Abstract
The paper presents a unified framework for analyzing the impact of corporate taxation on R&D and exporting, considering
firm productivity heterogeneity and sunk costs. We empirically examine three hypotheses using data from7819 European firms spanning 2001–2014. We propose that: (a) an increase in corporate tax reduces the likelihood of innovation, (b) an increase in corporate tax reduces the likelihood of exporting, and (c) firms that innovate are more likely to enter foreign markets. On average, a high Effective Average Tax Rate (EATR) lowers the probability of investing in R&D and exporting by 2.3% and 1.41%, respectively. For firms with low Total Factor Productivity (TFP), the adverse effect of taxation on R&D investment ranges from 3.71% in our baseline analysis to 12.9% in our sensitivity analysis. Interestingly, while EATR positively influences the export decisions of high-TFP firms, a higher EATR can reduce the export probability by up to 25.5% for firms at the lower end of the TFP distribution. Our findings demonstrate
a causal relationship between firm heterogeneity and
their capacity to mitigate the distortions caused by higher
taxes. From a policy perspective, our results suggest that
fostering innovation is essential for firms aiming to expand
into international markets.
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Wiley
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Citation
Bournakis, I., & Romero-Jordán, D. (2024). Corporate tax, R&D and export decisions: Evidence from European firms. Review of International Economics. https://doi.org/10.1111/roie.12771



