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Offshore Profit Shifting and Aggregate Measurement: Balance of Payments, Foreign Investment, Productivity, and the Labor Share
Author(s) -
Fatih Guvenen,
Raymond J. Mataloni,
Dylan G. Rassier,
Kim J. Ruhl
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
macroeconomics: production and investment ejournal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.3386/w23324
Subject(s) - balance of payments , profit (economics) , productivity , submarine pipeline , payment , economics , business , investment (military) , labour economics , monetary economics , microeconomics , oceanography , finance , macroeconomics , geology , politics , political science , law
Official statistics display a significant slowdown in U.S. aggregate productivity growth that begins in 2004. We show how offshore profit shifting by U.S. multinational enterprises affects GDP and, thus, productivity measurement. Under international statistical guidelines, profit shifting causes part of U.S. production generated by multinationals to be excluded from official measures of U.S. production. Profit shifting has increased significantly since the mid-1990s, resulting in lower measures of U.S. aggregate productivity growth. We construct an alternative measure of value added that adjusts for profit shifting. The adjustments raise aggregate productivity growth rates by 0.09 percent annually for 1994-2004, 0.24 percent annually for 2004-2008, and lowers annual aggregate productivity growth rates by 0.09 percent after 2008. Our adjustments mitigate, but do not eliminate, the measured productivity slowdown. The adjustments are especially large in R&D-intensive industries, which most likely produce intangible assets that facilitate profit shifting. The adjustments boost value added in these industries by as much as 8 percent in the mid-2000s.

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