Taxing Capital? The Importance of How Human Capital is Accumulated

52 Pages Posted: 30 Dec 2015

See all articles by William Peterman

William Peterman

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: 2015-12-29

Abstract

This paper considers the impact of how human capital is accumulated on optimal capital tax policy in a life cycle model. In particular, it compares the optimal capital tax when human capital is accumulated exogenously, endogenously through learning-by-doing, and endogenously through learning-or-doing. Previous work demonstrates that in a simple two generation life cycle model with exogenous human capital accumulation, if the utility function is separable and homothetic in each consumption and labor, then the government has no motive to condition taxes on age or tax capital. In contrast, this paper demonstrates analytically that adding either form of endogenous human capital accumulation creates a motive for the government to use age-dependent labor income taxes. Moreover, if the government cannot condition taxes on age, then a capital tax can be optimal in order to mimic such taxes. This paper quantitatively explores the strength of this channel and finds that, including human capital accumulation with learning-by-doing, as opposed to exogenously, causes the optimal capital tax to increase by between 7.3 and 14.5 percentage points. In contrast, introducing learning-or-doing causes a much smaller increase in the optimal capital tax of between 0.7 and 3.7 percentage points. Taken as a whole, this paper finds that the specific formulation by which human capital is accumulated can have notable implications on the optimal capital tax.

Keywords: Optimal Taxation, Capital Taxation, Human Capital

JEL Classification: E24, E62, H21

Suggested Citation

Peterman, William, Taxing Capital? The Importance of How Human Capital is Accumulated (2015-12-29). FEDS Working Paper No. 2015-117, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2709309 or http://dx.doi.org/10.17016/FEDS.2015.117

William Peterman (Contact Author)

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System ( email )

20th Street and Constitution Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20551
United States

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