Taxes and production: The case of Pakistan |
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Authors: | Jeffrey I. Bernstein Anwar Shah |
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Affiliation: | (1) Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada;(2) The National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA, USA;(3) The World Bank, Washington, DC, USA |
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Abstract: | ![]() This paper investigates the effectiveness of investment incentives and corporate income taxes in influencing production and investment decisions in the Pakistani wearing apparel and leather products industries. Three tax instruments are considered: the corporate income tax (CIT), the investment tax credit (ITC), and the capital cost allowance (CCA).The results show that since there are significant capital adjustment costs, it is important to distinguish between the short, intermediate, and long-run effects associated with the tax instruments. Production decisions are relatively more responsive to changes in the ITC rate compared to changes in either CCA or CIT rates in each run. However, only in the long run for the apparel industry are the ITC and CCA rates cost effective in stimulating investment. The CIT is never cost effective. Thus targeted instruments outperform the general CIT instrument. In addition, although the incentive to invest is enhanced, there is little effect on output. Therefore, tax incentives essentially make production techniques more capital intensive. |
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Keywords: | production taxes capital adjustment corporate income tax investment tax credit capital cost allowance |
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