Tax Changes and Capital Allocation in the 1980s

Working Paper: NBER ID: w1911

Authors: Patric H. Hendershott

Abstract: The paper begins with presentation of a methodology for computing rental costs of capital under any tax regime.Tax law over the 1980-84 period is specified and the provisions of theTreasury and Administration tax reform proposals and HR 3838 are described. A model is then constructed to allow calculation of the impact of changes in tax regimes and/or expected inflation on interest rates and the allocation of real capital. The model allocates a fixed private capital stock among various classes of nonresidential and residential capital, depending upon the rental costs for the capital components, the price elasticities of demand with respect to the rental costs, and the elasticities of homeownership with respect to the cost of owning versus renting. The interest rate adjusts in response to tax/inflation changes so as to maintain the aggregate demand for capital at this initial level.The model is employed to deduce the efficiency of the allocation of real capital under various tax regimes at different inflation rates.

Keywords: tax reform; capital allocation; interest rates; homeownership

JEL Codes: H21; H25; E62


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
Tax changes (H29)Interest rates (E43)
Tax changes (H29)Capital allocation (G31)
Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 (E65)Demand for depreciable property (D25)
Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 (E65)Demand for owner-occupied housing (R21)
Demand for depreciable property (D25)Investment behavior (G11)
Decline in inflation rates (E31)Homeownership rate (R21)
Decline in inflation rates (E31)Real after-tax financing rate (G19)
Real after-tax financing rate (G19)Homeownership rate (R21)
Tax changes (H29)Reallocation of capital (G31)
Reallocation of capital (G31)Aggregate housing stock (R31)

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