Séminaires
EU Tax Observatory Lunch Seminar
Location :
The seminar takes place at Paris School of Economics, 48 boulevard Jourdan and via Zoom.
The increased global mobility of capital and labour poses a number of challenges to national tax systems : intricate global structures to hide personal wealth from the eyes of tax administrators and regulators, conflicts about the international allocation of taxing rights, a fast-evolving international tax policy landscape. The seminar focuses on the topic of taxation in the global economy and aims to bring together international junior and senior researchers working on international taxation, tax avoidance and evasion, tax competition, tax harmonization and related topics. Presentations can be polished papers or work in progress. The aim is to learn from each other and to discuss in a friendly atmosphere.
The seminar is organized by the EU Tax Observatory, an EU-funded research laboratory hosted at Paris School of Economics.
This project has received funding from the European Union (TAXUD/2022/DE/310).
If you want to meet the speaker, please register here.
Contact :
manon.francois chez psemail.eu
Program :
Please find below the schedule and the location for the next seminar sessions :
Prochainement
- Vendredi 6 octobre 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- MIETHE Jakob (LMU) : Lost in Information: National Implementation of Global Tax Agreements
- with Annette Alstadsæter, Elisa Casi-Eberhard, and Barbara Stage
- Vendredi 20 octobre 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- TBA * : *
- Vendredi 10 novembre 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- MOREAU-KASTLER Ninon (PSL) : *
- Vendredi 24 novembre 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- WAMSER Georg (Tübingen University) : *
- Vendredi 1er décembre 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- OLBERT Marcel (London Business School) : *
- Vendredi 19 janvier 2024 12:00-13:00
- TBA * : *
- Vendredi 2 février 2024 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- TBA * : *
- Vendredi 16 février 2024 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- TBA * : *
- Vendredi 1er mars 2024 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- MARIE Olivier (Erasmus School of Economics) : *
- Vendredi 15 mars 2024 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- DAVIES Ron (University College Dublin) : *
- Vendredi 5 avril 2024 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- MARTINEZ Isabel (ETH) : *
- Vendredi 19 avril 2024 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- JAKOB BROUSTEIN (IFS) : tba*
- Vendredi 3 mai 2024 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- STAGE Barbara (WHU) : *
- Vendredi 17 mai 2024 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- PARADISI Matteo (EIEF) : *
- Vendredi 14 juin 2024 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- TBA * : *
Archives
- Vendredi 22 septembre 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- DUBININA Evgenyia (Charles University) : Online Cash Register Policy in Russia: Impact on Prices and Exit Decisions
- RésuméTo achieve better tax compliance, the Russian government required small firms to use online cash registers (OCRs) for business-to-consumer transactions from 2017. For firms, the installation of the OCR leads to an increase in fixed costs and marginal markup that depends on production output. This might push firms to increase prices, to switch to the shadow market, to exit the market, or to combine the first two strategies. Using Regression Discontinuity Design technique, I estimate the effect of OCR policy on regional tax revenues. Using the Difference-in-Difference technique, I estimate the effects of the OCR policy on business activity changes and firms' exit decisions. Exogenous variation for causal inference is possible thanks to different years of policy implementation (2017, 2018). The research findings may be useful to help policymakers address the question of firms' behavior after the OCR policy implementation.
- Vendredi 15 septembre 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1-14
- PAPPADÀ Francesco (PSE) : Rethinking the Informal Economy and the Hugo Effect
- Kenneth Rogoff
- RésuméThis paper offers a new approach to measuring the size of the informal economy based on VAT data for the European Union. Although data intensive, our EVADE measure is simpler and more transparent than existing measures. EVADE also shows more variation across countries of Europe than earlier measures, including significantly higher informality in Greece, Italy and Spain, for example. Moreover, we find considerably higher variation within countries across time; in a cross-country time series regression, controlling for tax rates, we con- firm that the informal economy grows significantly in recessions and decreases in booms, which we term the “Hugo effect”.
- Vendredi 9 juin 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1.15
- BACH Maria (Lausanne) : Do billionaires pay taxes ?
- with Laurent Bach, Antoine Bozio and Arthur Guillouzic
- Jeudi 25 mai 2023 11:00-12:00
- Salle R1.09
- RIEDEL Nadine (University of Münster) : What Happens when you Tax the Rich? – Evidence from South Africa
- with Christopher Axelson, Antonia Hohmann, Jukka Pirttilä, Roxanne Raabe
- RésuméIn 2017, South Africa increased its top personal income tax (PIT) rate in an attempt to enhance tax revenue collection and reduce after-tax income inequality. Drawing on the population of personal income tax returns and a transparent empirical identification design, we show that treated taxpayers strongly lowered their reported taxable income in response to the tax reform, translating into an elasticity of taxable income of around 1. The size of the response is particularly pronounced at the very top of the income distribution and among the self-employed. We reject a significant increase in PIT tax revenue collection. The impact of the reform on after-tax income inequality hinges on whether observed income adjustments reflect real or reporting responses. Preliminary analyses show no response in treated taxpayers’ labor supply and job effort.
- Vendredi 12 mai 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1.13
- VICARD Vincent (CEPII) : The instruments of profit shifting
- Kévin Parra-Ramirez
- RésuméThe relevance of tax avoidance at the global level has been convincingly documented by the recent literature. How firms avoid tax - the quantitative relevance of different instruments of profit shifting - is however still unclear. Several papers have provided direct evidence and quantification for the use of different instruments of profit shifting separately and for different countries, providing conflicting conclusions. In this paper we use firm level data to assess the quantitative importance of the three main instruments of profit shifting by multinationals -- the manipulation of transfer prices in trade in goods, the location of intangibles and export of services from tax havens and the strategic location of intra-group debt -- for a single high tax country, France. We further compare these estimates based on direct evidence to estimates of the amount of missing profits in France based on the location of multinationals' profits (FDI income), to get a complete picture of the impact of profit shifting through the lens of balance of payments data.
- Vendredi 28 avril 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1.13
- BASELGIA Enea ( University of St. Gallen) : The Compliance Effects of the Automatic Exchange of Information: Evidence from the Swiss Tax Amnesty
- RésuméThis paper studies the effectiveness of the Automatic Exchange of Information (AEOI) in fighting tax evasion. AEOI via the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) is an international agreement that enables the yearly exchange of information between countries without having to request it, thereby improving tax transparency. Exploiting quasi-random policy variation, administrative wealth tax returns, and granular amnesty data for Switzerland, I find: (i) 69% of the total 156k participants were pushed into the Swiss amnesty by the AEOI. (ii) Out of 66.4 billion Swiss francs (or 10% of GDP) of hidden assets uncovered, 53% are attributable to the AEOI. (iii) The effects on tax compliance appear significant and long-lasting. On average, reported taxable wealth rises by about 60% after a voluntary self-disclosure and remains at this level in subsequent years. Moreover, using micro-level amnesty data, I show that tax evasion is likely more widespread and more evenly distributed in Switzerland relative to other European countries—which is consistent with Switzerland’s lack of third- party reporting prior to the AEOI in 2017.
- Vendredi 21 avril 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1.13
- KATORPI Kaisa (Tampere University, VATT) : The effects of tax audits on business activity
- Jarkko Harju, Tuomas Matikka, Annika Nivala
- RésuméWe analyze firm responses to risk-based tax audits using full firm population data on operational tax audits and firm tax returns in Finland. This provides important evidence for policy, as risk-based audits are a central tool in tax enforcement. We use matching to account for observable differences in selection into being audited, and show that the matched firms have similar trends in key outcomes prior to the audit. We find that there is an immediate and persistent increase in reported profits by the audited firms after getting audited, which is an indication of significant non-compliance in the baseline. Regarding the mechanisms of non-compliance, we find that both reported revenue and costs increase after audit. We also observe a real effect of tax enforcement on economic activity: there is an increase in the likelihood of filing bankruptcy after audit, especially for firms that were found to be non-compliant.
- Vendredi 24 mars 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1.13
- LAFFITTE Sébastien (ECARES ULB) : The Market for tax havens
- RésuméI investigate the determinants of the development of tax havens using a novel database that tracks the building of offshore institutions in 48 tax havens. By tracking offshore regulations in tax havens, this is the first database to identify when tax havens became so. After describing the development of tax havens in the 20th century and several key empirical patterns, I explore their causal determinants. Building on a theoretical framework and on the idea that tax havens are the suppliers in the market for offshore services, I explore two types of market shocks. First, I show that demand shocks, identified through changes in tax rates in neighboring countries, explain why countries become tax havens. Second, I find that competition shocks, identified through changes in the number of tax havens in neighboring countries, explain why tax havens update their regulations. This reaction is facilitated by the diffusion of legal technologies between tax havens. Finally, I show that becoming a tax haven generates GDP per capita gains for countries adopting this status. My results suggest that high-tax countries’ policymakers should anticipate the responses of tax havens to international tax reforms by making their potential legal innovations costly.
- Texte intégral [pdf]
- Vendredi 10 mars 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R2.01
- TORTAROLO Dario (University of Nottingham) : Revealing 21% of GDP in Hidden Assets: Evidence from Argentina's Tax Amnesties
- work with Juliana Londoño-Vélez
- RésuméThe paper studies the effectiveness of tax amnesties and their impacts on capital taxation and public spending. We leverage rich policy variation from Argentina, which implemented the world’s most successful program, reportedly revealing assets worth 21% of GDP. First, despite substantial offshore tax evasion, declared foreign assets quadrupled. Second, tax progressivity improved because disclosures were extensive among the wealthiest 0.1%. Third, improving tax compliance has sizable fiscal externalities on capital taxes and social transfers: the wealth and capital income tax bases more than doubled, and the earmarked revenue boosted pension benefits by 15%. We end by discussing the lessons from Argentina.
- Texte intégral [pdf]
- Vendredi 24 février 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1.13
- DI CARO Paolo (Italian Ministry of Economy and Finance, University of Rome La Sapienza) : One step forward and three steps back: pros and cons of a flat tax reform
- with Francesco Figari, Carlo Fiorio, Marco Manzo, Andrea Riganti
- RésuméWe use a rich administrative dataset on individual tax returns from 2008 to 2015 to analyse the behavioural and distributive effects of a flat tax (FT) reform introduced in 2011 for residential property income in Italy replacing the progressive personal income tax. Linking a panel of individual tax data with cadastral property records, and using a difference-in-difference identification strategy, we address five research questions: (i) does the FT increase the probability of declaring a positive rental income to the tax authorities? (ii) does the FT increase the declared tax base? (iii) is the reduced tax burden shared with the tenant? (iv) does the FT affect the overall tax revenue? (v) who are the gainers of the policy? The estimated intention-to-treat effects suggest that the decrease of tax evasion is limited whereas tax burden reduction is large, it is not shared with tenants and it mostly benefits top-income taxpayers. Overall, top 1% of property owners reap about 20% of the overall lost tax revenues.
- Texte intégral [pdf]
- Vendredi 10 février 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1.13
- WIER Ludvig (Danish Ministry of Finance) : Global Profit Shifting, 1975-2019
- with Gabriel Zucman
- RésuméThis paper constructs time series of global profit shifting covering the 2015–19 period, during which major international efforts were implemented to curb profit shifting. We find that (i) multinational profits grew faster than global profits, (ii) the share of multinational profits booked in tax havens remained constant at around 37 per cent, and (iii) the fraction of global corporate tax revenue lost due to profit shifting rose from 9 to 10 per cent. We extend our time series back to 1975 and document a remarkable increase of multinational profits and global profit shifting from 1975 to 2019.
- Texte intégral [pdf]
- Vendredi 27 janvier 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1.13
- BOAS Hjalte (University of Copenhagen and the Danish Ministry of Taxation) : Taxing Wealth in a Globalized World: The Compliance Effect of Automatic Information Exchange
- with Niels Johannesen, Claus Thustrup Kreiner, Lauge Larsen, and Gabriel Zucman
- RésuméLeaks from offshore financial institutions have revealed significant wealth of the rich hidden away from tax authorities worldwide. To address this adverse effect of globalization, more than 100 countries recently adopted a new policy instrument that provides automatic information exchange on financial accounts. Under the new Common Reporting Standard (CRS), banks are required to identify owners of financial accounts and provide information about their assets and capital income to their home countries. Despite its immediate policy relevance, little is known about the effectiveness of such policies to improve tax compliance and uncover hidden wealth. Using several data sources inside the Danish tax authorities and customized tax audits, we study the three ways in which the new policy of automatic information exchange can improve tax compliance. Tax evaders may repatriate their undeclared offshore wealth before the onset of automatic information exchange, they may start to self-report this wealth and its return to the tax authorities, or the tax authorities may detect their evasion in audits that use the new information reports. We document compliance effects of taxpayers along all margins.
- Vendredi 13 janvier 2023 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1.13
- MANDEL Antoine (Paris 1) : The network structure of global tax evasion evidence from the Panama papers
- with Fernando Garcia Alvarado
- RésuméThis paper builds on recent insights from network theory and on the rich dataset made available by the Panama Papers in order to investigate the micro-economic dynamics of tax-evasion. We model offshore financial entities documented in the Panama Papers as links between jurisdictions in the global network of tax evasion. A quantitative analysis shows that the resulting network, far from being a random collection of bilateral links, has key features of complex networks such as a core-periphery structure and a fat-tail degree distribution. We argue that these structural features imply that policy must adopt a systemic perspective to mitigate tax evasion. We offer three sets of insights from this perspective. First, we identify through centrality measures tax havens that ought to be priority policy targets. Second, we show that efficient tax treaties must contain exchange information clauses and link tax-havens to non-haven jurisdictions. Third, we show that the optimal deterrence strategies for a social-planner facing a strategic tax-evader in a Stackelberg competition can be characterized using the notion of Bonacich centrality.
- Texte intégral [pdf]
- Vendredi 16 décembre 2022 13:00-14:00
- Salle R1.13, Campus Jourdan
- PARENTI Mathieu (Université Libre de Bruxelles) : Multinational Enterprises and International Tax Shifting: Evidence from Shutting Down the Mauritius Route to India
- joint with Josh De Lyon (Oxford & OECD) and Swati Dhingra (London School of Economics, CEP, & CEPR)
- RésuméMultinational enterprises exploit gaps in international taxation rules to artificially shift their tax liability to low-tax countries. Huge empirical challenges arise in understanding international tax loopholes due to limited coverage of tax haven countries in available data sources and even more limited experience of plugging tax loopholes internationally. This paper contributes to both these areas by examining foreign investments and international tax loopholes through new administrative transaction data from India. Gravity models of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) inflows to India show a stark outlier - Mauritius - with which India has a bilateral tax treaty that contained a loophole allowing both Indian and foreign firms to avoid capital gains tax on profits of company sales. In 2016, India and Mauritius agreed to reform treaty, removing the loophole. and changing effective tax rates to investments in India through Mauritius. Following the reform, we show that the volume of FDI flowing to India through Mauritius falls, compared to FDI from other routing countries. Firm-level micro data confirms the finding that foreign investors reduced their investments through Mauritius, with some diversion to investments from other tax haven channels. Indian firms who had received FDI through Mauritius before the policy change did not experience a relative fall in total FDI inflows. Plugging international tax loopholes therefore reduced tax avoidance possibilities without sacrificing much the potential to attract foreign investment.
- Vendredi 2 décembre 2022 13:00-14:00
- Salle R1.14, Campus Jourdan
- DELATTE Anne Laure (CNRS, University Paris Dauphine) : CANCELLED: Banks Defy Gravity in Tax Havens
- Vincent Bouvatier and Gunther Capelle-Blancard
- RésuméUsing country-by-country reports from the Systemically Important Banks in the European Union, we measure “abnormal” banking activity in tax havens (TH). Our assessment is based on a gravity model used to predict the expected international turnover of EU banks worldwide. We find that: 1) banks turnover in TH represents on average twice the gravity predictions; 2) there is a large heterogeneity across TH with Hong Kong, Luxembourg and Singapore concentrating the bulk of the abnormal turnover; 3) the abnormal turnover of EU banks represents 1.46% of GDP in TH and varies between 16% of GDP and zero; 4) we observe a decline and a concentration of abnormal turnover since the reporting requirement has been introduced in the EU.
- Vendredi 18 novembre 2022 13:00-14:00
- Salles R1.14, Campus Jourdan
- PALANSKÝ Miroslav (Charles University, Prague) : The spillover effects of forced corporate transparency through offshore leaks
- RésuméLeaks of confidential documents from companies that facilitate the creation of secretive corporate structures in offshore jurisdictions have become a major source of information about the world of financial secrecy, with far-reaching consequences for the individuals involved. In this paper, I look at the effects that the leaks have on individuals not directly involved in the leaks, but using schemes and tax havens exposed by the leaks. I develop a new dataset of bilateral corporate transparency and use the leaks in an event-study design to assess their impact on cross-border bank deposits and portfolio investment. I find that offshore leaks negatively influence the use of the implicated offshore jurisdictions: the more pronounced is the presence of a given offshore jurisdiction in an offshore leak, the higher is the effect on inward cross-border financial flows to that jurisdiction. I then investigate whether this effect is driven by one important feature of the data on cross-border financial flows: that it is reported at the immediate ownership level (rather than ultimate). I find a higher negative effect of leaks on financial flows from less-developed countries, in which control mechanisms are weaker, and thereby the costs of setting up a simple offshore structure are lower (via lower detection probabilities).
- Mercredi 9 novembre 2022 12:00-13:00
- PSE, Campus Jourdan, R1.13.
- LOPEZ-FORERO Margarita (Université d’Evry, Paris-Saclay) : Aggregate Labor Share and Tax Havens: Things are not always what they seem
- RésuméWe use French firm-level data to study the role of multinational enterprises' (MNEs) presence in tax havens in determining the dynamics of the aggregate labor share and therefore, income inequalities between workers and capitalists. Given these firms’ weight in the economy, we find that tax haven presence of MNEs accounts for a 5% of the observed increase in the aggregate share of labor in France between 1997-2014. Implementing a difference-in-differences we analyze the effect firm entry in a tax haven on firms' labor share of value added and each of its components. We find that average firm labor share in France experiences an increase by 2.2% over the immediate years following the establishment in a tax haven. We argue that the labor share of MNEs with presence in tax havens is overestimated given that tax optimization partly consists in artificially shifting profits to low tax jurisdictions, thus underestimating domestic value added, which experiences an average drop by 11.1%. Indeed, the labor share increases even if its numerator, total wage bill, decreases on average by 8.8% when MNEs enter a tax haven. Additionally, the total wage bill drop is explained by a strong decline in employment (-8.6%) rather than a decline on average firm wages, on which there is no statistically significant effect. This means that the effect of firms' usage of tax havens on workers goes beyond the underestimation of their share of income. Finally, we implement a panel event study design to show that our estimates capture the tax haven entry effect and not differential trends between treated and control units.
- Mercredi 19 octobre 2022 12:00-13:00
- Salle R1.13, Campus Jourdan
- PAPPADÀ Francesco (PSE) : The dynamics of fiscal policy and informal economy under sovereign risk
- Yanos Zylberberg
- RésuméIn economies with imperfect tax enforcement, the dynamics of the informal economy might mitigate the relationship between fiscal policy and default risk. We build a model of sovereign debt with limited commitment and imperfect tax enforcement to assess the consequences of dynamic distortions induced by fiscal policy. In the model, fiscal policy persistently affects taxable activity, which impacts future fiscal revenues and thus default risk. The interaction of tax distortions and limited commitment strongly constrains the dynamics of optimal fiscal policy and leads to costly fluctuations in consumption.
- Mercredi 5 octobre 2022 12:00-13:00
- Salle R 1.13, Campus Jourdan
- CASI-EBERHARD Elisa (Norwegian School of Economics) : So close and yet so far: The ability of mandatory disclosure rules to crack down on offshore tax evasion
- Mohammed Mardan and Rohit R. Muddasani
- RésuméWe study the short-term effect of the introduction of the mandatory disclosure program for aggressive tax arrangements by focusing on the one introduced in May 2018 under the Council Directive 2018/288/EU (or DAC6). Employing bilateral data on cross-border deposits, we study the effect of this new disclosure requirement on cross-border tax evasion. Our results show a reduction of cross-border deposits in EU countries with a strong enforcement, captured by large monetary penalties for misreporting. At the same time, we document a relocation of income and wealth to countries with limited intermediary reporting obligation. Finally, we detect an increase in the volume of cross-border deposits from countries offering citizenship/residence by investment programs, suggesting the use of these schemes as regulatory arbitrage to circumvent the disclosure mandated under DAC6. We provide timely and relevant evidence contributing to the debate on international administrative cooperation to reduce cross-border tax evasion.
- Vendredi 9 septembre 2022 12:00-13:00
- Salle R 1.13, Campus Jourdan
- NICOLAIDES Panayiotis (EU Tax Observatory, Hertie School Berlin) : Electronic Payments Lottery and Tax Revenue: Evidence from a Natural Experiment in Greece
- RésuméThis paper studies a third-party reporting policy - the Greek electronic payments lottery - which incentivises the use of electronic payments over cash to fight tax evasion. The lottery allocates tickets automatically to the entire population of consumers, proportional to their electronic payments, and offers €1 million in prizes split to 1,000 winners every month. Taking advantage of a delayed introduction, 10 monthly draws with 10,000 winners and €10 million in prizes took place retroactively in Christmas 2017. Participation was unanticipated and tickets corresponded to electronic payments completed in previous months. To identify the effect on VAT revenue, I combine information from the universe of winners, a random sample of 50,000 non-winners and monthly VAT revenue from regional tax offices. I estimate (a) every additional winner randomly allocated to a tax office’s jurisdiction, leads to an overall increase of 0.01% in VAT revenue (b) winners initially increase their electronic consumption by 15% after winning, then decrease it to pre-winning levels after 5 months (c) in regions with large number of winners, there is evidence of spillover effects in the electronic consumption of non-winning individuals. While the policy does not change payment habits permanently, the overall revenue effect is fiscally positive.
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- Salle R1.13
- KATORPI Kaisa (Tampere University, VATT) : *