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International tax planning and optimal policies Lecture 1: Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Niels Johannesen Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen 21 February 2012 Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Today’s lecture Introduction: what characterizes tax havens? Tax havens in corporate tax planning and implications for policy what do …rms use tax havens for? are tax havens good or bad? (Slemrod and Wilson, 2009; Hong and Smart 2010; Johannesen, 2010 ) if tax havens are bad, why are they allowed to integrate into the world economy? (Johannesen, 2012) Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens What is a tax haven? Low tax on capital sometimes only certain types of capital (Janeba and Peters, 1999) capital taxes may still be important revenue source (Schön, 2005) Secrecy (OECD, 2009) Regulatory dumping (Schjelderup, 2011) Legal innovation (Lorenzetti, 1997) Commercialization of state sovereignty (Slemrod, 2008) Good governance (Dhamarpala and Hines, 2009) A- uence Smallness Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens The 50 tax havens of the world Source: Hines (2010) Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Tax havens and multinational …rms Pro…t shifting to tax havens transfer pricing (Kleinbard, 2011; Clausing, 2003; Bartelsman and Beetsma, 2003) intra-…rm capital structure (Desai, Foley and Hines, 2004; Buettner and Wamser, 2009 ) Policy tools to combat pro…t shifting transfer pricing rules (Peralta, Wauthy and Ypersele, 2006) CFC rules (Ruf and Weichenrieder, 2012) thin capitalization rules withholding taxes on capital ‡ows Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Slemrod and Wilson (2009): Tax havens are bad Standard tax competition model augmented with tax havens World market for concealment services supply by tax havens demand by …rms in high-tax countries production requires real resources Concealment is countered by tax administrations enforcement requires real resources Tax evasion raises the marginal deadweight loss of taxation Tax havens reduce welfare through two channels waste of real resources aggravation of the distortion of tax policies Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Hong and Smart (2010): Tax havens are good Small, open economy Individuals: workers and entrepreneurs Two sectors: multinational sector using labor and mobile "physical capital" domestic sector using labor and immobile "entrepreneurial capital" Corporate tax on income generated by: physical capital in multinational sector (no redistribution and e¢ ciency cost) entrepreneurial capital in the domestic sector (redistribution and no e¢ ciency cost) Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Hong and Smart (2010): Tax havens are good First-best: zero tax on multinational …rms (Gordon, 1986) positive tax on domestic …rms desired redistribution and no e¢ ciency cost Second-best: same positive corporate tax rate in both sectors some redistribution (from domestic sector) and some e¢ ciency cost (from multinational sector) Consider the e¤ect of introducing tax havens: multinational …rms shift a fraction b of capital income to tax haven e¤ective tax rate on multinationals: (1 b )t increasing in t has smaller e¢ ciency cost and same redistributive e¤ect Tax havens enhance welfare Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Johannesen (2010): Tax havens may or may not be good... Build new theoretical framework for understanding tax policies in the presence of pro…t shifting standard framework with two countries (Hau‡er and Schjelderup, 2000) symmetric equilbrium with no pro…t shifting (empirically non-satisfactory) no equilibrium in pure strategies with multiple countries (theoretically non-satisfactory) insight: tax competition between many identical countries ! possibility of asymmetric policy equilibrium with low-tax and high-tax countries Study the e¤ect of tax havens in this framework insight: tax havens may increase the revenue of countries by inducing low-tax countries to become high-tax countries Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Theoretical framework Large number of identical countries Single multinational …rm Production plant with technology f (kn ) in each country Firm chooses kn and (qn1 , qn2 , ..., qnN ) for each n kn is real capital (and tax base) qnm is tax base shifted from country n to country m Tax revenue in country n: tn ∑ qnm + ∑ qmn kn m m = tn fkn qn g Governments maximize tax revenue - FOC: fkn qn g = Niels Johannesen tn ∂kn ∂tn ∂qn ∂tn Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Shifting costs I What happens if pro…t shifting is costless? all pro…ts are shifted to the country with the lowest tax rate policy equilibrium where all countries apply zero tax rate Typical assumption in literature: shifting costs are a convex function of (∑m qnm ) only some pro…ts are shifted but all to the country with the lowest tax rate no policy equilibrium in pure strategies with multiple countries Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Shifting costs II The assumption of the paper: shifting costs in country n Cn (qn1 , qn2 ...qnN ) = (∑m qnm )2 N ∑m (qnm )2 + +Φ 2α 2β marginal cost in country n of shifting pro…ts from n to m: proportional to total shifting out of n: 1α (∑m qnm ) proportional to shifting from n to m: 1β qnm Implication: if tm < tk << tn , then qnk > 0 provided that tk is su¢ ciently close to tm Interpretation: diversi…cation motive in pro…t shifting Small behavioral responses to small tax changes: imperfect tax competition for pro…ts Parameter β/α measures closeness to perfect competition Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Equilibrium (no tax havens) Under some parametric assumptions there exists an asymmetric equilibrium (t H , t L , z ) where: tH > tL a fraction z of the countries apply the low tax rate t L a fraction (1 z ) of the countries apply the high tax rate t H Both t H and t L satisfy FOC for revenue maximization and generate the same revenue Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Illustration of equilibrium (no tax havens) Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Tax havens Tax havens are jurisdictions with zero tax rate and zero real investment Assume the existence of aN tax havens If a > a then there exists a separating equilibrium t N all countries apply tax rate t N all tax havens apply zero tax rate If a < a then countries earn more revenue in separating equilibrium t N than in asymmetric equilibrium (t H , t L , z ) more pro…t shifting for unchanged tax policies (negative "leakage e¤ect") less attractive to be low-tax country ! some low-tax countries become high-tax countries ! less pro…t shifting (positive "crowding e¤ect") The existence of tax havens may help countries collecting tax revenue from multinational …rms Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Discussion Main insights: in a world without tax havens the bene…t of being a low-tax destination for shifted pro…ts persists ! asymmetric equilibrium with low-tax countries and high-tax countries and pro…ts shifted from the latter to the former. tax havens may improve welfare by alleviating tax competition for pro…ts between countries Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Johannesen (2012): Why …scal barriers against tax havens are missing... Other papers compare outcomes with tax havens and without tax havens The extent to which tax havens are integrated in the world economy depends on policy choices More than half of EU-countries have zero withholding tax rate on interest payments to havens Possible explanations political economy tax havens are good Can we explain why benevolent governments do not protect themselves against harmful tax havens? Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Theoretical framework Two countries and one tax haven Each country inhabited by workers and entrepreneurs operating a …rm Two types of entrepreneurs: avoiders and compliers Each entrepreneur optimally chooses one of the following "…rm types" no production ("no …rm") domestic plant ("national …rm") domestic and foreign plant and no haven sub ("multinational …rm") domestic and foreign plant and haven sub ("planning …rm") Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Theoretical framework Technology at …xed inputs: F (α, θ ) = α α c (θ ) m c (θ ) if the plant is domestic if the plant is foreign where: α is "skill level" of entrepreneur θ is the debt-asset ratio of the plant c (θ ) is an "agency cost" of deviating from optimal level e θ m is a "cost of distance" Important things to note: no external loans ! some internal loans even if tax disfavored scope for welfare improving economic integration Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Financial structure - multinational …rm Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Financial structure - planning …rm Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Policy Governments maximize private consumption subject to revenue requirement G Three policy instruments: corporate tax internal …scal barrier - tax on interest payments to the other country external …scal barrier - tax on interest payments to the tax haven Policy a¤ects real outcomes through two channels: …nancial structure of …rms allocation of resources between the three …rm types Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Economic equilibrium Generally: entrepreneurs with highest skills: domestic and foreign plant entrepreneurs with intermediate skills: domestic plant entrepreneurs with lowest skills: no plants The threshold skill levels may di¤er between avoiders and compliers if external barrier below threshold avoiders operate planning …rms and are taxed more lightly than compliers marginal planning …rm less productive than marginal multinational …rm Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens First-best policies First-best tax policy: prohibitive external barrier zero internal barrier corporate tax raises the entire revenue Properties of economic equilibrium: no planning …rms optimal degree of economic integration undistorted …nancial structure of …rms Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens EU-style cooperation Countries precommit to a zero internal barrier and set external barrier and corporate tax rate non-cooperatively (Council Directive 2003/49/EC on taxation of interest and royalty income) Unique policy equilibrium: zero external barriers corporate tax raises the entire revenue (higher rate than before) Intuition: zero tax cost of conduit …nancing ! planning …rms channel all interest payments through country with lowest external barrier bertrand competition drives external barriers to zero Properties of economic equilibrium: tax planning with tax havens too much economic integration distorted …nancial structure of planning …rms (too much debt) Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Second-best environments If political / institutional frictions make it impossible to implement the …rst-best policy, then the internal barrier is optimally positive Standard second-best argument - raising the internal barrier marginally above zero has …rst-order social bene…t (conduit …nance more expensive) second-order social cost (distortion of multinational-national …rm margin) Formal application where countries cannot cooperate on enforcement Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens Discussion Main insights: protection against tax havens is an endogenous outcome countries have mixed incentives when choosing a policy position towards tax havens trade-o¤ between international economic integration and protection against tax havens Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens References I Bartelsman, E.J., Beetsma, R.M.W.J., 2003. Why pay more? Corporate tax avoidance through transfer pricing in OECD countries. Journal of Public Econonomics 87, 2225–2252. Buettner, T., Wamser, G., 2009. Internal Debt and Multinationals’Pro…t Shifting - Empirical Evidence from Firm-Level Panel Data. Oxford University Centre for Business Taxation, Working Paper no. 09/18. Clausing, K.A., 2003. Tax-motivated transfer pricing and US intra…rm trade prices. Journal of Public Econonomics 87, 2207–2223. Desai, M.A., Foley, F., Hines, J.R., 2004. A Multinational Perspective on Capital Structure Choice and Internal Capital Markets. Journal of Finance 59(6), 2451-2488. Dharmapala, D., Hines, J., 2009. Which Countries Become Tax Havens? Journal of Public Economics 93, 1058-1068. Gordon, R., 1986. Taxation of investment and savings in a world economy. American Economic Review 76, 1086-1102. Hau‡er, A., Schjelderup, G., 2000. Corporate tax systems and cross country pro…t shifting, Oxford economic papers, 52, pp. 306–325. Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens References II Hines, J.R., 2010. Treasure Islands. Journal of Economic Perspectives 24(4), p 103-126. Hong, Q., Smart, M., 2010. In praise of tax havens: international tax planning and foreign direct investment. European Economic Review 54, 82–95. Janeba, E., Peters, W., 1999. Tax evasion, tax competition and the gains from nondiscrimination: The case of interest taxation in Europe. Economic Journal 109, 93-101. Johannesen, N., 2010. Imperfect Tax Competition for Pro…ts, Asymmetric Equilibria and Bene…cial Tax Havens”. Journal of International Economics 81, 253-264. Johannesen, N., 2012. Optimal Fiscal Barriers to International Economic Integration in the Presence of Tax Havens. Journal of Public Economics 96(3-4), 2012, 400-416. Kleinbard, E., 2011. Stateless Income. USC Legal Studies Research Paper No. 11-6 Lorenzetti, J.T., 1997. The O¤shore Trust: A Contemporary Asset Protection Scheme. Commercial Law Journal 102, 138-165. Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens References III OECD, 2009. Tax Co-operation 2009 - Towards a level playing …eld. Peralta, S., Wauthy, X., Ypersele, T., 2006. Should countries control international pro…t shifting? Journal of International Economics 68, 24–37. Ruf, M., Weichenrieder, A., 2012. The Taxation of Passive Foreign Investment Lessons from German Experience. Canadian Journal of Economics, forthcoming Schön, W., 2005. Playing di¤erent games? Regulatory competition in tax and company law compared. Common Market Law Review 42, 331–365. Schelderup, G., 2011. Secrecy Jurisdictions. Unpublished working paper. Slemrod, J., 2008. "Why Is Elvis on Burkina Faso Postage Stamps? Cross-Country Evidence on the Commercialization of State Sovereignty." Journal of Empirical Legal Studies, 5(4): 683-712 Slemrod, J., Wilson, J.D., 2009. Tax competition with parasitic tax havens. Journal of Public Economics 93, 1261–1270 Niels Johannesen Corporate tax avoidance using tax havens