International Journal of Innovation Studies (Sep 2018)

Tax distortions in cross-border flows of intangible assets

  • Thomas Neubig,
  • Sacha Wunsch-Vincent

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 101 – 121

Abstract

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The phenomenon of global fragmented production and associated trade in intermediate products, including intangible assets, has changed how economists study globalization and how new public policies are shaped. Understanding cross-border flows of disembodied knowledge, often associated with intellectual property (IP), is essential for analyzing how modern economies operate. Available data to document these international IP-related knowledge flows—namely cross-border payments for IP—are distorted by various factors. Tax planning by multinational enterprises has seriously distorted the measurement of cross-border IP flows, affecting national measurements of imports, exports, GDP, and productivity. The tax-induced mismeasurement could be more than 35% of global charges for use of intellectual property, and greater for individual countries, particularly high-tax-rate countries. International initiatives to address the effects of tax base erosion, profit shifting, and other statistical initiatives on global value chains will improve future measurements of cross-border IP flows, improving the understanding of both the creation and uses of IP. Keywords: Global value chain, Intellectual property, Intangible assets, Tax, Base erosion, Profit shifting, Cross-border flows, Charges for the use of intellectual property