Income taxes

Income taxes

Showing 121 – 140 of 228 results

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Changes in the Distribution of After-Tax Wealth in the US: Has Income Tax Policy Increased Wealth Inequality?

Journal article

A substantial share of the wealth of Americans is held in tax-deferred form such as in retirement accounts or as unrealised capital gains. Most data and statistics on assets and wealth are reported on a pre-tax basis, but pre-tax values include an implicit tax liability and may not provide as accurate a measure of the financial position or material well-being of families. In this paper, we describe the distribution of tax-deferred assets in the Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF) from 1989 to 2013, provide new estimates of the income tax liabilities implicit in those assets, and present new statistics on the level and distribution of after-tax net worth. The results of our analysis suggest that, relative to published statistics on pre-tax net worth, the distribution of after-tax wealth is slightly less concentrated in the early years of our sample period, but the effectiveness of the income tax system in reducing wealth inequality has decreased during the last decade. We find the reduction in the long-term capital gains rate is the primary reason for the muted effectiveness of the current income tax system in reducing wealth inequality.

31 March 2016

Presentation graphic

Discussion of R. Avi-Yonah, "Reinventing the wheel"

Presentation

This presentation was given as a discussion of Reuven Avi-Yonah's paper 'Reinventing the wheel: What we can learn from the Tax Reform Act of 1986' at the Oxford University Centre for Business Taxation 9th Annual Symposium in Oxford on 23 June 2015.

23 June 2015

Article graphic

Unknown quantities: Labour’s ‘non-dom’ proposal

Comment

The Labour Party has proposed abolishing ‘non-dom’ status for people who have lived in the UK for a significant length of time. This Observation sets out what is known, and what is not, about non-doms and the likely effects of Labour’s proposal.

9 April 2015

Article graphic

The new tax break for some married couples

Comment

The Prime Minister David Cameron has announced how the Government proposes to recognise some marriages and civil partnerships in the income tax system. From April 2015 it plans to make up to £1,000 of the income tax personal allowance transferable between adults who are married or in a civil partnership, so long as the higher-income adult is a basic-rate taxpayer. In this observation we briefly discuss this policy and its effects.

30 September 2013