Do corporate taxes reduce productivity and
investment at the firm level?
Cross-country
evidence from the Amadeus dataset
Cyrille Schwellnus
Jens Arnold
OECD Economics
Department WP 641 (2008)
This paper uses a
stratified sample of firms across OECD economies over the period 1996-2004 to
analyse the effects of corporate taxes on productivity and investment. Applying
a differences-in-differences estimation strategy which exploits differential
effects of corporate taxes on firms with different profitability, it is found
that corporate taxes have a negative effect on productivity at the firm level.
The effect is negative across firms of different size and age classes except
for the small and young, which may be attributable to the relatively low
profitability of small and young firms. The negative effect of corporate taxes
is particularly pronounced for firms that are catching up with the
technological frontier. In the investment analysis, the results suggest that
corporate taxes reduce investment through an increase in the user cost of
capital. This may partly explain the negative productivity effects of corporate
taxes if new capital goods embody technological change.