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Dynamic Effects of Corporate Taxation in Open Economy

Research output: Working paper

Published

Standard

Dynamic Effects of Corporate Taxation in Open Economy. / Cardi, Olivier; Hoke, Fatma; Restout, Romain.
Lancaster University, Department of Economics, 2024. (Economics Working Papers Series).

Research output: Working paper

Harvard

Cardi, O, Hoke, F & Restout, R 2024 'Dynamic Effects of Corporate Taxation in Open Economy' Economics Working Papers Series, Lancaster University, Department of Economics.

APA

Cardi, O., Hoke, F., & Restout, R. (2024). Dynamic Effects of Corporate Taxation in Open Economy. (Economics Working Papers Series). Lancaster University, Department of Economics.

Vancouver

Cardi O, Hoke F, Restout R. Dynamic Effects of Corporate Taxation in Open Economy. Lancaster University, Department of Economics. 2024 Feb 20. (Economics Working Papers Series).

Author

Cardi, Olivier ; Hoke, Fatma ; Restout, Romain. / Dynamic Effects of Corporate Taxation in Open Economy. Lancaster University, Department of Economics, 2024. (Economics Working Papers Series).

Bibtex

@techreport{e90b41f50fe14b03ab640bfb0a194dd3,
title = "Dynamic Effects of Corporate Taxation in Open Economy",
abstract = "By exploiting the downward trend of profits' taxation observed in OECD countries which is rooted into international competition to attract capital, we identify exogenous variations in the corporate income tax rate. Estimating a SVAR model with long-run restrictions for a panel of eleven OECD countries over 1973-2017, we find that a permanent decline in profits' taxation leads to significant technology improvements which are concentrated in traded industries. The corporate tax cut has also an expansionary effect on hours concentrated in non-traded industries. The country-split shows that technology significantly improves in English-speaking and Scandinavian countries only while hours persistently increase only in continental European countries. To account for the dynamic effects of a corporate tax cut, we consider a two-sector open economy model with tradables and non-tradables and endogenous technology decisions where both capital and technology can be used more intensively. The model can account for the magnitude of technology improvements we estimate empirically as long as the traded sector is intensive in R&D, experiences low costs in the use of the stock of knowledge and also highly benefits from international R&D spillover. While large elasticities of utilization-adjusted-TFP w.r.t. the domestic and international stock of knowledge must be assumed in English-speaking and Scandinavian countries, in accordance with our estimates, we have to allow for sticky wages in continental European countries to account for our evidence.",
keywords = "Corporate taxation, SVAR, Open economy, Endogenous technological change, R&D, Hours worked, Tradables and non-tradables, Labor reallocation, Wage stickiness",
author = "Olivier Cardi and Fatma Hoke and Romain Restout",
year = "2024",
month = feb,
day = "20",
language = "English",
series = "Economics Working Papers Series",
publisher = "Lancaster University, Department of Economics",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Lancaster University, Department of Economics",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Dynamic Effects of Corporate Taxation in Open Economy

AU - Cardi, Olivier

AU - Hoke, Fatma

AU - Restout, Romain

PY - 2024/2/20

Y1 - 2024/2/20

N2 - By exploiting the downward trend of profits' taxation observed in OECD countries which is rooted into international competition to attract capital, we identify exogenous variations in the corporate income tax rate. Estimating a SVAR model with long-run restrictions for a panel of eleven OECD countries over 1973-2017, we find that a permanent decline in profits' taxation leads to significant technology improvements which are concentrated in traded industries. The corporate tax cut has also an expansionary effect on hours concentrated in non-traded industries. The country-split shows that technology significantly improves in English-speaking and Scandinavian countries only while hours persistently increase only in continental European countries. To account for the dynamic effects of a corporate tax cut, we consider a two-sector open economy model with tradables and non-tradables and endogenous technology decisions where both capital and technology can be used more intensively. The model can account for the magnitude of technology improvements we estimate empirically as long as the traded sector is intensive in R&D, experiences low costs in the use of the stock of knowledge and also highly benefits from international R&D spillover. While large elasticities of utilization-adjusted-TFP w.r.t. the domestic and international stock of knowledge must be assumed in English-speaking and Scandinavian countries, in accordance with our estimates, we have to allow for sticky wages in continental European countries to account for our evidence.

AB - By exploiting the downward trend of profits' taxation observed in OECD countries which is rooted into international competition to attract capital, we identify exogenous variations in the corporate income tax rate. Estimating a SVAR model with long-run restrictions for a panel of eleven OECD countries over 1973-2017, we find that a permanent decline in profits' taxation leads to significant technology improvements which are concentrated in traded industries. The corporate tax cut has also an expansionary effect on hours concentrated in non-traded industries. The country-split shows that technology significantly improves in English-speaking and Scandinavian countries only while hours persistently increase only in continental European countries. To account for the dynamic effects of a corporate tax cut, we consider a two-sector open economy model with tradables and non-tradables and endogenous technology decisions where both capital and technology can be used more intensively. The model can account for the magnitude of technology improvements we estimate empirically as long as the traded sector is intensive in R&D, experiences low costs in the use of the stock of knowledge and also highly benefits from international R&D spillover. While large elasticities of utilization-adjusted-TFP w.r.t. the domestic and international stock of knowledge must be assumed in English-speaking and Scandinavian countries, in accordance with our estimates, we have to allow for sticky wages in continental European countries to account for our evidence.

KW - Corporate taxation

KW - SVAR

KW - Open economy

KW - Endogenous technological change

KW - R&D

KW - Hours worked

KW - Tradables and non-tradables

KW - Labor reallocation

KW - Wage stickiness

M3 - Working paper

T3 - Economics Working Papers Series

BT - Dynamic Effects of Corporate Taxation in Open Economy

PB - Lancaster University, Department of Economics

ER -