The Impact and Inefficiency of the Corporate Income Tax: Evidence from State Organizational Form Data
27 Pages Posted: 6 Sep 2002 Last revised: 25 Dec 2022
Date Written: September 2002
Abstract
By double taxing the income of corporate firms but not unincorporated firms, taxes can play an important role in a firm's choice of organizational form. The sensitivity of the organizational form decision to tax rates can also be used to approximate the efficiency cost of the corporate income tax. This paper uses new cross-sectional data on organizational form across states compiled in the Census of Retail Trade to estimate this sensitivity. The results document a significant impact of the relative taxation of corporate to personal income on the share of economic activity that is done by corporations including sales, employment, and the number of firms. The impacts are substantially larger than those found in the previous empirical literature based on time-series data.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Taxes, Organizational Form, and the Deadweight Loss of the Corporate Income Tax
-
Corporate Tax Policy, Entrepreneurship and Incorporation in the EU
By Ruud A. De Mooij and Gaëtan Nicodème
-
By Judith Freedman and Claire Crawford
-
The Impact of Fundamental Tax Reform on the Allocation of Resources
-
Tax Competition and Profit Shifting: On the Relationship between Personal and Corporate Tax Rates