Does Information Asymmetry Affect Corporate Tax Aggressiveness?

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Abstract

We investigate the effect of information asymmetry on corporate tax avoidance. Using a difference-in-differences matching estimator to assess the effects of changes in analyst coverage caused by broker closures and mergers, we find that firms avoid tax more aggressively after a reduction in analyst coverage. We further find that this effect is mainly driven by firms with higher existing tax-planning capacity (e.g., tax-haven presence), smaller initial analyst coverage, and a smaller number of peer firms. Moreover, the effect is more pronounced in industries where reputation matters more and in firms subject to less monitoring from tax authorities.

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APA

Chen, T., & Lin, C. (2017). Does Information Asymmetry Affect Corporate Tax Aggressiveness? Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 52(5), 2053–2081. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022109017000576

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