Tax-haven investors and corporate profitability evidence of profit shifting by German affiliates of multinational firms Sarah Godar
By: Godar, Sarah
.
Material type: 







Item type | Current location | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Artículos | IEF | IEF | OP 207/2021/4-2 (Browse shelf) | Available | OP 207/2021/4-2 |
Browsing IEF Shelves Close shelf browser
No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | ||
OP 207/2021/3-3 Distributional effects of carbon pricing in Germany | OP 207/2021/4 FinanzArchiv | OP 207/2021/4-1 Does the marginal tax rate affect activity in the informal sector? | OP 207/2021/4-2 Tax-haven investors and corporate profitability | OP 207/2021/4-3 Election cycles in European public procurement | OP 207/2021/4-4 An annual wealth tax | OP 207/2022/1/2 FinanzArchiv |
Resumen.
This paper uses confidential firm-level panel data to provide new estimates of corporate profit shifting by German affiliates of multinational corporations. The estimated semielasticity suggests that the profits of German affiliates are highly sensitive to foreign tax rate changes. The semielasticity is higher when at least one investor is located in a tax haven and is not significant when a company has never had a tax-haven investor. Using the tax attractiveness index as an alternative operationalization of the profit-shifting incentive yields similar but less robust results. The estimated effects are used to extrapolate aggregate revenue losses, which range between EUR 1.5 and 5.8 billion in 2016. The results suggest that ownership links to tax havens are an informative indicator of whether or not a company engages in international profit shifting.
There are no comments for this item.