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The route of all evil: the political economy of Ezra Pound
An evil genius for just a foolish one? -- The Mint Assayor's son -- The trouble with money -- Pound on Pound -- War and the descent into despair -- Pound foolish?
Taxation and the evolution of aggregate corporate ownership concentration
In: NBER working paper series 11469
World Affairs Online
Constraining managers without owners: governance of the not-for-profit enterprise
In: NBER working paper series 11140
Foreign direct investment and domestic economic activity
In: NBER working paper series 11717
Financial constraints and growth: multinationals and local firm responses to currency crises
In: NBER working paper series 10545
Capital controls, liberalizations, and foreign direct investment
In: NBER working paper series 10337
Corporate tax avoidance and high powered incentives
In: NBER working paper series 10471
"This paper analyzes the links between corporate tax avoidance, the growth of high-powered incentives for managers, and the structure of corporate governance. We develop and test a simple model that highlights the role of complementarities between tax sheltering and managerial diversion in determining how high-powered incentives influence tax sheltering decisions. The model generates the testable hypothesis that firm governance characteristics determine how incentive compensation changes sheltering decisions. In order to test the model, we construct an empirical measure of corporate tax avoidance - the component of the book-tax gap not attributable to accounting accruals - and investigate the link between this measure of tax avoidance and incentive compensation. We find that, for the full sample of firms, increases in incentive compensation tend to reduce the level of tax sheltering, suggesting a complementary relationship between diversion and sheltering. As predicted by the model, the relationship between incentive compensation and tax sheltering is a function of a firm's corporate governance. Our results may help explain the growing cross-sectional variation among firms in their levels of tax avoidance, the undersheltering puzzle,' and why large book-tax gaps are associated with subsequent negative abnormal returns"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site