Artículo de revista
Using small businesses for individual tax planning: evidence from special tax regimes in Chile
Fecha
2018Registro en:
International Tax and Public Finance Vol. 25, No. 6, pp. 1.449 - 1.489, Diciembre, 2018
ISSN: 0927-5940
Autor
Engel Goetz, Eduardo
Agostini, Claudio
Repetto, Andrea
Vergara, Damian
Institución
Resumen
Many countries have special tax regimes (STRs) for small businesses. Even though
these regimes may reduce compliance costs, they increase the complexity of the tax
system and can be used by high-income individuals to avoid taxes. This paper uses
administrative data from Chile to analyze whether the use of STRs is associated with
strategic tax planning at the individual level. A descriptive analysis of the data finds
three stylized facts that, taken together, are consistent with strategic behavior: STRs
are used frequently, they are used mainly by high-income taxpayers, and high-income
taxpayers are more likely to hold a portfolio of businesses filing taxes under STRs. We
rationalize these facts with a simple model of small business creation and tax planning
and test the model’s predictions. We find that following a reform that made a particular
STR more restrictive, reported individual incomes from businesses filing under that
STR decreased between 10 and 15%, while income reported from alternative sources
increased. Overall Taxable Income increased between 4 and 7%. This increase is
explained by the more restrictive scenario for avoiding taxes through STRs, consistent
with individuals using these regimes for tax planning.