Tax avoidance in French Firms:Evidence from the Introduction of a Tax Notch

Arthur Bauer (Insee-Dese - Département des études économiques - Division « Marchés et entreprises » au moment de la rédaction de ce document), Martin Rotemberg (New York University)

Documents de travail
No G2020-10
Paru le :Paru le26/10/2020
Arthur Bauer (Insee-Dese - Département des études économiques - Division « Marchés et entreprises » au moment de la rédaction de ce document), Martin Rotemberg (New York University)
Documents de travail No G2020-10- October 2020

Corporate tax codes can have notches; values where after-tax profits decrease in before-tax sales. Firms endogenously respond to notches, leading to excess mass in the firm-size distribution. We study a 1997 policy reform in which the French government implemented a transient tax reform that increased profit taxes by 15% for firms with over 50 million Francs in turnover. We use two distinct and complementary approaches to estimate the extent of tax avoidance: (a) using firms far away from (and therefore unlikely to be responsive to) the tax notch in the same year and (b) the entire firm size distribution before the tax reform. Both strategies generate similar results for the extent of tax avoidance. We show that the firms who avoid the tax are the ones with the lowest calibrated adjustment costs and those with the larger profits. The tax avoidance behavior comes mostly from increases in inventories and decreases in sales.