In recent years, mandated benefits in Taiwan have increased significantly due to several policy reforms pertaining to social insurance and labor welfare. This has caused an increase in total labor costs, which may in turn cause a decrease in capital investments - a topic that has become an important policy issue. This research therefore uses data from Taiwanese stock market companies over the period from 2002 to 2012 in order to analyze the effect of mandated benefits on capital investments. To control for a bias possibly caused by unmeasurable heterogeneity, we employ a panel data fixed effect model. Moreover, we control for the endogeneity between mandated benefits and wages as well as for the traditional determinants of capital investments based on accelerator model, cash flow model, neoclassical model and Tobins Q. According to our empirical research results, an increase in the mandated benefit ratio causes a reduction in company capital investments. We check the robustness of this result by employing the methodology proposed in Barslund et al. (2007) and find that the effect of mandated benefits on capital investments is negative and significant for all possible combinations of independent variables in all of our models.