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ATA Doctoral Consortium

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Title: ATA Doctoral Consortium


1
ATA Doctoral Consortium
  • Multinational Tax Research
  • in Accounting
  • Kaye J. Newberry
  • University of Houston

2
Outline of Presentation
  • Why is multinational tax research in accounting
    important?
  • Advantages of working in this area
  • Challenges to working in this area
  • Microeconomic framework
  • Overview and examples
  • Future directions

3
Why is Multinational Tax Research
Important?
  • Globalization of Companies
  • For 1996, U.S. companies reported 2.7 trillion
    in assets for their 7500 largest foreign
    corporations.
  • Many business decisions are now made in a global
    context.
  • Use of foreign entities as reporting havens
    e.g., special purpose entities and corporate tax
    shelters.

4
Why is Multinational Tax Research
Important?
  • Contributes to our knowledge of investing and
    financing decisions
  • Worldwide investment decisions
  • Production/ financial investments
  • Reinvestment of foreign earnings
  • Financing choices
  • Foreign tax credit limitations
  • Income-shifting mechanism

5
Why is Multinational Tax Research Important?
  • Provides insights regarding income reporting
    incentives
  • Cross-jurisdictional income shifting
  • Management of effective tax rates (Xerox
    Corporation)

6
Why is Multinational Tax Research Important?
  • Managerial accounting links
  • Transfer prices used to accomplish tax-motivated
    income shifting
  • Managers say transfer pricing complicates
  • bonus calculations
  • operating measurements
  • internal management fees
  • overhead allocations

7
Why is Multinational Tax Research
Important?
  • Economic tax policy implications
  • Income shifting studies provide insights
    regarding U.S. inflows and outflows of tax
    revenues
  • Studies of investing and financing decisions
    provide insights regarding capital market
    distortions

8
Advantages of Conducting
Multinational Tax Research
  • Effects are widespread and interdisciplinary
  • Rich theoretical base to draw on
  • Corporate finance theory
  • Positive accounting theory
  • Managerial accounting theory

9
Advantages of Conducting
Multinational Tax Research
  • Powerful research setting
  • Variation in tax rates, tax systems, and
    accounting systems
  • Firm-level variation in U.S. corporations tax
    incentives
  • Accountants have a comparative advantage
  • Institutional knowledge
  • Training in microeconomic theory

10
Challenges to Conducting
Multinational Tax Research
  • Requisite Skill Set
  • Knowledge of complex tax and accounting rules
  • Knowledge of international business environment
  • Strong background in economic and corporate
    finance theory

11
Challenges to Conducting
Multinational Tax Research
  • Data, Data, Data
  • Privately-held information on organizational
    structure and company transactions
  • Firm-level tax return information is confidential
  • Measurement of non-tax incentives is difficult

12
Challenges to Conducting
Multinational Tax Research
  • On the positive side, the availability of
    databases is increasing
  • U.S. data
  • Compustat (63, 64, 272, 273)
  • Geographic segment tapes
  • Stock data (cross-listings, etc.)
  • U.S. corporate tax return data

13
Challenges to Conducting Multinational
Tax Research
  • International Data
  • Global Vantage
  • Worldscope (gt 20,000 companies)
  • PACAP (Pacific-Basin Countries)
  • Transaction Data
  • SDC New Issues
  • SDC Mergers and Acquisitions
  • Dealscan

14
Microeconomic Research Framework
  • Scholes-Wolfson approach to empirical tax
    research
  • Conceptual Framework
  • Effective tax planning ? tax minimization
  • The importance of considering
  • All taxes
  • All parties
  • All costs

15
Microeconomic Research Framework
  • All taxes
  • Explicit taxes (income taxes, withholding taxes,
    etc.)
  • Implicit taxes
  • reduction in pre-tax returns earned from tax
    favored assets
  • investment in low-tax rate country (after-tax
    returns could be low)

16
Microeconomic Research Framework
  • All parties
  • Tax authorities (an unwelcome contracting party)
  • Financial statement users (shareholders,
    creditors, etc.)
  • Managers
  • Employees

17
Microeconomic Research Framework
  • All costs
  • Tax audit costs and political scrutiny
  • Financial reporting/ contracting costs
  • Managerial incentives/ agency costs
  • Institutional features (capital markets, business
    norms, etc.)

18
Research Overview
  • Investing decisions
  • Multinational tax incentives influence
  • Production location decisions (e.g., Kemsley
    1998)
  • Reinvestment vs. repatriation of foreign earnings
    (e.g., Krull 2004)
  • Importance of non-tax factors

19
Research Overview
  • Financing decisions
  • Foreign tax credit limits influence
  • Use of preferred stock (Collins and Shackelford
    1992)
  • Public offerings of domestic debt versus equity
    (Newberry 1998)
  • Worldwide debt location decisions (e.g, Newberry
    and Dhaliwal 2001)
  • Debt funding for corporate acquisitions (Dhaliwal
    et al. 2005)

20
Research Overview
  • Financing decisions
  • Importance of non-tax incentives
  • Capital structure theory constructs
  • Institutional features of capital markets

21
Research Overview
  • Cross-jurisdictional income shifting
  • U.S. versus foreign income reporting patterns
    surrounding TRA1986
  • Broad income patterns (Klassen et al. 1993,
    Harris 1993, Jacob 1996)
  • Ability to shift (Harris 1993, Jacob 1996)

22
Research Overview
  • Cross-jurisdictional income shifting
  • Firm-level differences in U.S. versus foreign
    income reporting incentives
  • Collins, Kemsley and Lang (1998)
  • Newberry and Dhaliwal (2001)
  • Mills and Newberry (2004)
  • Income shifting within a jurisdiction
  • Multistate taxation
  • Japan (Gramlich et al. 2004)

23
Research Improvements
  • Tests of firm-level incentives
  • Data sources
  • Consideration of firm valuation and accounting
    incentives
  • Tests of alternative contexts and shifting
    mechanisms

24
Three Examples
  • Why did I choose these papers?
  • Published in top-tier accounting journals
  • Different research settings, designs, and data
    sources

25
Newberry and Dhaliwal 2001
  • Research Question
  • Do tax incentives influence where U.S.
    multinationals locate their interest deductions
    worldwide?
  • Sample
  • 220 firm-years from 1987-1997.
  • International bond offerings denominated in
    currencies of G-7 countries (not U.S.) and
    Australia.

26
Newberry and Dhaliwal 2001
  • Data Sources
  • SDC new issues database, directories of corporate
    affiliations, Compustat, annual report footnotes,
    and survey questionnaires to CFOs in sample.
  • Empirical Approach
  • Logistic regression of placement (foreign vs.
    U.S.) to firm-specific tax attributes,
    country-level tax regimes, and controls for
    market, size, etc.

27
Newberry and Dhaliwal 2001
  • Primary Findings
  • Firms with excess foreign tax credits are more
    likely to issue bonds through foreign subsidiary.
    Result is economically significant.
  • U.S. tax losses influence firms to place offering
    overseas but only affects 5 of sample.
  • Country-level tax regimes make a difference with
    more foreign placements in high-tax countries.

28
Newberry and Dhaliwal 2001
  • Incremental Contributions
  • Extension of corporate finance theory. Debt
    location decisions take into account
    jurisdiction-specific tax loss carryforwards and
    credit limits.
  • Debt location decisions can achieve tax-motivated
    income shifting.

29
Krull 2004
  • Research Questions
  • Do firms use the permanently reinvested earnings
    (PRE) designation to manage financial earnings?
  • Do PRE amounts reflect investment and tax
    incentives (secondary question)?

30
Krull 2004
  • Sample
  • 805 firm-year observations for 1993-1999.
  • U.S. multinationals on 2001 Compustat Industrial
    file with necessary data (including disclosure of
    permanently reinvested earnings).

31
Krull 2004
  • Data Sources
  • Annual report footnotes, Compustat, geographic
    segment files, IBES.
  • Empirical Approach
  • Regression of change in PRE to 1) earnings
    management variables, 2) interactions with
    foreign tax credit position, 3) investment/tax
    variables, and 4) control variables.

32
Krull 2004
  • Primary Findings
  • Firms with pre-managed earnings that miss analyst
    forecasts lower their deferred tax expense by
    designating more low-tax rate foreign earnings as
    permanently reinvested.
  • Firms with relatively high foreign after-tax
    returns and tax incentives to reinvest designate
    more foreign earnings as permanently reinvested.

33
Krull 2004
  • Incremental Contributions
  • Evidence of earnings management in new setting.
  • Modeling of economic incentives.

34
Gramlich, Limpaphayon, Rhee 2004
  • Research Question
  • Does Keiretsu affiliation affect tax-motivated
    income shifting among Japanese firms?
  • Sample
  • 12,357 firm-years of non-financial and
    non-utility firms on the Tokyo Stock Exchange
    during 1977-1997.

35
Gramlich, Limpaphayon, Rhee 2004
  • Data Sources
  • PACAP-Japan and Industrial Groupings in Japan.
  • Empirical Approach
  • Regression of pre-tax income/ firm value to
    marginal tax rate, keiretsu dummy, presidents
    council dummy, interactions, and control
    variables.

36
Gramlich, Limpaphayon, Rhee 2004
  • Primary Findings
  • Relative to independent firms, keiretsu firms
    pre-tax return on firm value is less positively
    related to marginal tax rate.
  • Stronger effect found for presidents council
    firms.
  • Evidence of compensation to income shifters
    (supplemental analysis).

37
Gramlich, Limpaphayon, Rhee 2004
  • Incremental Contributions
  • Evidence of income shifting between
    differentially taxed entities within the same
    jurisdiction using new data.
  • Suggests bias in financial statements of Japanese
    keiretsu members.

38
Future Directions
  • More theory-based tests
  • More interdisciplinary studies
  • Continued focus on increasing power of tests
    (theory, data, modeling tradeoffs)
  • Be creative and explore new areas!
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