TY - UNPB
T1 - Bilateral Tax Competition and Regional Spillovers in Tax Treaty Formation
AU - Petkova, Kunka
AU - Stasio, Andrzej
AU - Zagler, Martin
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Tax treaties are often seen as a means to mitigate fierce tax competition. Building on former literature, we challenge this view by arguing that taxes on passive income reduce effective average tax rates; and induce neighbouring countries to react by reducing bilateral tax rates. As opposed to traditional tax competition, where every foreign investor would benefit from lower tax rates, we show that countries also engage in cutting tax rates for investors from a particular country, leaving taxes for everyone else unaffected. We call this bilateral tax competition, and we test these predictions empirically. We focus on the four treaty withholding tax rates on passive income - portfolio dividends, participation dividends, interest, and royalties - and collect these rates for 3,000 tax treaties and amending protocols signed between 1930 and 2012. We find a positive relationship in the negotiated withholding tax rates of a destination country's tax treaty and destination country's competitors' past tax treaties with the same source country. This relationship is strongest for the tax rates on interest and royalties.
AB - Tax treaties are often seen as a means to mitigate fierce tax competition. Building on former literature, we challenge this view by arguing that taxes on passive income reduce effective average tax rates; and induce neighbouring countries to react by reducing bilateral tax rates. As opposed to traditional tax competition, where every foreign investor would benefit from lower tax rates, we show that countries also engage in cutting tax rates for investors from a particular country, leaving taxes for everyone else unaffected. We call this bilateral tax competition, and we test these predictions empirically. We focus on the four treaty withholding tax rates on passive income - portfolio dividends, participation dividends, interest, and royalties - and collect these rates for 3,000 tax treaties and amending protocols signed between 1930 and 2012. We find a positive relationship in the negotiated withholding tax rates of a destination country's tax treaty and destination country's competitors' past tax treaties with the same source country. This relationship is strongest for the tax rates on interest and royalties.
UR - http://ssrn.com/abstract=3567791
U2 - 10.2139/ssrn.3567791
DO - 10.2139/ssrn.3567791
M3 - WU Working Paper
T3 - WU International Taxation Research Paper Series
BT - Bilateral Tax Competition and Regional Spillovers in Tax Treaty Formation
PB - WU Vienna University of Economics and Business
CY - Vienna
ER -