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January 18, 2013
Caron & Repetti on the Estate Tax & Inequality
Paul Caron (Cincinnati) and James Repetti (Boston College) have posted Occupy the Tax Code: Using the Estate Tax to Reduce Inequality (Pepperdine Law Review) on SSRN. Here's the abstract:
Inequality has been increasing in the United States. We should care
about this increase because inequality contributes to a variety of
adverse social consequences that persist across generations. There is
also substantial empirical evidence that inequality has a long-term
negative impact on economic growth.
For many decades, federal tax policy has played an important role in
reducing inequality, although the impact of federal taxes on inequality
has waxed and waned depending on the focus of elected officials. We
argue that the estate tax is a particularly apt vehicle to reduce
inequality because inheritances are a major source of wealth among the
rich, and studies suggest that inherited wealth has a more deleterious
impact on economic growth than inequality caused by self-made wealth.
Although there are loopholes in the estate tax, it is still effective in
moderating the amount of wealth that is passed within a family from
generation to generation.
The major criticism about the estate tax — that it discourages savings —
is inaccurate. Standard tax theory cannot predict the impact of the
estate tax on savings and the empirical evidence is mixed. Moreover, the
estate tax has a less harmful impact on savings than the income tax for
two reasons. First, the event that triggers estate tax liability —
death — is ignored by taxpayers during the period of life in which they
are likely to be most productive. Second, the expected value of the
estate tax’s effective rate is quite low during the period of life in
which most taxpayers create wealth.
Steve Clowney
January 18, 2013 | Permalink
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