Explaining Underutilization of Tax Depreciation Deductions: Empirical Evidence from Norway

被引:0
|
作者
Karl Ove Aarbu
Jeffrey K. MacKie-Mason
机构
[1] Vesta Forsikring A/S,Department of Economics
[2] University of Michigan,undefined
来源
关键词
corporate taxes; depreciation; reporting conventions;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Many corporations do not claim all of their allowable tax depreciation deductions. Intuitively, this kind of behavior might seem odd. However we propose several possible explanations. First, we find strong evidence that firms facing current tax losses or carrying forward past losses underutilize depreciation in order to recover tax losses before they expire. Second, corporations with bad economic performance tend to underutilize their deductions, suggesting that corporations use costly “windowdressing” on their accounting measures. Third, we find support for the hypothesis that tax compliance costs discourage the utilization of accelerated depreciation, especially by small firms. We do not find much support for other hypotheses. For example, we find no evidence of substitution between tax depreciation and private debt due to competition between the benefits of private bank monitoring and the tax savings from using tax allowances to postpone tax payments, as suggested in earlier literature. We also study the effects of the uniform reporting accounting system (typical of many European countries) which can, under certain circumstances, constrain dividends. Forgoing some tax depreciation can loosen the dividend constraint, but the evidence does not support this motivation. Unusual access to extremely detailed individual firm tax return forms in Norway made our empirical analysis possible. In addition, the 1992 Norwegian tax reform provided a natural experiment for testing some of the hypotheses. We use the time-series and cross-sectional variation across Norwegian corporations in 1988, 1991, 1992 and 1993.
引用
收藏
页码:229 / 257
页数:28
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] The impact of depreciation savings on investment: Evidence from the corporate Alternative Minimum Tax
    Park, Jongsang
    JOURNAL OF PUBLIC ECONOMICS, 2016, 135 : 87 - 104
  • [22] Explaining corporate effective tax rates: Evidence from Greece
    Stamatopoulos, Ioannis
    Hadjidema, Stamatina
    Eleftheriou, Konstantinos
    ECONOMIC ANALYSIS AND POLICY, 2019, 62 : 236 - 254
  • [23] Empirical evidence of underutilization of referrals for epilepsy surgery evaluation
    de Flon, P.
    Kumlien, E.
    Reuterwall, C.
    Mattsson, P.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, 2010, 17 (04) : 619 - 625
  • [24] Properties of emerging organizations: empirical evidence from Norway
    Manolova, Tatiana S.
    Edelman, Linda F.
    Brush, Candida G.
    Rotefoss, Beate
    SMALL BUSINESS ECONOMICS, 2012, 39 (03) : 763 - 781
  • [25] Properties of emerging organizations: empirical evidence from Norway
    Tatiana S. Manolova
    Linda F. Edelman
    Candida G. Brush
    Beate Rotefoss
    Small Business Economics, 2012, 39 : 763 - 781
  • [26] Benzodiazepine use in COPD: empirical evidence from Norway
    Halvorsen, Thomas
    Martinussen, Pal E.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY DISEASE, 2015, 10 : 1695 - 1702
  • [27] Tax incentives and the financialization of the real sector: Evidence from the accelerated depreciation policy in China
    Li, Xing
    Shen, Guangjun
    FINANCE RESEARCH LETTERS, 2023, 51
  • [28] The Role of Leasing in the Effectiveness of Corporate Tax Policy: Evidence from the 2002 Bonus Depreciation
    Park, Jongsang
    Shin, Sukha
    FINANZARCHIV, 2020, 76 (02): : 121 - 145
  • [29] Impact of exchange rate depreciation on the balance of payments: Empirical evidence from Nigeria
    Iyoboyi, Martins
    Muftau, Olarinde
    COGENT ECONOMICS & FINANCE, 2014, 2 (01):
  • [30] Accelerated depreciation tax policy for fixed assets and IPO underpricing: Evidence from China
    Zeng, Jing
    Luo, Gaoling
    Wu, Jun
    FINANCE RESEARCH LETTERS, 2025, 78