Working Paper No. 1547

Tax Incentives, Minimum Capital Requirements, and the Incorporation Decision

Working Paper
Reference
Massenz, Gabriella (2025). “Tax Incentives, Minimum Capital Requirements, and the Incorporation Decision”. IFN Working Paper No. 1547. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).

Author
Gabriella Massenz

What leads self-employed entrepreneurs to incorporate? I examine how tax incentives interact with the cost of incorporation to answer this question. I exploit the abolition of minimum capital requirements to set up a limited liability company in the Netherlands and compare entrepreneurs that differ in their incentive to incorporate but that are otherwise comparable.

After the reform, entrepreneurs whose pre-reform taxable income was closest to a kink where marginal personal income tax rates steeply increase are more likely to start a corporation. Total tax paid by these entrepreneurs is significantly reduced, which suggests they are able to reap the tax benefits of conducting business activity as a corporation.

However, there seems to be no significant impact on total business activity – at least in the short term. Finally, there appears to be no significant difference in the probability that business owners own an unincorporated business, which suggests that many entrepreneurs operate a corporation alongside an unincorporated firm.