Working Paper

Wages and International Tax Competition

Sebastian Krautheim, Tim Schmidt-Eisenlohr
CESifo, Munich, 2012

CESifo Working Paper No. 3867

Rent-sharing between firm owners and workers is a robust empirical finding. If workers bargain with firms, information on the actual surplus is essential. When the firm can use profit shifting to create private information on the surplus, it can thereby reduce its wage bill. We study how rent sharing and this wage incentive for profit shifting affect the ability of governments to tax multinational companies in a standard model of international tax competition. We find that if firms only have a tax incentive for profit shifting, rent-sharing decreases the competitive pressure on the large country and leads to higher equilibrium tax rates. When we allow for the wage channel, this result can change. If the wage incentive is sufficiently strong, rent-sharing increases the competitive pressure on the large country, implying a lower equilibrium tax rate.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Labour Markets
Keywords: wages, tax competition, rent-sharing, profit shifting, tax havens, private information
JEL Classification: F230, H250, H730