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The distorting arm's length principle.

Abstract:
To prevent profit shifting by manipulation of transfer prices, tax authorities typically apply the arm's length principle in corporate taxation and use comparable market prices to `correctly' assess the value of intracompany trade and royalty income of multinationals. We develop a model of heterogeneous firms subject to financing frictions and offshoring of intermediate inputs. We find that arm's length prices systematically differ from independent party prices. Application of the principle thus distorts multinational activity by reducing debt capacity and investment of foreign affiliates, and by distorting organizational choice between direct investment and outsourcing. Although it raises tax revenue and welfare in the headquarter country, welfare losses are larger in the subsidiary location, leading to a first order loss in world welfare.

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Publisher:
CEPR
Series:
CEPR Discussion Papers
Place of publication:
London
Publication date:
2009-01-01


Language:
English
UUID:
uuid:74feab0f-6dd2-463b-9ca0-abf184ee44e3
Local pid:
oai:economics.ouls.ox.ac.uk:14843
Deposit date:
2011-08-16
ARK identifier:

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