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Corporate taxation and investment in South Africa

This thesis investigates some aspects of corporate taxation and firm-level investment in South Africa. The thesis uses specially constructed and unique datasets to draw insights on the link between corporate tax changes and firm-level investment and as well as the efficiency of capital allocation in...

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Main Author: Maboshe, Mashekwa
Other Authors: Woolard, Ingrid D
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Economics 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Maboshe, Mashekwa
author2 Woolard, Ingrid D
author_browse Maboshe, Mashekwa
Woolard, Ingrid D
author_facet Woolard, Ingrid D
Maboshe, Mashekwa
author_sort Maboshe, Mashekwa
collection Thesis
description This thesis investigates some aspects of corporate taxation and firm-level investment in South Africa. The thesis uses specially constructed and unique datasets to draw insights on the link between corporate tax changes and firm-level investment and as well as the efficiency of capital allocation in South Africa. The thesis comprises a short introductory chapter, three empirical chapters, and a summary chapter. The first empirical chapter (chapter 2) evaluates the responsiveness of firm-level investment to corporate tax changes over a period of notable corporate tax reforms in South Africa. The study estimates a reduced form neoclassical investment model using a particularly constructed dataset of firms listed on the Johannesburg stock exchange over the period 1999-2012. Generalised methods of moments (GMM) techniques are used to control for various econometric biases. The findings suggest that although the corporate tax reforms reduced the marginal cost of investment, these reductions did not result in a statistically significant increase in firm-level investment. The null effects found in this study are robust to various estimation specifications. Although at variance with the established literature from developed countries, the findings are similar to emerging evidence in other developing country contexts and suggest that other factors may be more important determinants of investment than corporate tax policy. Chapter 3 explores the possibility that the unresponsiveness of firm-level investment to corporate tax policy may be a result of the presence of financial constraints. According to the financial constraints hypothesis, neoclassical fundamentals may fail to explain investment in the presence of financial constraints. The paper investigates the role of financial constraints in investment using dynamic GMM and endogenous switching regressions methods. The paper finds that financial constraints are an important factor in investment determination. Firms that are more financially constrained rely more on the availability of internal resources to fund investment relative to the less financially constrained firms. The findings suggest that investment policy should consider strategies that reduce informational asymmetries and other capital market inefficiencies. Such strategies would help lower the barriers and costs of external finance, thus improving firm-level investment. Chapter 4 considers the implications of differential taxation of assets and industries in South Africa. The paper's motivation is that although there are variations in the tax treatment of investments in assets and across industries, little empirical evidence exists on the nature of any investment distortions due to differential tax policies. Using a rare and unexplored industrylevel data source from Statistics South Africa, the study constructs a panel of asset shares by industry over the period 2007-2014 and estimates inter-asset tax elasticities to estimate the potential investment distortion or misallocation effects of differential taxation policies. The findings suggest the presence of non-negligible inter-asset distortions due to non-uniform taxation of investments. Investments in a given asset are found to respond to the tax incentives provided for other asset classes. Our findings suggest that current corporate tax policies that offer differentiated and asset or industry-specific investment incentives may be causing distortions and inefficiencies in the allocation of assets among industries.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35538 Corporate taxation and investment in South Africa Maboshe, Mashekwa Woolard, Ingrid D economics This thesis investigates some aspects of corporate taxation and firm-level investment in South Africa. The thesis uses specially constructed and unique datasets to draw insights on the link between corporate tax changes and firm-level investment and as well as the efficiency of capital allocation in South Africa. The thesis comprises a short introductory chapter, three empirical chapters, and a summary chapter. The first empirical chapter (chapter 2) evaluates the responsiveness of firm-level investment to corporate tax changes over a period of notable corporate tax reforms in South Africa. The study estimates a reduced form neoclassical investment model using a particularly constructed dataset of firms listed on the Johannesburg stock exchange over the period 1999-2012. Generalised methods of moments (GMM) techniques are used to control for various econometric biases. The findings suggest that although the corporate tax reforms reduced the marginal cost of investment, these reductions did not result in a statistically significant increase in firm-level investment. The null effects found in this study are robust to various estimation specifications. Although at variance with the established literature from developed countries, the findings are similar to emerging evidence in other developing country contexts and suggest that other factors may be more important determinants of investment than corporate tax policy. Chapter 3 explores the possibility that the unresponsiveness of firm-level investment to corporate tax policy may be a result of the presence of financial constraints. According to the financial constraints hypothesis, neoclassical fundamentals may fail to explain investment in the presence of financial constraints. The paper investigates the role of financial constraints in investment using dynamic GMM and endogenous switching regressions methods. The paper finds that financial constraints are an important factor in investment determination. Firms that are more financially constrained rely more on the availability of internal resources to fund investment relative to the less financially constrained firms. The findings suggest that investment policy should consider strategies that reduce informational asymmetries and other capital market inefficiencies. Such strategies would help lower the barriers and costs of external finance, thus improving firm-level investment. Chapter 4 considers the implications of differential taxation of assets and industries in South Africa. The paper's motivation is that although there are variations in the tax treatment of investments in assets and across industries, little empirical evidence exists on the nature of any investment distortions due to differential tax policies. Using a rare and unexplored industrylevel data source from Statistics South Africa, the study constructs a panel of asset shares by industry over the period 2007-2014 and estimates inter-asset tax elasticities to estimate the potential investment distortion or misallocation effects of differential taxation policies. The findings suggest the presence of non-negligible inter-asset distortions due to non-uniform taxation of investments. Investments in a given asset are found to respond to the tax incentives provided for other asset classes. Our findings suggest that current corporate tax policies that offer differentiated and asset or industry-specific investment incentives may be causing distortions and inefficiencies in the allocation of assets among industries. 2022-01-20T09:36:00Z 2022-01-20T09:36:00Z 2021 2022-01-20T09:34:47Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35538 eng application/pdf School of Economics Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle economics
Maboshe, Mashekwa
Corporate taxation and investment in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Corporate taxation and investment in South Africa
title_full Corporate taxation and investment in South Africa
title_fullStr Corporate taxation and investment in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Corporate taxation and investment in South Africa
title_short Corporate taxation and investment in South Africa
title_sort corporate taxation and investment in south africa
topic economics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35538
work_keys_str_mv AT maboshemashekwa corporatetaxationandinvestmentinsouthafrica