Wealth Taxation and Wealth Accumulation: Theory and Evidence from Denmark

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Standard

Wealth Taxation and Wealth Accumulation: Theory and Evidence from Denmark. / Jakobsen, Katrine Marie Tofthøj; Jakobsen, Kristian; Kleven, Henrik; Zucman, Gabriel.

2018.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Jakobsen, KMT, Jakobsen, K, Kleven, H & Zucman, G 2018 'Wealth Taxation and Wealth Accumulation: Theory and Evidence from Denmark'. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3138451

APA

Jakobsen, K. M. T., Jakobsen, K., Kleven, H., & Zucman, G. (2018). Wealth Taxation and Wealth Accumulation: Theory and Evidence from Denmark. CEBI Working Paper Series Nr. 04/18 https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3138451

Vancouver

Jakobsen KMT, Jakobsen K, Kleven H, Zucman G. Wealth Taxation and Wealth Accumulation: Theory and Evidence from Denmark. 2018 mar. 14. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3138451

Author

Jakobsen, Katrine Marie Tofthøj ; Jakobsen, Kristian ; Kleven, Henrik ; Zucman, Gabriel. / Wealth Taxation and Wealth Accumulation: Theory and Evidence from Denmark. 2018. (CEBI Working Paper Series; Nr. 04/18).

Bibtex

@techreport{58e06f46bc034870b6fb2efa683157e4,
title = "Wealth Taxation and Wealth Accumulation: Theory and Evidence from Denmark",
abstract = "Using administrative wealth records from Denmark, we study the effects of wealth taxes on wealth accumulation. Denmark used to impose one of the world{\textquoteright}s highest marginal tax rates on wealth, but this tax was drastically reduced and ultimately abolished between 1989 and 1997. Due to the specific design of the wealth tax, these changes provide a compelling quasi-experiment for understanding behavioral responses among the wealthiest segments of the population. We find clear reduced-form effects of wealth taxes in the short and medium run, with larger effects on the very wealthy than on the moderately wealthy. We develop a simple lifecycle model with utility of residual wealth (bequests) allowing us to interpret the evidence in terms of structural primitives. We calibrate the model to the quasi-experimental moments and simulate the model forward to estimate the long-run effect of wealth taxes on wealth accumulation. Our simulations show that the long-run elasticity of wealth with respect to the net-of-tax return is sizeable at the top of distribution. Our paper provides the type of evidence needed to assess optimal capital taxation.",
keywords = "Saving, Wealth, Tax, Taxation, Public Economics, Public Finance, Fiscal Policy",
author = "Jakobsen, {Katrine Marie Tofth{\o}j} and Kristian Jakobsen and Henrik Kleven and Gabriel Zucman",
year = "2018",
month = mar,
day = "14",
doi = "10.2139/ssrn.3138451",
language = "English",
series = "CEBI Working Paper Series",
number = "04/18",
type = "WorkingPaper",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Wealth Taxation and Wealth Accumulation: Theory and Evidence from Denmark

AU - Jakobsen, Katrine Marie Tofthøj

AU - Jakobsen, Kristian

AU - Kleven, Henrik

AU - Zucman, Gabriel

PY - 2018/3/14

Y1 - 2018/3/14

N2 - Using administrative wealth records from Denmark, we study the effects of wealth taxes on wealth accumulation. Denmark used to impose one of the world’s highest marginal tax rates on wealth, but this tax was drastically reduced and ultimately abolished between 1989 and 1997. Due to the specific design of the wealth tax, these changes provide a compelling quasi-experiment for understanding behavioral responses among the wealthiest segments of the population. We find clear reduced-form effects of wealth taxes in the short and medium run, with larger effects on the very wealthy than on the moderately wealthy. We develop a simple lifecycle model with utility of residual wealth (bequests) allowing us to interpret the evidence in terms of structural primitives. We calibrate the model to the quasi-experimental moments and simulate the model forward to estimate the long-run effect of wealth taxes on wealth accumulation. Our simulations show that the long-run elasticity of wealth with respect to the net-of-tax return is sizeable at the top of distribution. Our paper provides the type of evidence needed to assess optimal capital taxation.

AB - Using administrative wealth records from Denmark, we study the effects of wealth taxes on wealth accumulation. Denmark used to impose one of the world’s highest marginal tax rates on wealth, but this tax was drastically reduced and ultimately abolished between 1989 and 1997. Due to the specific design of the wealth tax, these changes provide a compelling quasi-experiment for understanding behavioral responses among the wealthiest segments of the population. We find clear reduced-form effects of wealth taxes in the short and medium run, with larger effects on the very wealthy than on the moderately wealthy. We develop a simple lifecycle model with utility of residual wealth (bequests) allowing us to interpret the evidence in terms of structural primitives. We calibrate the model to the quasi-experimental moments and simulate the model forward to estimate the long-run effect of wealth taxes on wealth accumulation. Our simulations show that the long-run elasticity of wealth with respect to the net-of-tax return is sizeable at the top of distribution. Our paper provides the type of evidence needed to assess optimal capital taxation.

KW - Saving

KW - Wealth

KW - Tax

KW - Taxation

KW - Public Economics

KW - Public Finance

KW - Fiscal Policy

U2 - 10.2139/ssrn.3138451

DO - 10.2139/ssrn.3138451

M3 - Working paper

T3 - CEBI Working Paper Series

BT - Wealth Taxation and Wealth Accumulation: Theory and Evidence from Denmark

ER -

ID: 248849770