Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
A model is investigated in which small open economies choose the degree of information exchange among tax authorities and an unrestricted set of capital income taxes. The author shows that cooperation in information sharing does not matter in equilibrium outcomes. This comes in striking contrast to existing results and the common belief among policy practitioners. The reason for this result is that if the set of distortionary taxes is unrestricted then, depending on the characteristics of the economy, either information sharing becomes redundant or the non‐cooperative equilibrium is characterized by zero information exchange and overprovision of information.