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Public Pressure and Corporate Tax Behavior
Authors:SCOTT D DYRENG  JEFFREY L HOOPES  JARON H WILDE
Institution:1. Fuqua School of BusinessDuke University;2. Fisher College of BusinessOhio State University;3. Tippie College of BusinessUniversity of Iowa
Abstract:We use a shock to the public scrutiny of firm subsidiary locations to investigate whether that scrutiny leads to changes in firms’ disclosure and corporate tax avoidance behavior. ActionAid International, a nonprofit activist group, levied public pressure on noncompliant U.K. firms in the FTSE 100 to comply with a rule requiring U.K. firms to disclose the location of all of their subsidiaries. We use this setting to examine whether the public pressure led scrutinized firms to increase their subsidiary disclosure, decrease tax avoidance, and reduce the use of subsidiaries in tax haven countries compared to other firms in the FTSE 100 not affected by the public pressure. The evidence suggests that the public scrutiny sufficiently changed the costs and benefits of tax avoidance such that tax expense increased for scrutinized firms. The results suggest that public pressure from outside activist groups can exert a significant influence on the behavior of large, publicly traded firms. Our findings extend prior research that has had little success documenting an empirical relation between public scrutiny of tax avoidance and firm behavior.
Keywords:H25  H26  H20  G39  Real effects of disclosure  corporate taxation  corporate reputation
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