The Gains from Preferential Tax Regimes Reconsidered

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP7814

Authors: Carl Gaign; Ian Wooton

Abstract: The EU policy against harmful tax competition aims at eliminating tax policies targeted at attracting the internationally mobile tax base. We examine this issue by considering two countries which decide their corporate tax rates their tax regimes (discriminatory or non-discriminatory tax policy). Firms produce under imperfect competition and trade between countries is costly. The endogenous spatial allocation of mobile firms depends upon different parameters of the economy while the distribution of immobile firms is exogenous. We show that countries discriminate against immobile firms when trade costs are high. Trade integration makes imposing the same tax on all firms more appealing such that, at low trade costs, the unique Nash equilibrium is characterized by uniform corporate taxes being set by both governments. However, when trade costs reach intermediates values, fiscal competition may lead to tax discrimination while uniform taxation is socially preferred

Keywords: Imperfect competition; Preferential tax regimes; Tax competition; Trade costs

JEL Codes: F12; H87


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
trade costs (F19)tax regime (H25)
tax regime (H25)spatial allocation of firms (R32)
trade costs (F19)tax revenue (H27)
tax regime (H25)tax revenue (H27)
trade costs (F19)effectiveness of tax policy (H31)
tax discrimination (H20)equilibrium revenues (D59)

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