Abstract

We study the effect of domestic tax on firms’ outward foreign direct investment (OFDI) decisions. We exploit a policy change in China that unifies corporate income tax rates through raising foreign firms’ but reducing domestic firms’ tax rates. Using a difference-in-differences estimator that compares the OFDI of foreign and domestic firms before and after the tax unification, we find that a higher domestic corporate income tax rate increased firms’ OFDI but reduced firms’ domestic capital in China and exports from China, which reflect capital relocation from China to overseas countries. This “capital relocation” effect of the domestic tax increase is stronger for firms of higher productivity.

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