Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5066887 European Economic Review 2013 18 Pages PDF
Abstract
We argue in this paper that differences in corporate taxes between economies stimulate vertical integration of final goods producers and suppliers of intermediate goods causing more intra-firm trade. This is due to the fact that vertically integrated firms can shift profits from a high-tax jurisdiction, rendering this organizational type more attractive for more productive firms as compared to outsourcing at arm's length. Using data on intra-firm imports of US multinational firms, we provide empirical support for our theoretical findings. Apart from reduced-form regressions we structurally estimate and calibrate the multi-country model for the US and 27 host countries. We find that the observed increase in the tax gap between the US and the average host country of 3.1 percentage points has led to an increase of intra-firm trade flows by 5.5%. Our calibration suggests that this change was stimulated largely by a 9.8% increase in the number of vertically integrated multinational firms.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
Authors
, ,