Tax Avoidance and Capital Structure

Tax Avoidance and Capital Structure
Author: Alessandro Gabrielli
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 103
Release: 2023-05-23
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 3031309804

This book provides a comprehensive overview of the implications of tax avoidance for a firm’s capital structure, highlighting the key role played by free cash flow and agency conflicts. First, the book provides an outline of the theories and empirical evidence concerning the role of taxes in the Theory of Capital Structure. It reviews the studies investigating the relationship between agency conflicts and capital structure. The book explores the role of free cash flow and agency conflicts in the relationship between tax avoidance and capital structure. In the final section, the results of an empirical investigation conducted on a sample of U.S. public firms are also presented. The empirical research examines whether and how tax avoidance is associated with debt covenant violation across the stages of the corporate life cycle. Specifically, the research uses the concept of the corporate life cycle stage to analyse whether and how the association between tax avoidance and debt covenant violation varies in different agency settings. Consistent with the hypotheses drawn on the Agency Theory, the findings of the empirical research suggest life cycle stages moderate the association between tax avoidance and debt covenant violation. Overall, this book sheds light on the potential implications of tax avoidance activities for a firm’s capital structure. The book will be of interest to both experienced and early-stage scholars interested in the topic. Moreover, the book will also be of interest to policymakers, investors, analysts, lenders, and other market participants.

Empirical Capital Structure

Empirical Capital Structure
Author: Christopher Parsons
Publisher: Now Publishers Inc
Total Pages: 107
Release: 2009
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 160198202X

Empirical Capital Structure reviews the empirical capital structure literature from both the cross-sectional determinants of capital structure as well as time-series changes.

Corporate Tax Avoidance and Debt Policy

Corporate Tax Avoidance and Debt Policy
Author: Ramesh P. Rao
Publisher:
Total Pages: 42
Release: 2013
Genre:
ISBN:

This paper examines the relation between corporate tax avoidance and debt policy using a large sample of firms from 1988 to 2006. We use modified measures of book-tax difference and long-run cash effective tax rate to proxy for tax avoidance. Using both measures we find consistent evidence that tax avoidance is negatively associated with leverage ratio. Further, we find that the substitution of non-debt tax avoidance for debt dissipates for very large, highly profitable firms, and firms with higher credit rating. Our findings are robust to alternative measures of leverage. Consistent with the debt substitution hypothesis, we offer new evidence to show that tax is an important factor in corporate capital structure decisions.

Technological Change and Technology Strategy

Technological Change and Technology Strategy
Author: Robert E. Evenson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 144
Release: 1994
Genre: Technological innovations
ISBN:

Theoretical contributions; Technological infrastructure; Technological assets and development; International flows of technology; Technological investment in the private sector; Returns to technological activities; Policy issues.

International Corporate Tax Avoidance: A Review of the Channels, Magnitudes, and Blind Spots

International Corporate Tax Avoidance: A Review of the Channels, Magnitudes, and Blind Spots
Author: Sebastian Beer
Publisher: International Monetary Fund
Total Pages: 45
Release: 2018-07-23
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1484370538

This paper reviews the rapidly growing empirical literature on international tax avoidance by multinational corporations. It surveys evidence on main channels of corporate tax avoidance including transfer mispricing, international debt shifting, treaty shopping, tax deferral and corporate inversions. Moreover, it performs a meta analysis of the extensive literature that estimates the overall size of profit shifting. We find that the literature suggests that, on average, a 1 percentage-point lower corporate tax rate will expand before-tax income by 1 percent—an effect that is larger than reported as the consensus estimate in previous surveys and tends to be increasing over time. The literature on tax avoidance still has several unresolved puzzles and blind spots that require further research.

Determinants and Consequences of Corporate Tax Avoidance

Determinants and Consequences of Corporate Tax Avoidance
Author: Gerrit M. Lietz
Publisher:
Total Pages: 65
Release: 2013
Genre:
ISBN:

I provide a first comprehensive literature survey with an exclusive focus on empirical corporate tax avoidance research. Shackelford and Shevlin [2001] traced the earlier developments of archival, microeconomic-based, empirical income tax research, pointing out a nascent interest for research on the determinants of tax aggressiveness. Nine years later, Hanlon and Heitzman [2010] labeled “corporate tax avoidance” as one of four “main areas” of tax research in accounting. Until and since then, work in this area has grown at a rapid pace and clearly remains a vibrant area of tax research. Hence, the goal of this study is to assist both researchers who are new to this field as well as experienced readers by providing an updated overview of empirical studies investigating firms' efforts to reduce their explicit tax burden. In a first step, the origins of tax avoidance research in the corporate context are briefly summarized. The second section briefly reviews numerous fundamental firm characteristics (e.g. size, capital structure, and asset mix) that have been shown to explain some variation in levels of tax avoidance. Third, the main part of this study is devoted to the discussion of the extensive empirical findings on the determinants and consequences of corporate tax avoidance (e.g. various corporate governance arrangements and alternative firm value implications). Finally, the study concludes with suggestions for future research.