@techreport{809b6383f1ac4868973ca9dbfef49502,
title = "Patent Concentration, Asymmetric Information, and Tax-Motivated Income Shifting",
abstract = "We study the relation between patent concentration and tax-motivated income shifting. Using affiliate-level data for European multinational corporations (MNCs) and employing the relative share of patents held by an MNC as a measure for patent concentration, we predict and find that tax-motivated income shifting is increasing in the degree of patent concentration. This effect is economically meaningful: A one standard deviation higher patent concentration increases the extent to which affiliate-level profits are sensitive to income-shifting incentives by 25.6 percent. Additional tests exploiting variation in the information set of the local tax authority suggest that patent concentration facilitates tax-motivated income shifting by reducing comparable information available to the local tax authority. Overall, our results suggest that patent concentration shapes an MNC{\textquoteright}s incentives to shift income via patents. Our findings also indicate that the effectiveness of tax-policy measures in curtailing this form of income shifting critically depends on their ability to improve the information set of the local tax authority.",
author = "Harald Amberger and Benjamin O{\ss}wald",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.2139/ssrn.3600839",
language = "English",
series = "WU International Taxation Research Paper Series",
number = "2020-05",
publisher = "WU Vienna University of Economics and Business",
address = "Austria",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "WU Vienna University of Economics and Business",
}