Does the Open Economy Assumption Really Mean That Labor Bears the Burden of a Capital Income Tax?
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Jane G Gravelle
Abstract
The conventional view holds that domestic labor, not domestic capital, bears most of the long-run burden of a corporate income tax in an open economy due to the ability of capital to move across borders. This result assumes that domestic and foreign products (as well as investments) are perfect substitutes. This paper includes imperfect product substitution within a multi-sector open-economy model, and shows that much of the burden may fall on capital. To be sure, if savings falls sufficiently, much of the burden shifts to labor, but this fact also holds in a closed economy. Hence, the debate about tax incidence must focus more on the savings response and less on whether an economy is open or closed.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Advances Article
- Second-Best Climate Agreements and Technology Policy
- An Economic Response to Unsolicited Communication
- Does the Open Economy Assumption Really Mean That Labor Bears the Burden of a Capital Income Tax?
- Auction Bids and Shopping Choices
- Prescription Drug Advertising and Patient Compliance: A Physician Agency Approach
- The Impact of Midwifery-Promoting Public Policies on Medical Interventions and Health Outcomes
- A Simple Model of Entry That Increases Price Levels and Price Dispersion
- Do Teachers Really Leave for Higher Paying Jobs in Alternative Occupations?
- The Impact of Driver Cell Phone Use on Accidents
- Topics Article
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- Did the 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund Accurately Assess Economic Losses?
- The Firm's Cost of Capital, Its Effective Marginal Tax Rate, and the Value of the Government's Tax Claim
- Do Plants Overcomply with Water Pollution Regulations? The Role of Discharge Variability
- The Impact of Delivery Synergies on Bidding in the Georgia School Milk Market
- Credit Constraints and Contract Enforcement
- The Disadvantages of Aggregate Deductibles
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- Does Integrating Economic and Biological Systems Matter for Public Policy? The Case of Yellowstone Lake
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