A study of cross-border profit shifting channels

Crawford School of Public Policy | Tax and Transfer Policy Institute
Image sourced from Flickr httpswww.flickr.comphotosromainpontida

Event details

Seminar

Date & time

Friday 24 September 2021
4.00pm–5.00pm

Venue

ANU Online Zoom

Speaker

Dr Alfred Tran and Wanmeng Xu, Research School of Accounting, ANU

Contacts

Diane Paul
02 61259318

The audio recording of this event is available in the ‘downloads’ tab above.

Please register your attendance at the registration tab, and the Zoom invitation is available in the ‘downloads’ tab above.

In this seminar, we investigate two cross-border profit shifting channels of foreign multinational enterprises (MNEs) in Australia and assess the effectiveness of the related measures adopted by the Australian government to combat base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS). Specifically, we use propensity score matching (PSM) and coarsened exact matching (CEM) to match a group of foreign-owned Australian companies (FOACs) that are subsidiaries of foreign MNEs and have strong incentives to shift profits out of Australia (the treatment group) with a group of predominantly domestic-owned listed Australian companies (DOLACs) that have little incentives to do so (the control group) to identify cross-border profit shifting activities using two channels: intra-group transfer pricing and debt financing and/or interest expense loading. We further use the difference-in-difference approach to compare the extent of cross-border profit shifting by FOACs between the pre-BEPS period (2007 to 2012) and the post-BEPS period (2013 to 2020) to evaluate the effectiveness of the related BEPS countermeasures. Overall, we find that FOACs uses tax-induced intra-group transfer pricing and interest expense loading arrangements to effectively shift profit out of Australia in the entire 14-year study period from 2007 to 2020. However, up to 2020 we cannot find any significant evidence indicating that the related Australian BEPS countermeasures are effective in reducing cross-border profit shifting. Perhaps it takes time for the effects of these measures to be reflected in the financial reports of FOACs due to administrative time lags.

Dr. Alfred Tran has been an accounting academic at The Australian National University for more than 26 years and is a researcher in the areas of taxation and financial accounting. He is currently an honorary associate professor in the Research School of Accounting, ANU.

Wanmeng Xu completed a Master of Commerce degree from The Australian National University in 2018 and is currently a doctoral candidate in the Research School of Accounting, ANU.

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