Big and ‘Unprofitable’: How 10% of Multinational Firms Do 98% of Profit Shifting
Publikation: Working paper › Forskning
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Big and ‘Unprofitable’ : How 10% of Multinational Firms Do 98% of Profit Shifting. / Wier, Ludvig; Reynolds, Hayley.
Helsinki, Finland : UNU-WIDER, 2018.Publikation: Working paper › Forskning
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TY - UNPB
T1 - Big and ‘Unprofitable’
T2 - How 10% of Multinational Firms Do 98% of Profit Shifting
AU - Wier, Ludvig
AU - Reynolds, Hayley
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - Globally, the largest 0.001 per cent of firms earn roughly one-third of all corporate profits. Nonetheless, there is little understanding of how profit shifting differs across firm size. Using South African corporate tax returns from 2010–14, we investigate the link between firm size and profit shifting. We estimate that firms owned by a parent in a tax haven avoid taxation on as much as 80 per cent of their true income. However, this aggregate tax loss conceals large differences across firms. The majority of firms shift little income to tax havens, while a few large firms shift a lot. The top decile of foreign-owned firms accounts for 98 per cent of the total estimated tax loss. This extreme concentration of tax planning has not been documented before and has implications for both research and policy. First, our results imply that tax havens create competitive distortions as larger firms benefit more. Second, as past research does not account for heterogeneity across firms, it may underestimate the total tax loss caused by profit shifting. As an illustration of this, we revisit the OECD’s official estimate of profit shifting and find that profit shifting may have been dramatically underestimated.
AB - Globally, the largest 0.001 per cent of firms earn roughly one-third of all corporate profits. Nonetheless, there is little understanding of how profit shifting differs across firm size. Using South African corporate tax returns from 2010–14, we investigate the link between firm size and profit shifting. We estimate that firms owned by a parent in a tax haven avoid taxation on as much as 80 per cent of their true income. However, this aggregate tax loss conceals large differences across firms. The majority of firms shift little income to tax havens, while a few large firms shift a lot. The top decile of foreign-owned firms accounts for 98 per cent of the total estimated tax loss. This extreme concentration of tax planning has not been documented before and has implications for both research and policy. First, our results imply that tax havens create competitive distortions as larger firms benefit more. Second, as past research does not account for heterogeneity across firms, it may underestimate the total tax loss caused by profit shifting. As an illustration of this, we revisit the OECD’s official estimate of profit shifting and find that profit shifting may have been dramatically underestimated.
KW - Faculty of Social Sciences
KW - tax
KW - international taxation
KW - profit shifting
KW - multinational firms
KW - developing countries
M3 - Working paper
SN - 978-92-9256-050-8
T3 - UNU WIDER Working Paper Series
BT - Big and ‘Unprofitable’
PB - UNU-WIDER
CY - Helsinki, Finland
ER -
ID: 212425506