Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
969992 Journal of Public Economics 2013 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

We use the federal tax codes from 1926 through 2009 to construct the after-tax returns that individual investors, corporations, and broker–dealers would have generated on a set of benchmark portfolios. Portfolio strategies differ in the pace of capital gains realizations. This creates important heterogeneity in effective investment taxation beyond that implied by dividend yields. Tax burdens reduce the return premium that value portfolios earn over growth portfolios and the premium of small market capitalization portfolios over large market capitalization portfolios. Tax burdens exacerbate the equity premium puzzle, although they help explain mixed empirical results about the dividend preferences of high income and corporate investors.

► We construct after-tax returns for a set of benchmark portfolios. ► Portfolio strategies differ in the pace of capital gains realizations. ► This difference creates heterogeneity in effective investment taxation. ► Tax burdens reduce the return premia of value and small firm portfolios. ► These tax burdens exacerbate the equity premium puzzle.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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