This paper uses administrative data from the Australian Tax Office (ATO) to model the effective tax rates (ETRs) of large Australian corporates. The extent to which there is any habit persistence in ETRs is also examined. The results suggest that unobserved entity heterogeneity is important in explaining ETRs. In terms of observed heterogeneity, entity size, level of leverage, capital intensity, foreign income and R&D, are important explanators of ETRs. There is also evidence of a significant amount of habit persistence, implying that ETRs converge monotonically towards the statutory rate of corporation tax.
This paper uses a sample of 180,738 tax entities from the full Australian Tax Office (ATO) tax retur...
This study investigates the differences in effective tax rates between U.S. multinational corporatio...
In this paper we study the determinants of Effective Corporate Tax Rates (ETR) of large Belgian firm...
This paper is the result of work being undertaken as part of a collaborative research program entitl...
This study examines the determinants of the variability in corporate effective tax rates in Australi...
The paper investigates the factors that cause effective corporate tax rates (ETRs) to diverge from t...
Our study analyzes corporate effective tax rates of Australian firms for two periods: the years prec...
There has been a perception by the Australian public that 'big' Australian businesses do n...
The paper presents an econometric accounting of the effective corporate tax rate in Australia for th...
Reducing tax evasion is vital mainly because an “enforced compliance” policy is costly and often ver...
To our knowledge, this paper provides the most comprehensive analysis of firm-level corporate income...
This paper examines the relationship between effective tax rates and firm size. The political cost h...
This study examines corporate effective tax rates (ETRs) of large Malaysian listed companies during ...
The Ralph Review of Business Taxation, which submitted its recommendations to the Australian Governm...
To our knowledge, this paper provides the most comprehensive analysis of firm-level corporate income...
This paper uses a sample of 180,738 tax entities from the full Australian Tax Office (ATO) tax retur...
This study investigates the differences in effective tax rates between U.S. multinational corporatio...
In this paper we study the determinants of Effective Corporate Tax Rates (ETR) of large Belgian firm...
This paper is the result of work being undertaken as part of a collaborative research program entitl...
This study examines the determinants of the variability in corporate effective tax rates in Australi...
The paper investigates the factors that cause effective corporate tax rates (ETRs) to diverge from t...
Our study analyzes corporate effective tax rates of Australian firms for two periods: the years prec...
There has been a perception by the Australian public that 'big' Australian businesses do n...
The paper presents an econometric accounting of the effective corporate tax rate in Australia for th...
Reducing tax evasion is vital mainly because an “enforced compliance” policy is costly and often ver...
To our knowledge, this paper provides the most comprehensive analysis of firm-level corporate income...
This paper examines the relationship between effective tax rates and firm size. The political cost h...
This study examines corporate effective tax rates (ETRs) of large Malaysian listed companies during ...
The Ralph Review of Business Taxation, which submitted its recommendations to the Australian Governm...
To our knowledge, this paper provides the most comprehensive analysis of firm-level corporate income...
This paper uses a sample of 180,738 tax entities from the full Australian Tax Office (ATO) tax retur...
This study investigates the differences in effective tax rates between U.S. multinational corporatio...
In this paper we study the determinants of Effective Corporate Tax Rates (ETR) of large Belgian firm...