Malaysian multinational companies (MNC): Permanent and temporary nature of tax planning

Tax gap measures differences between tax theoretically due and tax actually paid. Researchers and authority attribute tax gap as a measure of tax planning. At a firm level, the measure is often referred to book-tax difference (BTD), which has been utilised by researchers as a measure of tax planning...

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Main Author: Nor Shaipah Abdul Wahab
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2016-12-01
Series:Cogent Business & Management
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2016.1248644
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spelling doaj-b253a23266484b5d8f7756ae52271f7a2021-02-08T14:35:56ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Business & Management2331-19752016-12-013110.1080/23311975.2016.12486441248644Malaysian multinational companies (MNC): Permanent and temporary nature of tax planningNor Shaipah Abdul Wahab0Taylor’s UniversityTax gap measures differences between tax theoretically due and tax actually paid. Researchers and authority attribute tax gap as a measure of tax planning. At a firm level, the measure is often referred to book-tax difference (BTD), which has been utilised by researchers as a measure of tax planning given the unavailability of tax return data. In line with tax gap, BTD measures the extent taxable income deviates from the accounting income. As multinational companies (MNC) have more opportunities to effectively avoid tax than the domestic-only companies, it is hypothesised that the MNC’s permanent component of BTD (PD) differs significantly from the temporary component (TD). The sample is Bursa Malaysia-listed MNC and the data are drawn from Datastream and annual reports. Using a direct consistency test, this study reports the behaviour of BTD and its main components, PD and TD, over 2008–2014. To investigate whether BTD can be explained by firm-specific, the data are also analysed using panel regression models. Foreign sales, earnings management and auditor are found significant in explaining the aggregated tax planning measure. PD is found as not only the source of the relationship but also outweighs TD in explaining the relationship. This study contributes to literature and practice in terms of the nature and behaviour of BTD and its components using MNC settings. Findings on disaggregated BTD can be inferred to MNC’s effective tax planning strategies, particularly in addressing the questions or debates of whether the MNC have effectively utilised tax planning opportunities through permanent BTD.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2016.1248644tax planningbook-tax differencepermanent differencetemporary differencemultinational companies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nor Shaipah Abdul Wahab
spellingShingle Nor Shaipah Abdul Wahab
Malaysian multinational companies (MNC): Permanent and temporary nature of tax planning
Cogent Business & Management
tax planning
book-tax difference
permanent difference
temporary difference
multinational companies
author_facet Nor Shaipah Abdul Wahab
author_sort Nor Shaipah Abdul Wahab
title Malaysian multinational companies (MNC): Permanent and temporary nature of tax planning
title_short Malaysian multinational companies (MNC): Permanent and temporary nature of tax planning
title_full Malaysian multinational companies (MNC): Permanent and temporary nature of tax planning
title_fullStr Malaysian multinational companies (MNC): Permanent and temporary nature of tax planning
title_full_unstemmed Malaysian multinational companies (MNC): Permanent and temporary nature of tax planning
title_sort malaysian multinational companies (mnc): permanent and temporary nature of tax planning
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Business & Management
issn 2331-1975
publishDate 2016-12-01
description Tax gap measures differences between tax theoretically due and tax actually paid. Researchers and authority attribute tax gap as a measure of tax planning. At a firm level, the measure is often referred to book-tax difference (BTD), which has been utilised by researchers as a measure of tax planning given the unavailability of tax return data. In line with tax gap, BTD measures the extent taxable income deviates from the accounting income. As multinational companies (MNC) have more opportunities to effectively avoid tax than the domestic-only companies, it is hypothesised that the MNC’s permanent component of BTD (PD) differs significantly from the temporary component (TD). The sample is Bursa Malaysia-listed MNC and the data are drawn from Datastream and annual reports. Using a direct consistency test, this study reports the behaviour of BTD and its main components, PD and TD, over 2008–2014. To investigate whether BTD can be explained by firm-specific, the data are also analysed using panel regression models. Foreign sales, earnings management and auditor are found significant in explaining the aggregated tax planning measure. PD is found as not only the source of the relationship but also outweighs TD in explaining the relationship. This study contributes to literature and practice in terms of the nature and behaviour of BTD and its components using MNC settings. Findings on disaggregated BTD can be inferred to MNC’s effective tax planning strategies, particularly in addressing the questions or debates of whether the MNC have effectively utilised tax planning opportunities through permanent BTD.
topic tax planning
book-tax difference
permanent difference
temporary difference
multinational companies
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2016.1248644
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