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The Incidence of the U.S. Corporation Income Tax: An Old Problem Revisited

Marian Krzyzaniak and Sharokh Bastani

Public Finance = Finances publiques, 1988, vol. 43, issue 2, 165-94

Abstract: Krzyzaniak's previous tax incidence analyses for a growing neoclassical economy are the base for what the long-run incidence of the U.S. corporate income tax should be. The data for 1929-78 first support the hypothesis that, in the short run, the U.S. economy is neoclassical. Later this economy starts changing, becoming, in the long run, a fully neoclassical one. That they were able to separate the tax from the government expenditures effects was unexpected. Apparently, the impossibility of separating such effects breaks down in the long run.

Date: 1988
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:pfi:pubfin:v:43:y:1988:i:2:p:165-94

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