TY - UNPB
T1 - On the relevance of double tax treaties in the presence of treaty shopping
AU - Petkova, Kunka
AU - Stasio, Andrzej
AU - Zagler, Martin
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - This paper investigates the effects of double tax treaties (DTTs) on foreign direct investment (FDI) after controlling for their relevance in the presence of treaty shopping. DTTs cannot be considered a bilateral issue, but must be viewed as a network, since FDI can flow from home to host country through one or more conduit countries. By accounting for treaty shopping, we calculate the shortest (i.e. the cheapest) tax distance between any two countries allowing the corporate income to be channelled through intermediate jurisdictions. We differentiate between relevant and neutral DTTs - i.e. tax treaties that offer investors a financial advantage - and irrelevant DTTs and use these data to derive two important results. First, only relevant and neutral tax treaties increase bilateral FDI, whereas irrelevant DTTs do not. We can quantify the increase of FDI due to a relevant DTT at around 22%. Second, significant tax reductions due to treaty benefits will lead to an increase in FDI.
AB - This paper investigates the effects of double tax treaties (DTTs) on foreign direct investment (FDI) after controlling for their relevance in the presence of treaty shopping. DTTs cannot be considered a bilateral issue, but must be viewed as a network, since FDI can flow from home to host country through one or more conduit countries. By accounting for treaty shopping, we calculate the shortest (i.e. the cheapest) tax distance between any two countries allowing the corporate income to be channelled through intermediate jurisdictions. We differentiate between relevant and neutral DTTs - i.e. tax treaties that offer investors a financial advantage - and irrelevant DTTs and use these data to derive two important results. First, only relevant and neutral tax treaties increase bilateral FDI, whereas irrelevant DTTs do not. We can quantify the increase of FDI due to a relevant DTT at around 22%. Second, significant tax reductions due to treaty benefits will lead to an increase in FDI.
UR - https://ssrn.com/abstract=3126593
U2 - 10.2139/ssrn.3126593
DO - 10.2139/ssrn.3126593
M3 - WU Working Paper
T3 - WU International Taxation Research Paper Series
BT - On the relevance of double tax treaties in the presence of treaty shopping
ER -