Tax wedges, financial frictions and misallocation

We revisit the classical result that in a closed economy the incidence of corporate taxes on labor is approximately zero. We consider a rich general equilibrium framework, where agents differ in the level of their wealth as well as in their managerial and working ability. Potential entrepreneurs go...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of public economics 2023-11, Vol.227, p.105000, Article 105000
Hauptverfasser: Ábrahám, Árpád, Gottardi, Piero, Hubmer, Joachim, Mayr, Lukas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We revisit the classical result that in a closed economy the incidence of corporate taxes on labor is approximately zero. We consider a rich general equilibrium framework, where agents differ in the level of their wealth as well as in their managerial and working ability. Potential entrepreneurs go through all the key decisions affected by corporate tax changes: the choice of (i) occupation, (ii) organizational form, (iii) investment, and (iv) financing structure. We allow both for the presence of financial frictions and the traditional tax advantage of debt over corporate equity, which jointly generate misallocation of capital and talent. In this environment we characterize the effects of increasing corporate taxes both analytically and for a calibrated version of the model. We show that this tax increase reallocates production from C corporations to pass-through businesses. Since, due to distorted prices, the latter have higher capital-labor ratios, this reallocation generates a reduction in labor productivity and wages. Furthermore, the corporate tax increase induces some C corporations to reorganize as pass-throughs, which implies more restricted access to external funds and thus a socially inefficient downsizing of production in these firms. Finally, the tax increase causes further misallocation of talent by inducing agents with low wealth relative to their managerial talent to switch from entrepreneurship to being workers, while the reverse happens for agents with higher wealth and lower managerial skills. Overall, we find that both labor and capital bear a large share of the corporate tax incidence, while entrepreneurs are net beneficiaries of the tax change. •We study the incidence of corporate taxation in a general equilibrium environment.•C corporations are taxed at a higher effective rate than pass-through businesses.•This tax wedge and financial frictions cause a missallocation of production factors.•A further rise in the corporate tax rate strengthens this misallocation.•Production is relocated from C corporations to pass-throughs.•Since the former are more productive / labor intensive, equilibrium wages fall.•As a result, both labor and capital bear a large share of the incidence.•Owners of pass-through businesses gain from the decline in factor prices.
ISSN:0047-2727
1879-2316
DOI:10.1016/j.jpubeco.2023.105000