Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Richard Ochmann
In: Applied Economics 46 (2014), 8, S. 880-894
This article empirically investigates the effects of differential income taxation on households' portfolio choice and asset allocation, applying a two-stage budgeting model of asset demand to German survey data. The model is structured into the discrete and the continuous asset choice. Cross-sectional variation in marginal tax rates, appropriately instrumented, as well as over-time variation from a major tax reform are used to identify the tax effects. Households with higher tax rates are found to have relatively greater demand for tax-privileged assets, such as nonowner-occupied housing, mortgage repayments, building society deposits, stocks, insurances and consumer credits, than households with lower tax rates. Demand at higher tax rates is lower for owner-occupied housing, bank deposits and bonds.
Topics: Taxes
JEL-Classification: C35;G11;H31
Keywords: household asset allocation, portfolio choice, two-stage budgeting, capital income taxation
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00036846.2013.859381