Replication data for: Positive Long-Run Capital Taxation: Chamley-Judd Revisited
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Ludwig Straub; Iván Werning
Version: View help for Version V1
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Project Citation:
Straub, Ludwig, and Werning, Iván. Replication data for: Positive Long-Run Capital Taxation: Chamley-Judd Revisited. Nashville, TN: American Economic Association [publisher], 2020. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2025-05-29. https://doi.org/10.3886/E231369V1
Project Description
Summary:
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According to the Chamley-Judd result, capital should not be taxed in the long run. In this paper, we overturn this conclusion, showing that it does not follow from the very
models used to derive it. For the main model in Judd (1985), we prove that the long-run tax on capital is positive and significant, whenever the intertemporal elasticity of substitution is below one. For higher elasticities, the tax converges to zero but may do so at a slow rate, after centuries of high tax rates. The main model in Chamley
(1986) imposes an upper bound on capital taxes. We provide conditions under which these constraints bind forever, implying positive long-run taxes. When this is not the
case, the long-run tax may be zero. However, if preferences are recursive and discounting is locally nonconstant (e.g., not additively separable over time), a zero long-run
capital tax limit must be accompanied by zero private wealth (zero tax base) or by zero labor taxes (first-best). Finally, we explain why the equivalence of a positive capital
tax with ever-increasing consumption taxes does not provide a firm rationale against capital taxation.
Scope of Project
JEL Classification:
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H21 Taxation and Subsidies: Efficiency; Optimal Taxation
H25 Business Taxes and Subsidies including sales and value-added (VAT)
H21 Taxation and Subsidies: Efficiency; Optimal Taxation
H25 Business Taxes and Subsidies including sales and value-added (VAT)
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