On the effects of anti-profit shifting regulations: A developing country perspective

Laudage Teles, Sabine; Riedel, Nadine; Strohmaier, Kristina

Zusammenfassung

Multinational profit shifting is a major concern for low and middle income countries (LMICs). Many have enacted anti-profit shifting rules in order to constrain this type of tax avoidance behavior. Yet, not much is known on the rules’ effects. We offer a first empirical assessment, providing two pieces of evidence: First, we draw on macro data for more than 120 LMICs for a 30-year-period and show that the introduction of transfer pricing (TP) rules – provisions that constrain profit shifting from mis-pricing of intra-firm trade – significantly increased corporate tax revenue collection in LMICs. Second, we use rich tax administrative and trade data for South Africa to provide “first-stage” evidence for firms’ behavioral response to stricter TP provisions: we establish that a tightening of South African TP rules reduced intra-firm trade mis-pricing and increased taxable income reporting of affected multinational firms.

Schlüsselwörter

Corporate taxation; International taxation; Transfer pricing laws

Zitieren als

Laudage, T., Sabine;, R., Nadine;, S., & Kristina, (2024). On the effects of anti-profit shifting regulations: A developing country perspective. Journal of Public Economics, 235.

Details

Publikationstyp
Forschungsartikel (Zeitschrift)

Begutachtet
Ja

Publikationsstatus
Veröffentlicht

Jahr
2024

Fachzeitschrift
Journal of Public Economics

Band
235

Herausgeber
Elsevier B.V.

Sprache
Englisch

ISSN
0047-2727

DOI

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