Title
The impact of US tax depreciation law on asset location and ownership decisions
Abstract
The decision of whether to manufacture products within the US, manufacture internationally or to outsource production depends critically upon a thorough understanding of the costs and benefits of each option. In this paper, we contribute to such an understanding by considering the impact of US tax depreciation rules, which differ depending upon whether a US corporation locates its assets at domestic or foreign branches. Our analysis and illustrative examples demonstrate that US depreciation law can indeed have a non-trivial impact on location and sourcing decisions, with direct ownership of foreign assets appearing relatively less attractive once depreciation law is taken into account. More broadly, our results demonstrate that comprehensive asset location and ownership decisions require a detailed understanding of international tax law, rather than just a simple recognition of differences in tax rates among countries.
Year
DOI
Venue
2007
10.1016/j.cor.2006.01.020
Computers & OR
Keywords
Field
DocType
US depreciation law,direct ownership,ownership decision,comprehensive asset location,US corporation,thorough understanding,detailed understanding,US tax depreciation rule,US tax depreciation law,tax rate,depreciation law,international tax law
Offshoring,Income tax,Mathematical optimization,Microeconomics,Outsourcing,Depreciation,Facility location problem,Asset location,Cost–benefit analysis,Mathematics
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
34
12
Computers and Operations Research
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
2
0.47
4
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Joseph C. Hartman1405.47
Stephen L. Liedtka2382.84
Lawrence V. Snyder344831.03