Abstract This paper analyzes investments in tax planning. The literature is replete with examples of specific tax-planning strategies. However, little Is known about how firms invest in tax planning to develop these strategies or the firm-wide returns to investments in tax planning. We use data from a confidential survey by Slemrod and Blumenthal (1993) in which 365 large U. S. corporations shared data on their tax-related expenditures. We find that: (1) planning costs (as a percentage of selling, general and administrative expenses (SG (2) firms with foreign operations invest more heavily in tax planning; (3) capital intensity and number of legal entities are positively related to tax-planning costs; and (4) inventory intensity and leverage are unrelated to tax-planning costs. Finally, our estimates indicate a negative relation between investments in tax planning and tax liabilities. On average, an additional 1 investment in tax planning results in a 4 reduction in tax liabilities; This relation holds over specifications with and without industry controls, within the manufacturing industry alone, and in the presence of controls for tax-planning opportunities, although the magnitude does vary.
Mills et al. (Sun,) studied this question.