
handle: 10419/237987 , 10419/288422 , 10419/226227
Abstract This paper investigates how multinational banks use internal debt to shift profits to low-taxed affiliates. Using regulatory data on multinational banks headquartered in Germany, we show that banks use this tax avoidance channel more aggressively than non-financial multinationals do. We find that a ten percentage points higher corporate tax rate increases the internal net debt ratio by 5.7 percentage points, corresponding to a 20% increase at the mean. Our study also takes into account the existence of conduit entities, which simply pass through financial flows. If conduit entities are systematically located in low-tax countries, previous studies may have underestimated the extent of debt shifting.
330, ddc:330, H25, internal debt, multinational banks, profit shifting, Taxation, Multinational Banks, Internal debt, Multinational banks, G21, F23, Profit Shifting, taxation, ddc:340, Profit shifting, Internal Debt
330, ddc:330, H25, internal debt, multinational banks, profit shifting, Taxation, Multinational Banks, Internal debt, Multinational banks, G21, F23, Profit Shifting, taxation, ddc:340, Profit shifting, Internal Debt
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