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Capital Versus Labor Income Taxation With Heterogeneous Agents

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Author Info
Jonathan Heathcote (Stockholm School of Economics)
David Domeij

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Abstract

We investigate the welfare implications of eliminating a proportional capital income tax for a model economy in which heterogeneous households face labor income risk and trade only one asset. Labor taxes rises at the time of the reform to maintain long run budget balance. Our stochastic process for labor earnings is consistent with empirical estimates of earnings risk, and also implies a distribution of asset holdings across households closely resembling that in the United States. We find that a vast majority of households prefers the status quo to the tax reform. This finding is interesting in light of the fact that our reform would be optimal if we abstracted from heterogeneity and assumed a representative agent. Initial household productivity and initial household wealth are dependently important in determining a particular household's expected gain or loss, in constrast to a complete markets economy in which only the ratio of asset to labor income matters.

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Publisher Info
Paper provided by Society for Computational Economics in its series Computing in Economics and Finance 2000 with number 346.

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Date of creation: 05 Jul 2000
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Handle: RePEc:sce:scecf0:346

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Postal: CEF 2000, Departament d'Economia i Empresa, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Ramon Trias Fargas, 25,27, 08005, Barcelona, Spain
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  1. T. Kirk White, 2002. "Marginal Tax Rates and the Tax Reform of 1986: the Long-run Effect on the U.S. Wealth Distribution," Macroeconomics 0209002, EconWPA. [Downloadable!]
  2. Kartik B. Athreya & Andrea L. Waddle, 2007. "Implications of some alternatives to capital income taxation," Economic Quarterly, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, issue Win, pages 31-55. [Downloadable!]
  3. Ulrike Vogelgesang & Ulrike Ludden, 1999. "Optimal Capital Income Taxation and Redistribution," GK working paper series 1999-10, Post Graduate Programme "Allocation on Financial Markets", University of Mannheim, revised Apr 2000. [Downloadable!]
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