Public Good Differentiation and the Intensity of Tax
Competition
Working Paper No. 07-W10
Ben Zissimos and Myrna Wooders
ABSTRACT [article]
We show that, in a setting where tax competition promotes
efficiency, variation in the extent to which firms can use public goods to
reduce costs brings about a reduction in the intensity of tax competition.
This in turn brings about a loss of efficiency. In this environment, a
`minimum tax' counters the reduction in the intensity of tax competition,
thereby enhancing efficiency. `Split-the-difference' tax harmonization also
potentially enhances efficiency but would not be agreed upon by governments
because it lowers the payoff to at least one of them. This paper also
presents an explanation for how traditionally high-tax countries have
continued to set taxes at a relatively high rate even as markets have
become more integrated.
Keywords and Phrases: Asymmetric equilibrium, core-periphery, tax competition,
tax harmonization
JEL Classification Numbers: C72, H21, H42, H73, R50