Three Essays on the Taxation of Unearned Incomes

Three Essays on the Taxation of Unearned Incomes

Author: Harry Gunnison Brown

Publisher:

Published: 1925

Total Pages: 204

ISBN-13:

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In three essays the author discusses whether taxation can be used as a tool for obtaining and perpetuation of economic democracy, and if so, what system of taxation is the best for the end in view.


Three Essays on Taxation

Three Essays on Taxation

Author: Kirsten Abram Cook

Publisher:

Published: 2010

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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This dissertation contains three essays. The first essay examines the response of equity values to the announcement of a decrease in the capital gains tax rate. The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 reduced the long-term capital gains tax rate. News of this rate reduction reached investors in late April to early May of 1997. During the week of this event, firms with appreciated stock positions, average holding periods of at least one year, and individual marginal investors reported lower returns than companies lacking one or more of these characteristics. The second essay builds on recent research reporting that firms establish target capital structures by weighing the costs and benefits of debt and that adjustment costs dictate how rapidly companies move toward optimal leverage ratios. If tax considerations impact debt structures adjust more rapidly than companies below the goals because low-tax firms have less need of interest deductions to decrease tax burdens and, thus, sacrifice less tax benefit when retiring debt. The third essay demonstrates that manufacturing firms manipulate production to manage earnings and examines whether tax incentives magnify or temper this strategy. Companies that exceed the quarterly consensus analyst forecasts absent the earnings effects of discretionary inventory changes cut production and create an earnings cookie jar for future quarters. For this sub-sample, companies make larger discretionary inventory decreases as the marginal tax rates rise in the fourth quarter relative to the first three quarters. In contrast, the sub-sample of firms that miss income goals without manipulating production use discretionary inventory increases to enhance earnings and potentially reach benchmarks. Higher tax rates do not impede miss firms from managing earnings upward; however, considerations of tax timing dissuade these companies from opportunistically manipulating production in the fourth quarter.


Three Essays on Taxation in Simple General Equilibrium Models

Three Essays on Taxation in Simple General Equilibrium Models

Author: Neil Bruce

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2021-12-20

Total Pages: 138

ISBN-13: 1000385299

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This book, first published in 1984, examines the use of simple general equilibrium models in analysing the effects of taxes. The replacement of the earlier partial equilibrium approach has yielded numerous insights and conclusions, and these are examined here alongside the simple general equilibrium reasoning.


Three Essays on Institutional Investors and Income Taxes

Three Essays on Institutional Investors and Income Taxes

Author: Spencer Conley Usrey

Publisher:

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 136

ISBN-13:

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This dissertation investigates the role of institutional investors in capital market tax studies. Specifically, this studies examines how institutional investors influence firms' cost of capital and financing decisions following changes in personal tax rates on debt and equity income. The dissertation is organized into three essays that examine these topics. The first two essays examine tax rate changes in 1997 and 2003 that reduced the personal tax rates on interest, capital gains and dividends. Essay 3 summarizes relevant literature involving institutional investors and capital market tax studies. Essay 1 investigates whether differences between the tax liabilities of the underlying shareholders of institutional investors affect firms' capital structures and decisions to issue debt versus equity following changes in tax rates on investment income received by individuals. The study predicts that firms with high concentrations of tax disadvantaged institutional investors (institutions whose underlying shareholders are taxable) will issue more equity relative to debt than those with high concentrations of tax-advantaged institutional investors (institutions whose underlying shareholders are not taxable). The results find that the financing decisions of firms with high levels of tax-disadvantaged institutional investors are influenced by changes in individual tax rates. Essay 2 investigates whether differences in the tax attributes of the underlying shareholders of institutional investors influences the impact of equity tax rate changes on a firm's cost of equity. The study examines a sample period of two years (eight quarters) around the enactment of the 1997 and 2003 Acts. The study finds that firms with high levels of tax-disadvantaged ownership experienced a decrease in their cost of equity capital following a decrease in the individual tax rate on capital gains. In addition, the interaction of the institutional investor dummy variable and a dummy variable indicating the observation is after the 2003 Act indicates that the cost of equity capital for firms with high levels of tax-disadvantaged ownership decreased following the 2003 Act. The results of Essays 1 and 2 provide evidence that institutional investors are not homogeneous with respect to their influence on firms' cost of capital and financing decisions following changes in individual tax rates.


Three Essays on Investments

Three Essays on Investments

Author: Matthew Elias Hurst

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 145

ISBN-13:

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We find that there exists a pattern of negative returns and increased volume in the month of March that is unexplained by changes in yield. Chapter 3 examines the ex-dividend day effect for municipal bond closed-end. The proposed explanations for this phenomenon are tax effects, short-term trading and/or market microstructure effects. In this study I use a unique set of dividend distributions to provide additional evidence that ex-dividend behavior is related to taxation as well as short-term trading. The sample I use is comprised of dividends in nontaxable closed-end funds, which ordinarily are not subject to Federal Income Tax. However, there is an occasional distribution that is subject to capital gains or ordinary income tax. This provides a unique environment in which to study the ex-dividend price behavior of a fund while eliminating the need for comparisons across funds.