Abstract
This study investigates the relation between corporate political connections and tax aggressiveness. We study a broad array of corporate political activities, including the employment of connected directors, campaign contributions, and lobbying. Using a large hand-collected data set of U.S. firms' political connections, we find that politically connected firms are more tax aggressive than nonconnected firms, after controlling for other determinants of tax aggressiveness, industry and year fixed effects, and the endogenous choice of being politically connected. Our findings are robust to various measures of political connections and tax aggressiveness. These results are consistent with the conjecture that politically connected firms are more tax aggressive because of their lower expected cost of tax enforcement, better information regarding tax law and enforcement changes, lower capital market pressure for transparency, and greater risk-taking tendencies induced by political connections.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Publication status | Published - Oct 2013 |
| Event | 28th Contemporary Accounting Research Conference - Holiday Inn Kingston Waterfront Hotel, Ontario, Canada Duration: 25 Oct 2013 → 26 Oct 2013 https://www.ssrn.com/update/arn/arnann/ann13005.html |
Conference
| Conference | 28th Contemporary Accounting Research Conference |
|---|---|
| Place | Canada |
| City | Ontario |
| Period | 25/10/13 → 26/10/13 |
| Internet address |
UN SDGs
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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SDG 17 Partnerships for the Goals
Research Keywords
- Political connection
- lobbying
- campaign contribution
- tax avoidance
- tax aggressiveness
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