Tax Avoidance in Multinationals: The Case of Debt … Avoidance in Multinationals: The Case of Debt...
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CES Lecture Series
Tax Avoidance in Multinationals:
The Case of Debt Shifting
Dirk Schindler (Norwegian School of Economics)
Lecture 3: Regulation, Minority Ownership and Transfer Pricing
as Limiting Factors
Dirk Schindler
Potential (important) factors limiting debt shifting:
• Thin-capitalization rules (TC rules)
• Controlled-foreign-company rules (CFC rules)
• Minority ownership in affiliates
• Interplay with transfer pricing
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5 Thin-capitalization Rules and Controlled-
foreign-company Regulation
• Thin-capitalization rules
⋄ Few countries without TC rules, e.g., Cyprus, (still) Norway
⋄ Otherwise trend from TC rules in strict sense (safe harbor rules)
to non-specific TC rules (earnings-stripping rules / ‘Zinsschranke’)
• Controlled-foreign-company rules
⋄ Banned by European Court of Justice for EEA affiliates in 2006
⋄ Part of BEPS proposal by OECD (2013)
• Some overview on details in Ruf and Schindler (2012)
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5.1 Thin-Capitalization Rules
5.1.1 General Features of TC rules (in Strict Sense)
• Applicable for debt from shareholders with significant influence on ma-
nagement
• Threshold for influence mostly direct and indirect holding of at least
25% (or higher values) of shares / voting rights
• If applicable, no tax deductibility of interest expenses on (excess) inter-
nal debt
• Excess debt determined by fixed debt-to-equity ratio
• Safe harbor: no TC rules, if debt-to-equity ratio below threshold ratio
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• Average safe harbor in EU (2008): 3.4:1 debt-to-equity
• Usually exemption (or preferable rules) for financial institutions and
holding companies
• Often escape clause:
⋄ arm’s-length comparison: replacement of internal debt by external
debt at same conditions possible?
⋄ if proof provided, no application of TC rules
• For EU member states: no discrimination of non-residents from other
EU countries (Lankhorst-Hohorst ruling by ECJ)
⋄ no TC rules for EU-resident companies (e.g., Spain, Portugal)
⋄ TC rules for non-resident and for resident companies alikeCES Lecture: The Case of Debt Shifting 79 Lecture 3: Limiting Factors
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Example: German TC rules until 2007
• Introduction of (first) TC rule in 1994
• Only applicable for foreign investors (inbound investment)
• No tax-deduction of interest expenses on internal debt, if:
⋄ (direct and indirect) investor’s share in German affiliate ≥ 25%
⋄ internal-debt-to-equity ratio > 3:1 (from 2001: 1.5:1)
→ Concept of fixed debt-to-equity ratio with safe harbor
• Preference for holding companies: safe harbor of 9:1 (from 2001: 3:1)
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• Holding company, if
⋄ restriction to providing financial services only, or
⋄ ownership share in total assets ≥ 75%
• Escape clause:
→ no application of TC rules if arm’s-length comparison successful
• Due to Lankhorst-Hohorst ruling of ECJ from 2004 on:
⋄ TC rules applying to foreign and domestic investors alike
⋄ abolition of preference for holding companies
⋄ introduction of tax threshold:
→ no TC rules if interest expenses < 250.000 e
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5.1.2 Non-specific Thin-capitalization Rules: Earnings-stripping
• Disqualifying interest deductions from taxable income if equity is not
adequate from “commercial perspective” (Austria)
• Restricting interest deductions of both internal and external debt, if
interest payments exceed defined threshold (Germany, USA)
• Qualifying interest payments above certain percentage of profits /
EBIDTA as taxable profit / dividends
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Example: German earnings-stripping rules since 2008
• In place (with minor corrections) since 2008: §4h EStG, §8a KStG
• Restricting tax-deductibility of external and internal debt
• Net interest expenses deductible from tax base until 30% of EBIDTA
• EBIDTA = earnings before interest, depreciation, taxes + amortization
• No deductibility of net interest expenses exceeding 30% of EBITA, but
potential deductibility in following years (‘interest carry-forward’)
⇒ Attempt to protect tax base against any kind of debt shifting
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• Exceptions
⋄ tax threshold of 3 million euro (rules apply to full amount of inte-
rest expenses, when threshold exceeded)
⋄ trust clause
∗ no application of earnings-stripping rules, if firm not part of a
corporate group/trust
⋄ escape clause
∗ no application of earnings-stripping rules, if affiliate’s debt-to-
asset ratio is equal to or less than group-wide leverage
∗ exceeding of not more than 2 percentage points harmless
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• Aims
⋄ limit revenue losses from international debt shifting
⋄ exempt small enterprises
⋄ no distortion in investment + debt financing by domestic creditors
• Problem
⋄ rules can bite in and foster liquidity crises
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5.2 Economic Effects of Thin-Capitalization Rules
5.2.1 Effects on Debt-to-asset Ratio
• TC rules aimed to curb internal debt-shifting
• Two possibilities:
⋄ TC rules strictly binding at level b̄Ii
→ introduction of upper bound (ceiling) for internal leverage
⋄ some leeway in working around TC rules, but tax avoidance beco-
mes more expensive
→ flexible internal leverage bIi , but increased costs of internal debt
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Strictly binding (specific) TC rules
• Focus on specific TC rules (neglecting earnings-stripping)
• Safe harbor translating into fixed debt-to-asset ratio b̄Ii
• No tax-deductibility for interest expenses on excessive internal debt,
i.e., if bIi > b̄Ii
• No effect on external debt
→ No change in FOC for external debt DEi
• Only weakly positive marginal costs of internal debt:∂CI(bIi )
∂bIi→ 0
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• Implications:
⋄ standard result carries over as long as optimal internal leverage
within safe harbor
⋄ if marginal costs of internal debt very low, corner solution:
positive debt tax shield drives internal leverage to threshold
⋄ no tax-deductibility above threshold turns tax shield negative:
no tax savings in affiliate, additional tax payments in internal bank
⇒ No internal debt beyond threshold b̄Ii
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Specific TC rules with leeway
• Definition of safe harbor, but leeway to work around TC rules
• Exceeding threshold b̄Ii possible, but costly
→ equivalent to positive shock on marginal costs of internal debt
• Define parameter αi as measure for tightness of TC rules in country i
• Redefine costs of internal debt as CI = CI(bIi , αi)
• Again: no effect on external debt (exception: earnings-stripping rules)
→ no change in FOC for external debt DEi
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• Adjusted FOC for internal debt:
(ti − λ) · r − (1− ti) ·∂CI(bIi , αi)
∂bIi= 0 ∀ i (5.1)
• From comparative-statics
∂bIi∂αi
= −∂2CI(bIi , αi)/(∂b
Ii∂αi)
∂2CI(bIi , αi)/(∂bIi )
2< 0, (5.2)
since∂2CI(bIi ,αi)
∂bIi ∂αi> 0 and
∂2CI(bIi ,αi)
(∂bIi )2 > 0
⇒ Tighter TC-rules reduce internal debt shifting
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• Implications
⋄ TC rules reduce optimal internal debt-to-asset ratio
⋄ no qualitative change in standard results
⋄ internal debt-to-asset ratio will exceed threshold b̄Ii
⋄ firms will incur higher tax-engineering costs
⋄ if∂2CI(bIi ,αi)
∂bIi ∂αi→ ∞ approach collapses to strictly binding TC rules
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5.2.2 Effects on Real Investment
• TC rules restrict tax savings from financial policy
• Reduced debt tax shields increase effective capital costs for MNCs:
r > r̃TCi = r − γTCi (ti)− ψTCi (ti, t1) > r̃i (5.3)
• Real capital investment less profitable (compare equation (3.17))
⇒ Effective TC rules reducing real investment in MNCs
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5.2.3 Effects on Tax Competition
• TC rules foster corporate tax competition (Haufler/Runkel, 2012)
• Weak TC rules alleviate effective tax burden on mobile capital (MNCs)
• Higher corporate taxation of immobile capital possible
• For harmonized corporate tax rates:
⋄ TC rules turn into main instrument for tax competition
⋄ lax TC regulation to attract MNCs and mobile capital
⋄ shift in tax competition efforts
⇒ Challenging sustainability of strict TC rules
→ at least, argument in favor of TC rules with some leeway
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5.3 Empirical Evidence on Thin-Capitalization Rules
• Mostly studies on German MNCs or on German rules (using Bundes-
bank MiDi data for both cases)
• (Almost) No studies of earnings-stripping rules since rules not opera-
tionalizable (and lack of data respectively)
• TC rules (rather) effective in reducing internal debt
• Effect on real investment ambiguous (not existing)
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5.3.1 German Inbound Foreign Direct Investment• Weichenrieder/Windischbauer (2008): MiDi data from 1996 to 2004
• Estimating effects of German TC rules on financing of German affiliates
of foreign MNCs
• Testing effect of reform in 2001: tightening TC rules
• Branches as control group: not affected by TC rules
→ controlling for time trend (and reductions in tax rates)
• Identification strategy:
⋄ split sample of corporations (branches) in affiliates with high/low
level of internal debt before 2001
⋄ compare effects between corporations and branches
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• Findings
⋄ highly leveraged incorporated affiliates reduce internal-debt-to-
equity ratio (IRAT) and internal debt, but increase equity
⋄ only effect on IRAT significantly different (5%-level) from effect
on branches (control group)
⇒ TC rules (somehow) effective
⋄ effect driven by group of incorporated affiliates with highest
internal-debt ratios (IRAT > 5)
⋄ no effect on investment behavior (‘fixed and intangibles assets’)
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Table 4.1: Differential effects on thin capitalization of incorporated firms
IRAT Log of fixed assets Log of financial Log of equity Log of inter- log of third-
and intangibles assets company loans party debt
b1: Corp-high-01-02 -1.624*** 0.062 0.084 0.138*** -1.034*** 0.142
(0.00) (0.42) (0.57) (0.00) (0.00) (0.11)
b2: Branch-high-01-02 -0.417 -0.230 -0.826 0.022 -1.161** -0.260
(0.43) (0.45) (0.14) (0.78) (0.01) (0.53)
b3: Branch-low-01-02 0.061 -0.128 0.136 -0.077 0.335 -0.072
(0.61) (0.44) (0.57) (0.35) (0.43) (0.50)
b4: Log of sales -0.009 0.037 -0.008 0.007 0.072* 0.066**
(0.77) (0.11) (0.82) (0.23) (0.08) (0.02)
Test b1 = b2 -1.207** 0.361 0.910 0.11 0.127 0.402
(0.03) (0.36) (0.10) (0.14) (0.78) (0.34)
Observations 5097 5097 5097 5097 5097 5097
Firms 1699 1699 1699 1699 1699 1699
Adjusted R-squared 0.77 0.92 0.93 0.92 0.83 0.82
*** significant at 1% level, ** significant at 5% level, * significant at 10% level
Weichenrieder and Windischbauer (2008), table 2
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• Interpretation
⋄ Dourado/de la Feria (2008): TC rules effective at low costs since
no effect on real investment
⋄ alternative view: TC rules can be circumvented since no effect on
real investment
• Leeway: holding structure
⋄ evidence for holding structure and consolidation (‘Organschaft’)
⋄ holding facing higher safe harbor
⋄ evidence for increases of (holding) debt in groups with pronounced
leverage and binding TC rules
→ Avoiding TC rules on group level
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5.3.2 German Outbound Foreign Direct Investment
• Büttner et al. (2012): using Bundesbank MiDi data from 1996 to 2004
• Estimating effects of (foreign) TC rules on financing of foreign affiliates
of German MNCs
• Identification strategy:
⋄ cross-country and time variation in TC rules of 36 countries
⋄ dummy measuring effect of existence of TC rules on internal debt
⋄ estimating effect of tightness of TC rules by regressing on safe-
harbor threshold
⋄ splitting sample to analyze affiliates facing non-binding and bin-
ding TC rules separately
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• Findings (for interacted effects)
⋄ existence of TC rules (‘Rules’) reducing tax-rate effect on int. debt
⋄ lesser safe harbor (‘Tight’) diminishing tax sensitivity of int. debt
⋄ for threshold of 1.5:1 (‘Tight’ = 0.4) tax-rate effect reduced by
54% (i.e., −0.287·0.40.213
≈ 0.54)
⇒ TC rules (very) effective
⋄ however: using (affiliate-specific) fixed effects not allowing for crea-
ting new affiliates for holding purposes etc.
⋄ in WP-version (2008): strong negative effect on real investment
(‘fixed assets’)
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Table 4.2: Thin-capitalization Rules and Internal Debt
(1) (2) (3)
Statutory tax rate (STR) 0.214** 0.209** 0.213**
(0.095) (0.094) (0.093)
STR x Rule (TC rule exists) -0.049*
(0.028)
STR x Thight (safe harbor) -0.287**
(0.120)
R-squared 0.7643 0.7644 0.7645
Observations 42,950 42,950 42,950
Affiliate Fixed Effects yes yes yes
*** significant at 1% level, ** significant at 5% level, * significant at 10% level
Büttner et al. (2012), table 4
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• Interpretation
⋄ foreign TC rules more effective than German TC rules
⋄ potential problem: no information on loopholes and no possibility
to test for potential loopholes
⋄ binding TC rules costly: strong effect on investment behavior
→ confirmation of theoretical predictions
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5.4 Controlled-Foreign-Company Rules
5.4.1 General Features
• Affiliates in low-tax countries fostering tax avoidance
⋄ haven for valuable assets and internal debt
⋄ haven for license fees and patents
⋄ tax shelter for resulting passive incomes
• Controlled-foreign-company (CFC) rules to curb tax avoidance
⋄ denying low taxation in resident country of CFC
⋄ inclusion of passive income in tax base of parent on accrual basis
⇒ applying (higher) domestic tax rate on passive income (license fees,
patents, interest on internal debt) in foreign CFC
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• Problem: conflict with EU law
⋄ inclusion only in low-tax countries; imbalance to domestic or high-
tax affiliates
→ violation of freedom of establishment
(ECJ ruling 2006 on UK’s CFC rules in Schweppes-Cadbury case)
⋄ seeking tax advantage not sufficient for restricting freedom of esta-
blishment (‘no abuse’)
⋄ exception: ‘purely artificial structures’ (e.g., letterbox companies)
⋄ not yet tested: violation of freedom of movement of capital
⇒ Applicability of CFC rules (within EEA) legally rather impossible
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5.4.2 Example: German Controlled-foreign-company Rules
• Förster/Schmidtmann (2004); Ruf/Weichenrieder (2012); §§7-14 AStG
• German CFC rules biting, when following requirements fulfilled:
a) controlling ownership share
b) passive income
c) low taxation
a) Ownership share
⋄ ownership of 50% or more in shares or voting rights in foreign
corporation
⋄ no matter whether directly or indirectly held
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b) passive income
⋄ negative definition: whatever is not ‘qualified as active’
⋄ active income in particular income from production, agriculture
and dividends; but also banking, trade, services etc. as long as
main business partners are non-related third parties
⋄ capital income ‘active’ if proven that capital raised from unrelated
persons
c) low taxation
⋄ effective tax rate less than 25%
⋄ passive income calculated according to German tax law
→ effective tax burden decisive (tackling beneficial tax regimes)
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• Legal consequences
⋄ inclusion of passive income in tax base of German parent
⋄ no shelter from exemption principle or double tax treaties
⋄ tax exemption if passive income distributed as dividend later
⇒ Passive income (immediately) taxed at German tax rate
• German CFC rules and EU legislation
⋄ in principle, interfering with freedom of establishment and freedom
of movement of capital
⋄ conflict with EU law
→ CFC rules waived for affiliates residing in EEA countries
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5.4.3 Economic Effects of Controlled-foreign-company Rules
CFC rules with leeway
• CFC rules apply, but leeway to work around
• Increased (tax-engineering) costs of internal debt
→ equivalent to shock on marginal costs of internal debt (cf. TC rules)
• Define parameter γ as measure for CFC rule tightness (for parent p)
• Redefine costs of internal debt as CI = CI(bIi , γ)
• No effect on external debt
→ no change in FOC for external debt DEi
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• Adjusted FOC for internal debt:
(ti − λ) · r − (1− ti) ·∂CI(bIi , γ)
∂bIi= 0 ∀ i (5.4)
• From comparative-statics
∂bIi∂γ
= −∂2CI(bIi , γ)/(∂b
Ii∂γ)
∂2CI(bIi , γ)/(∂bIi )
2< 0, ∀ i (5.5)
since∂2CI(bIi ,γ)
∂bIi ∂γ> 0 and
∂2CI(bIi ,γ)
(∂bIi )2 > 0
⇒ Stricter CFC-rules reduce internal debt shifting
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• Implications
⋄ CFC rules reduce optimal internal debt-to-asset ratio
⋄ firms will incur higher tax-engineering costs
⋄ relevant for domestic MNCs only, but affecting financial policy in
all their affiliates worldwide (reduced internal tax savings)
⋄ no effect on domestic affiliates of foreign MNCs
⋄ less real investment in affected MNCs since higher capital costs
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Strictly binding CFC rules
• Define tp as tax rate of parent company
• CFC rules enforce tax rate tp in internal bank
⇒ Decrease of internal debt tax shield for all affiliates
⇒ Internal debt tax shield negative for affiliates with ti < tp
• No effect on external debt
→ no change in FOC for external debt DEi
• Additional constraint on internal debt: λ ≥ tp
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• Kuhn-Tucker problem for optimal capital structure (cf. equation (3.4))
maxDEi ,D
Ii
Πp =∑
i
{
(1− ti) · [F (Ki, Li)− wi · Li]− r ·Ki (5.6)
+ ti · r ·[
DEi +DI
i
]
− (1− ti)[
CE(bEi ) + CI(bIi )]
·Ki
}
− Cf(bf)
− λ∑
i
r ·DIi
− η (tp − λ)
s.t. bai =Dai
Ki, a = {E, I}, bf =
∑
iDEi
∑
iKi
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• FOC for internal debt DIi in country i:
∂Π
∂DIi
= (ti−λ) · r− (1− ti) ·∂CI(bIi )
∂bIi≤ 0 and λ ≥ tp ∀ i (5.7)
• Optimal to place internal bank in headquarters: mini λ = tp
• For affiliates with ti < tp: increased tax payments from internal debt
∂Π
∂DIi
< 0 ⇒ DIi = bIi = 0
• For ti ≥ tp: reduced internal debt tax shield
0 < bI∗i = CI(−1)(
ti − tp1− ti
· r
)
< CI(−1)(
ti − t11− ti
· r
)
⇒ Lower internal leverage in high-tax affiliates
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• Implications:
⋄ standard result collapsing for low-tax affiliates: bIi = 0 if ti ≤ tp
⋄ standard results qualitatively robust for affiliates with ti > tp
⋄ internal bank now located in headquarters
⇒ additional tax revenue for country p hosting MNC
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5.4.4 Empirical Evidence on Controlled-foreign-company Rules
• Ruf/Weichenrieder (2012): MiDi data from 1996 to 2006
• Estimating effects of German CFC rules on location of internal banks
of German MNCs
• Internal banks: conduit entities with positive net lending
• Testing effect of reform in 2003: tightening CFC rules for affiliates in
countries without activity clause in double tax treaty
• Control group: affiliates in countries with activity clause in tax treaty
• Hypotheses:
⋄ higher likelihood to host internal bank if no activity clause
⋄ effect vanishing after 2003
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• Findings for likelihood to own internal bank in country i
⋄ binding CFC rule (‘CFC-Dummy’) reducing likelihood by 45%
⋄ absence of activity clause (‘CFC-Dummy*NOACTI’) increasing
probability by 55%
⋄ activity-clause effect roughly nullified by reform in 2003
(‘CFC-Dummy*NOACTI*Post2003’)
⋄ caveat:
activity clause effects exclusively based on observations in Ireland
⇒ German CFC legislation effective in curbing tax avoidance
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Table 4.3: Locating Conduit Entities with Positive Net Lending
Panel logit OLS, linear probability
Corporate Tax Rate -1.664 -0.0527
(1.38) (0.055)
CFC-Dummy -0.659*** -0.0270***
(0.25) (0.0089)
CFC-Dummy*NOACTI 0.815** 0.0381***
(0.38) (0.014)
CFC-Dummy*NOACTI*Post2003 -1.066** -0.0577***
(0.52) (0.021)
Pseudo R-squared / R-squared 0.07 0.19
Observations 24,951 25,282
Affiliate Fixed Effects yes yes
Time Fixed Effects yes yes
*** significant at 1% level, ** significant at 5% level, * significant at 10% level
Ruf and Weichenrieder (2012), table 9
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Table 4.4: Conduit entities of German MNC with positive net lending by country (2006)
Country Lending to affiliated companies Number of conduit Statutory
less liabilites (in Mio. euro) entities tax rate
USA 53,824 58 0.4
UK 3,574 38 0.3
Switzerland 610 31 0.29
France 563 30 0.3333
The Netherlands 807 26 0.296
Belgium 2,607 12 0.3399
Austria 309 10 0.25
South Africa 82 9 0.396
Luxembourg 1,109 8 0.2963
Ireland 718 7 0.125
Spain 28 6 0.35
Sweden 71 6 0.28
Canada 405 5 0.361
Italy 226 5 0,3725
Cayman Islands 4,406 4 0
Malta 243 3 0.35
Sources: Ruf and Weichenrieder, 2012, table 6, MiDi database
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5.5 Comparison of Thin-capitalization and Controlled-
Foreign-Company Rules
• TC rules
⋄ restrict tax avoidance by (internal) debt shifting in country of
application
⋄ negatively affect domestic investment
⋄ affect domestic affiliates of both residing and foreign MNCs
⋄ low sustainability in tax-competition setting
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• CFC rules
⋄ restrict use of internal debt in all countries for domestic MNCs
⋄ affect only residing (domestic) MNCs / potentially reduced
competitiveness
⋄ negative effect on investment in all affiliates of domestic MNCs
⋄ potentially additional gains in tax revenue if internal bank located
in headquarters of MNC
⋄ sustainable under tax competition (!?)
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Result 5.1. Both thin-capitalization rules and controlled-foreign-company ru-
les are theoretically and empirically potential explanations for low tax sensi-
tivity of internal debt. Nevertheless, empirical studies provide evidence for
sufficient leeway to sustain all qualitative results on mechanisms of interna-
tional debt shifting.
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6 Other Limiting Factors
6.1 Minority Ownership
• Minority ownership: definition
⋄ joint ventures or diversified (minor) investors
⋄ MNC fully controlling its affiliates
→ total share of minority owners less than 50%
(cf., OECD-/IMF-definitions; Navaretti/Venables, 2004, ch. 1.1)
• Minority ownership in US-MNC (Desai et al., 2004, JFE)
⋄ wholly-owned affiliates amounting to 80.4% of all affiliates in 1997
⋄ share increased by 8.1 percentage points between 1982 and 1997
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• Minority ownership in German MNC (Hebous/Weichenrieder, 2010)
⋄ average share of partially-owned affiliates in number of all affiliates
in 2006: 20%
⋄ for emerging markets: decrease of partially-owned affiliates from
46% in 1996 to 30% in 2006
⋄ for OECD countries: decrease of partially-owned affiliates from
25% in 1996 to 18% in 2006
⋄ effects hold across all sectors
⇒ Strong and significant trend in reducing minority ownership in affiliates
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Tax-efficient capital structure
• Start out from model in chapter 3.1 (cf., Schindler/Schjelderup, 2012)
• For simplicity: no overall bankruptcy costs on parent level (Cf = 0)
→ no external debt-shifting
• Sum of minority shares in affiliate i given by Ji
• Cooperation on basis of cost savings CMi = CM
i (Ji) > 0
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• Minority shareholders contributing Ji% of equity Ei
→ no change in affiliate’s after-tax profit (except for market-entry costs)
πi = V Li = (1− ti) ·
[
F (Ki, Li)− w · Li − CMi (Ji)
]
− r ·Ki
+ ti · r · [DEi +DI
i ]− (1− ti)[CE(bEi ) + CI(bIi )] ·Ki,
but minority shareholders earning Ji% of after-tax profits
⇒ World-wide profits of MNC
Πp = V L =∑
i
(1− Ji)VLi =
∑
i
(1− Ji)πi (6.1)
• No change in internal lending constraint
∑
i
r ·DIi =
∑
i
bIi · r ·Ki = 0
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• Optimal capital structure (for fixed inputs Ki, Li)
maxDEi ,D
Ii
Πp =∑
i
(1− Ji){
(1− ti)[
F (Ki, Li)− wi · Li − CMi (Ji)
]
− r ·Ki
+ ti · r ·[
DEi +DI
i
]
− (1− ti)[
CE(bEi ) + CI(bIi )]
·Ki
}
(6.2)
s.t.∑
i
r ·DIi = 0, (λ) and bai =
Dai
Ki, a = {E, I}
• Rearranging the FOC for external debt:
ti · r = (1− ti) ·∂CE(bEi )
∂bEi(6.3)
→ identical to basic model without minority shares
⇒ No influence on external debt decision (as long as Cf = 0)
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• Rearranged FOC for internal debt
∂CI(bIi )
∂bIi=
[(1− Ji) ti − λ] · r
(1− Ji)(1− ti)=ti −
λ1−Ji
1− ti≥ 0, ∀ i (6.4)
• Balancing marginal costs against effective internal debt tax shield
• Locate internal bank in affiliate with lowest effective tax rate
λ = mini(1− Ji)ti = te1 (by assumption, country 1)
→ not necessarily the lowest-taxed affiliate
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• Effect of minority ownership on level of internal debt
dbIidJi
= −te1 · r
CI ′′(bIi ) · (1− Ji)2 · (1− ti)< 0, i > 1 (6.5)
• Effect of minority ownership on tax sensitivity of internal debt
∂(
dbIidti
)
∂Ji= −
te1 · r
CI ′′(bIi ) · (1− Ji)2 · (1− ti)2< 0, i > 1 (6.6)
⇒ Internal debt less attractive for MNC
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• Intuition
⋄ minority shareholders fully profiting from tax savings in affiliate i
⋄ no sharing of tax payments on shifted interest in internal bank
→ cost externality benefitting minority shareholders
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• Opposite effect compared to transfer pricing (Kant, 1988, SEJ)
• Cost externality decreasing with effective tax rate te1 in internal bank
• Empirical evidence
⋄ effect of tax rate on internal debt 40% larger in wholly-owned affi-
liates compared to partially-owned ones (Büttner/Wamser, 2009)
⋄ significant reduction of tax sensitivity (e.g., Büttner/Wamser,
2009; Hebous/Weichenrieder, 2010; Desai et al., 2004, JFE)
→ not transfer-pricing conflicts, but cost externality should drive negative
effect (Schindler/Schjelderup, 2012)
CES Lecture: The Case of Debt Shifting 130 Lecture 3: Limiting Factors
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Result 6.1. Since they do not participate in the tax payments in the internal
bank, but profit from tax savings in borrowing affiliates, minority shareholders
cause a cost externality reducing the attractiveness of internal debt shifting for
MNCs. The resulting increase in effective capital costs constitutes an additio-
nal cost effect when determining the optimal ownership structure in affiliates.
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6.2 Combining Debt Shifting and Transfer Pricing
• Questions:
⋄ Interaction of transfer pricing and debt shifting?
⋄ Implications for tax sensitivity?
⋄ Effectivity of governmental regulation?
• Use standard model as in section 3.1
• Add interest-rate manipulation:
surcharge r̃i on internal debt, i.e., rIi ≡ r + r̃i
• See Schindler and Schjelderup (2013)
CES Lecture: The Case of Debt Shifting 132 Lecture 3: Limiting Factors
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• Internal lending constraint: total sum of internal loans zero
∑
i
r ·DIi =
∑
i
r · bIi ·Ki = 0
• Profit shifting in affiliate i: Pi = r̃i ·DIi = r̃i · b
Ii ·Ki
• Profit shifting constraint:
∑
i
Pi =∑
i
r̃i · bIi ·Ki = 0
• Specification and definition of concealment costs for internal debt and
transfer pricing crucial
CES Lecture: The Case of Debt Shifting 133 Lecture 3: Limiting Factors
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Definition 6.1. Properties of marginal ‘cross-over’ effects:
• Complementarity in concealment costs implying
∂2CI∂bIi ∂Pi
,∂2CP∂bIi ∂Pi
< 0
• Substitutability in concealment costs implying
∂2CI∂bIi ∂Pi
,∂2CP∂bIi ∂Pi
> 0
CES Lecture: The Case of Debt Shifting 134 Lecture 3: Limiting Factors
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Findings
• All interaction taking place via concealment cost functions
• Concealment cost complementarity ( ∂2CI∂bIi ∂Pi
< 0) increasing tax sen-
sitivity of both debt and profit shifting; that is dbIi/dti > 0 and
dPi/dti > 0.
• Concealment cost substitutability ( ∂2CI∂bIi ∂Pi
> 0) reducing tax sensitivity
of both debt and profit shifting and dbIi/dti ≷ 0 and dPi/dti ≷ 0.
CES Lecture: The Case of Debt Shifting 135 Lecture 3: Limiting Factors
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Intuition
• all else equal: higher tax rate increasing both internal debt and profit
shifting
• cost complementarity ( ∂2CI∂bIi ∂Pi
< 0): cost-mitigating ‘cross-over’ effect
⋄ economies of scale and scope reducing marginal costs of both tax-
engineering activities
• cost substitutab. ( ∂2CI∂bIi ∂Pi
> 0): additional costs from ‘cross-over’ effect
⋄ higher internal debt (profit shifting) increasing marginal costs of
profit shifting (internal debt)
CES Lecture: The Case of Debt Shifting 136 Lecture 3: Limiting Factors
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Effectiveness of Governmental Regulation
• Tightening TC rules or arm’s-length principle
⋄ win-win situation for cost complementarity: reducing debt shifting
and profit shifting
⋄ unintended effects for cost substitutability: either debt shifting or
profit shifting can increase
• Intuition
⋄ complement.: less debt shifting makes profit shift. more expensive
⋄ substitutab.: reducing one activity makes other strategy cheaper
CES Lecture: The Case of Debt Shifting 137 Lecture 3: Limiting Factors
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Result 6.2. The (main) interaction of debt shifting and transfer pricing is
driven by the concealment costs. Cost complementarity will amplify, cost sub-
stitutability will reduce the tax sensitivity of internal debt. On the other hand,
cost complementarity simplifies the regulation of profit shifting as a whole,
while cost substitutability can trigger unintended effects.
CES Lecture: The Case of Debt Shifting 138 Lecture 3: Limiting Factors
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6.3 A Step Back: Some Open Issues
• Very few theoretical literature on TC rules
→ maybe not promising enough (so, be careful)
• Empirical estimates of investment effects of TC rules
→ to date at most ambiguous or lacking
• Earnings-stripping rules
⋄ not really tested empirically / hard to get suitable data
⋄ some papers now coming: Blouin et al., Buslei/Simmler, Holzmann
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• CFC rules:
⋄ OECD proposal to foster CFC rules
⋄ theoretical literature dead silent about foundation/justification
• (Specific) Empirical test for externality result for minority ownership?
• Most interesting: shape of concealment cost functions
⋄ little theoretical work, no empirical evidence
⋄ obviously more knowledge relevant for policy design
⋄ could be helpful for interpreting (empirical) findings
CES Lecture: The Case of Debt Shifting 140 Lecture 3: Limiting Factors