their head- quarters over the past decade and compares them to a control group of 1943 multinationals that have not done so. It is found that the additional tax due in the home country upon repatriation of foreign profits has a positive effect on the probability of relocation. The empirical results suggest that an increase in the repatriation tax by 10 percentage points would raise the share of relocating multinationals by 2.2 percentage points, equivalent to an increase in the number of relocations by more than one third. Furthermore, the introduction of controlled foreign corporation legislation also has a positive effect on the number of relocations
Tax Competition and Tax Evasion in a Multi-Jurisdictional World.
As an alternative to taxation of capital income at the corporate level, countries could instead tax their individual residents on their worldwide capital income. Information exchange on individualsâ foreign investment income is absolutely necessary for this approach to be effective. The second part of this thesis empirically and theoretically analyzes the circumstances under which countries would be willing to share information with each other so that residence-based capital income taxation becomes a viable option.
International taxation and productivity effects of M&As
We investigate the effect of international differences in corporate taxation on the realization of productivity gains in M&A deals. We argue that tax differentials distort the efficient allocation of productive factors following an M&A and thus mitigate the resulting productivity improvement. Using firm-level data on inputs and outputs of production as well as on corporate M&As, we estimate that a 1 percentage point increase in the absolute tax differential between the locations of two merging firms reduces the subsequent total factor productivity gain by 4.5%. This effect is less pronounced when firms can use international profit shifting to attenuate effective differences in taxation. In a complementary analysis, we use an event study design and a fixed effects model to explore the timing of the response of productivity, as well as, labor and capital input to the tax rate differential after the merger separately for the acquirer and the target. We show that our findings are mainly driven by deals with targets residing in locations with a tax advantage with respect to the acquirer. In these transactions, tax differentials reduce the post-merger adjustment in the target firm and inhibit the full realization of productivity gains
Corporate taxation and location of intangible assets : patents vs. trademarks
Numerous empirical studies have analysed the influence of corporate taxation on the location of intangible assets within a company group. However, the previous literature has rather focused on studying the impact of taxation on patent location choices assuming that these assets represent the rest of intangibles as well. This paper complements previous studies by
estimating and comparing the tax elasticities of two different types of intangibles â patents
and trademarks. We employ data on European and US patent and trademark applications in the period of 1996-2012 and estimate a multinomial logit model that incorporates various observed and unobserved factors of the intangibleâs location choice. According to our main findings, trademarks are more sensitive to changes in taxation as compared to patents. This
implies that firms use trademarks more eagerly for tax planning purposes than patents
International Taxation and Takeover Premiums in Cross-border M&As
Cross-border M&As can trigger a higher international taxation of the targetâs income. Non-resident dividend withholding taxes may be imposed by the target country, while additional corporate income taxation can be imposed by the acquiring country. Our evidence suggests that takeover premiums fully reflect non-resident dividend withholding taxes, while there is some evidence that they reflect corporate income taxation by the acquiring country as well. In contrast, acquiring firm stock market returns around the bid announcement do not appear to reflect either type of taxation. These results are consistent with previous findings that the gains of M&As primarily accrue to target shareholders
The impact of taxes on bilateral royalty flows
In 2013 the OECD introduced its Action Plan on base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS). One
of the major concerns of this Plan is a strategic use of intangible assets as an instrument for
profit shifting. The main purpose of this paper is to test whether multinational enterprises use
intangibles as an important BEPS channel by empirically analysing the relationship between
taxation and bilateral royalty flows. We employ the OECD data on 3,660 country-pairs for the
time period of 1990-2012 and apply the Poisson pseudo-maximum likelihood estimator in a
fixed-effects framework. The main results point to a negative impact of taxation on bilateral
royalty flows. Moreover, we find that tax differentials, which represent a relative level of
taxation in a recipient state compared to other potential royalty recipients, have a significant
influence on royalty payments as well. For tax policy considerations, the paper provides
various insights to the ongoing work on BEPS by the G20, the OECD, and the European
Commission. For example, we find that such reform suggestions of the OECD Action Plan as
an enforcement of the Nexus Approach, as well as an introduction of strict Controlled Foreign
Company rules and transfer pricing regulations are likely to reduce international royalty
flows
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