With corporate income tax breaks and excise taxation consistently being used as
methods of influencing company behavior, there has always been a desire to measure the size
of the effect taxation has on corporate behavior. In this paper, I examine the effects of a change
in research and development (R&D) tax policy on firm innovation, as measured by the quantity
of US patent applications filed annually. Using a combination of panel data and linear
regressions with year and company fixed effects, I look at the major differences in US patent
application filings before and after the addition of the Alternative Simplified Credit (ASC) in
2009. The findings suggest that there is a positive effect of the ASC on patent applications,
though it is quite negligible. Additionally, it appears that the effects of the ASC are negatively
correlated with the size of the firm, but at an insignificant level.