In 2009, the United Kingdom abolished the taxation of profits earned abroad and introduced a territorial tax system. Under the territorial system, firms have strong incentives to shift profits abroad. Using a difference-in-differences research design, we show that the profitability of UK subsidiaries in low-tax countries increased after the reform compared to subsidiaries of non-UK multinationals in the same countries by an average of 2 percentage points. The shifted profits originate largely in the UK headquarters and its domestic affiliates, not in other high-tax affiliates
In 2009, the United Kingdom switched from a worldwide taxation system to a territorial system which ...
This study asks whether a corporate tax cut in a high-tax country leads to a reduction of profit shi...
Abstract: We model the opportunities and incentives generated by international tax differences for i...
In 2009, the United Kingdom changed from a worldwide to a territorial tax system, which exempts all ...
We examine the effect of a permanent change to a country income repatriation tax system on a set of ...
This paper examines whether the profit-shifting trend in Europe during 2003–2013 can be explained by...
Using a 20-year-long, population-wide panel with detailed firm and group level data from Norway, we ...
In 2009, Japan began to exempt dividends paid by Japanese-owned foreign subsidiaries to their parent...
We model the opportunities and incentives generated by international tax differences for internation...
This paper stresses the special role of multinational headquarters in corporate profit shifting stra...
This paper examines the extent of international headquarter relocations worldwide. About 6 percent o...
Due to international tax differences in host countries, multinational firms shift profits and receiv...
This paper stresses the special role of multinational headquarters in corporate profit shifting stra...
International tax rules are commonly viewed as obsolete as multinational corporations exploit loopho...
By exploiting new macroeconomic data known as foreign affiliates statistics, we showthat affiliates ...
In 2009, the United Kingdom switched from a worldwide taxation system to a territorial system which ...
This study asks whether a corporate tax cut in a high-tax country leads to a reduction of profit shi...
Abstract: We model the opportunities and incentives generated by international tax differences for i...
In 2009, the United Kingdom changed from a worldwide to a territorial tax system, which exempts all ...
We examine the effect of a permanent change to a country income repatriation tax system on a set of ...
This paper examines whether the profit-shifting trend in Europe during 2003–2013 can be explained by...
Using a 20-year-long, population-wide panel with detailed firm and group level data from Norway, we ...
In 2009, Japan began to exempt dividends paid by Japanese-owned foreign subsidiaries to their parent...
We model the opportunities and incentives generated by international tax differences for internation...
This paper stresses the special role of multinational headquarters in corporate profit shifting stra...
This paper examines the extent of international headquarter relocations worldwide. About 6 percent o...
Due to international tax differences in host countries, multinational firms shift profits and receiv...
This paper stresses the special role of multinational headquarters in corporate profit shifting stra...
International tax rules are commonly viewed as obsolete as multinational corporations exploit loopho...
By exploiting new macroeconomic data known as foreign affiliates statistics, we showthat affiliates ...
In 2009, the United Kingdom switched from a worldwide taxation system to a territorial system which ...
This study asks whether a corporate tax cut in a high-tax country leads to a reduction of profit shi...
Abstract: We model the opportunities and incentives generated by international tax differences for i...