Taxation and Household Portfolio Composition: U.S. Evidence from the 1980s and 1990s
59 Pages Posted: 28 Feb 2000 Last revised: 28 Apr 2023
Date Written: October 1999
Abstract
This paper explores the relationship between household marginal income tax rates, the set of assets that households own, and the portfolio shares accounted for by each of these assets. It analyzes data from the 1983, 1989, 1992, and 1995 Surveys of Consumer Finances and develops a new algorithm for imputing federal marginal tax rates to households in these surveys. The empirical findings suggest that a household's marginal tax rate has an important effect its asset allocation decisions. The probability that a household owns tax-advantaged assets is strongly related to its tax rate on ordinary income. In addition, the amount of investment through tax-deferred accounts such as 401(k) plans and IRAs is an increasing function of the household's marginal tax rate. Holdings of corporate stock, which is taxed less heavily than interest bearing assets, and of tax-exempt bonds are also increasing in the household's marginal tax rate. Holdings of heavily taxed assets, such as corporate bonds and interest-bearing accounts, decline as a share of wealth as a household's marginal tax rate increases.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Portfolio Choice and Health Status
By Harvey S. Rosen and Stephen Wu
-
Which Households Own Municipal Bonds? Evidence from Tax Returns
-
Government Debt and Private Leverage: An Extension of the Miller Theorem
-
Estimation of Panel Data Models with Two-Sided Censoring
By Sule Alan, Bo E. Honoré, ...
-
By William G. Gale and Eric M. Engen
-
Savings, Portfolio Choice, and Retirement Expectations
By Arthur van Soest and Arie Kapteyn
-
On Marginal Effects in Semiparametric Censored Regression Models
By Bo E. Honoré