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Demographics and the Politics of Capital Taxation in a Life-cycle Economy

Mateos-Planas, Xavier

Discussion Paper Series In Economics And Econometrics from University of Southampton, Economics Division, School of Social Sciences

Abstract: This article studies the effects of demographics on the mix of tax rates on labour and capital. It uses a quantitative general-equilibrium overlapping-generations model where tax rates are voted without past commitments in every period and characterized as a Markov equilibrium. In the U.S., the younger voting-age population in 1990 compared to 1965 accounts for the observed decline in the relative capital tax rate between those two years. A younger population rises the net return to capital, leads voters to increase their savings, and results in a preference for lower taxes on capital. Conversely, ageing might increase capital taxation.
Keywords; Markov policies, demographic change, capital and labor taxation
JEL Classification: E1, E6, H2, H3

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