Do R&D tax credits work? Evidence from an international panel of countries 1979-94. Work in Progress – April 1998 Nicholas Bloom Rachel Griffith John Van Reenen Policy Issues • Substantial annual cost of current R&D tax measures: – $1bn estimated annual revenue loss from R&D tax credit in USA. – $1bn estimated annual revenue loss from R&D tax measures in EU. – Japan and Australia also have tax credits. • Other countries such as the UK and Germany considering an R&D tax credit. Economic Issues • Early studies indicated that R&D was not very sensitive to R&D tax incentives • More recent studies indicate a much greater response. However, one country studies: – problems disentangling tax policy and macro shocks – within firm variation in after tax price endogenous (?) – generalisable to other countries (?) What’s new in this paper? • Extend analysis to more countries • R&D tax changes as natural experiments • Appropriate R&D data – recorded on the basis of where it is conducted – consistent definition across countries – not tax data so not so susceptible to relabelling • Business R&D data by source of funding Tax Data • New data set developed at the IFS which constructs a “user cost of R&D”, reflecting – general features of the tax system – treatment of cross border flows – special treatment of R&D investment including tax credits and accelerated depreciation allowances • Eight countries studied over 16 year, 1979-1994. – Five with some kind of R&D tax promotion: Australia, Canada, France, Japan, and the USA – Three without any major R&D tax promotion: Italy, Germany, and the UK The User Cost of R&D (without inflation or exchange rates) 1 A 1 (r ) where: A = Net present value of depreciation allowances and tax credits = Statutory tax rate r = Real interest rate = Economic depreciation rate User cost of R&D .4 .35 .3 .25 .2 .15 1980 1985 1990 year 1995 Tax variation in user cost 1 .8 .6 .4 1980 1985 1990 year 1995 R&D data • OECD data on R&D. – business conducted R&D (BERD) – manufacturing sector – government survey data based on common Frascati definition. – deflated by 50% wages and 50% GDP deflator. Manufacturing BERD/ Manufacturing output 4 3.5 USA Japan Germany France UK 3 2.5 2 Canada Australia Italy 1.5 1 .5 0 1980 1985 1990 year 1994 R&D data • OECD MSTI data on the funding breakdown of business conducted R&D (BERD) into: – domestic business financed BERD – foreign business financed BERD – government financed BERD Total R&D Breakdown (UK 1994, £14Bn total) Domestic Business Financed 47% GOVERD 15% BERD 66% HERD 19% Government Financed 11% Foreign Business Financed 8% Table 1 from paper The model ritd ritd1 yit itd fi t t it business funded lag business R&D user cost of R&D output country specific effect time specific effect Relocation? • Is the impact of R&D tax credit only to change level of domestic R&D? • Is there also an impact through relocating R&D done by multinational firms? Adding in foreign tax price ritd ritd1 yit 1 itd itf fi tt it domestic user cost 0 foreign user cost indicates in favour of relocation Measuring foreign tax price 7 FDIij ijt f it j 1 Foreign Direct Investment from country i to country j User cost of R&D for investment from country i to country j Table 2 from paper Conclusions • Using tax changes as exogenous changes to the user cost of R&D we find an impact elasticity of around -0.1 and long-run elasticity or around -1.0 • Evidence suggests that the location of R&D may be affected by tax-induced changes to the cost of R&D, maybe some tax rivalry