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  N° 2003-17 CEPII Working Paper
December 2003
Tax Competition and Foreign Direct Investment
Agnès Bénassy-Quéré
Lionel Fontagné
Amina Lahrèche-Révil
 
Using a panel of bilateral FDI flows for 11 OECD countries over 1984-2000, we show that, although agglomeration-related factors are strong determinants of FDI, tax differentials also play a significant role in understanding foreign location decisions. We further investigate non-linearities in the impact of tax differentials, and explore the role of tax schemes. We show that the reaction of FDI inflows to tax differentials is non-linear: it depends on the magnitude of the tax gap, on the sign of this gap, and on the nature of bilateral tax schemes in operation (credit vs. exemption). Our results are consistent with the imperfect competition literature which underscores the possibility of tax differentials across countries in equilibrium. Abstract
   
Tax competition, Foreign Direct Investment, corporate tax, OECD Keywords
F21, H25, H87 JEL classification
   
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