At your service! The role of tax havens in international trade with services

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At your service! The role of tax havens in international trade with services. / Hebous, Shafik; Johannesen, Niels.

I: European Economic Review, Bind 135, 103737, 06.2021.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Hebous, S & Johannesen, N 2021, 'At your service! The role of tax havens in international trade with services', European Economic Review, bind 135, 103737. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euroecorev.2021.103737

APA

Hebous, S., & Johannesen, N. (2021). At your service! The role of tax havens in international trade with services. European Economic Review, 135, [103737]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euroecorev.2021.103737

Vancouver

Hebous S, Johannesen N. At your service! The role of tax havens in international trade with services. European Economic Review. 2021 jun.;135. 103737. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euroecorev.2021.103737

Author

Hebous, Shafik ; Johannesen, Niels. / At your service! The role of tax havens in international trade with services. I: European Economic Review. 2021 ; Bind 135.

Bibtex

@article{59b3ef84ad6a441cb9f432a6cc30df0e,
title = "At your service! The role of tax havens in international trade with services",
abstract = "This paper provides the first comprehensive study of profit shifting through service trade inside multinational firms. The analysis employs a unique firm-level dataset with detailed information about service trade and foreign affiliates for virtually all multinational firms in Germany. We find patterns consistent with profit shifting in service categories such as intellectual property (patents and trademarks), headquarter services (administration, man- agement and advertizing), information services (data processing and storage) and financial services (investment, lending and money management). In these service categories, trade with affiliates in tax havens is skewed towards imports and the internal service providers in tax havens earn significant excess profits that vary strongly with the value of their inter- nal service sales. These patterns are suggestive that multinational firms operate tax haven entities that sell overpriced services to affiliates in order to erode their taxable profits and reduce the global tax bill. While total service imports from tax havens are very large, our estimates suggest that Germany{\textquoteright}s loss of government revenue from mispriced service im- ports from tax havens is relatively modest, less than €1 billion per year. ",
author = "Shafik Hebous and Niels Johannesen",
year = "2021",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1016/j.euroecorev.2021.103737",
language = "English",
volume = "135",
journal = "European Economic Review",
issn = "0014-2921",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - At your service! The role of tax havens in international trade with services

AU - Hebous, Shafik

AU - Johannesen, Niels

PY - 2021/6

Y1 - 2021/6

N2 - This paper provides the first comprehensive study of profit shifting through service trade inside multinational firms. The analysis employs a unique firm-level dataset with detailed information about service trade and foreign affiliates for virtually all multinational firms in Germany. We find patterns consistent with profit shifting in service categories such as intellectual property (patents and trademarks), headquarter services (administration, man- agement and advertizing), information services (data processing and storage) and financial services (investment, lending and money management). In these service categories, trade with affiliates in tax havens is skewed towards imports and the internal service providers in tax havens earn significant excess profits that vary strongly with the value of their inter- nal service sales. These patterns are suggestive that multinational firms operate tax haven entities that sell overpriced services to affiliates in order to erode their taxable profits and reduce the global tax bill. While total service imports from tax havens are very large, our estimates suggest that Germany’s loss of government revenue from mispriced service im- ports from tax havens is relatively modest, less than €1 billion per year.

AB - This paper provides the first comprehensive study of profit shifting through service trade inside multinational firms. The analysis employs a unique firm-level dataset with detailed information about service trade and foreign affiliates for virtually all multinational firms in Germany. We find patterns consistent with profit shifting in service categories such as intellectual property (patents and trademarks), headquarter services (administration, man- agement and advertizing), information services (data processing and storage) and financial services (investment, lending and money management). In these service categories, trade with affiliates in tax havens is skewed towards imports and the internal service providers in tax havens earn significant excess profits that vary strongly with the value of their inter- nal service sales. These patterns are suggestive that multinational firms operate tax haven entities that sell overpriced services to affiliates in order to erode their taxable profits and reduce the global tax bill. While total service imports from tax havens are very large, our estimates suggest that Germany’s loss of government revenue from mispriced service im- ports from tax havens is relatively modest, less than €1 billion per year.

U2 - 10.1016/j.euroecorev.2021.103737

DO - 10.1016/j.euroecorev.2021.103737

M3 - Journal article

VL - 135

JO - European Economic Review

JF - European Economic Review

SN - 0014-2921

M1 - 103737

ER -

ID: 261436179