The Disappearing State Corporate Income Tax
49 Pages Posted: 6 Apr 2006
Date Written: December 2004
Abstract
This paper examines alternative explanations for the decline over the past two decades in state corporate income taxes relative to the state economy. We employ a survey of state tax administrators, individual tax returns from Georgia and Utah, and panel data to explore the importance of tax policy, tax planning, and economic factors on the trend in state corporate taxes. We find that corporate tax planning and economic factors account for much of the relative decline and that state tax policy changes are important factors. However, federal tax changes had only a modest effect during this period.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Coveting Thy Neighbor's Manuafacturing: The Dilemma of State Income Apportionment
By Austan Goolsbee and Edward L. Maydew
-
Coveting Thy Neighbor's Manuafacturing: the Dilemma of State Income Apportionment
By Austan Goolsbee and Edward L. Maydew
-
An Examination of Multijurisdictional Corporate Income Taxes Under Formula Apportionment
By Roger H. Gordon and John D. Wilson
-
Formula Apportionment and Transfer Pricing Under Oligopolistic Competition
By Soren Bo Nielsen, Pascalis Raimondos, ...
-
Profit Tax Competition and Formula Apportionment
By Rudiger Pethig and Andreas Wagener
-
Tax Spillovers Under Separate Accounting and Formula Apportionment
By Soren Bo Nielsen, Pascalis Raimondos, ...
-
Corporate Tax Systems, Multinational Enterprises, and Economic Integration
By Guttorm Schjelderup, Hans Jarle Kind, ...
-
Competitive, Political, and Economic Factors Influencing State Tax Policy Changes
-
The Effect of State Income Tax Apportionment and Tax Incentives on New Capital Expenditures
By Sanjay Gupta and Mary Ann Hofmann
-
The Effect of State Income Tax Apportionment and Tax Incentives on New Capital Expenditures
By Sanjay Gupta and Mary Ann Hofmann