资本所得征税心理:来自资本所得实现规律调查实验的证据

IF 0.9 Q2 LAW EJournal of Tax Research Pub Date : 2021-01-27 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.3848064
Zachary D. Liscow, Edward G. Fox
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引用次数: 5

摘要

如何对资本收入征税是当今的一个关键问题。变现规则要求在收益征税前必须出售财产,这是对资本收入征税的核心,但往往会降低税收制度的效率、公平性和简洁性。据估计,在未来10年里,实现规则将使政府损失超过2万亿美元。考虑到这些问题,目前尚不清楚为什么对容易估值和出售的资产存在这一规则。长期以来,学者们一直在推测公众观点在这方面的作用,但很少有经验可循。我们进行了第一次调查实验,以了解实现规则的心理,这对资本收入的征税具有广泛的影响。我们有三个主要发现。首先,受访者强烈倾向于等到出售股票时再考虑股票的税收收益,比例为75%至25%。这种模式在其他各种资产和政策框架中都存在:事实上,近一半没有股票的人更愿意提高所有人(包括他们自己)的税收,而不是对未售出的股票收益征税。但另一方面,在现行法律从未对资产收益征税的地区,对出售或转让(包括死亡时)的资产收益征税的支持力度令人惊讶。其次,在随机分配的参与者观看了一场由视频组成的政策辩论后,这些观点的变化幅度不大,视频中解释了售前征税的利弊,尽管正反两种处理方式各自都有很大的影响。第三,在对这些态度的许多可能解释中,我们找到了以下四种特别的证据:对未售出的收益使用不同的心理账户,而不是其他致富方式;安于现状:维持现状的倾向;对复杂性的关注;在资本利得的背景下,希望对消费而不是收入征税。
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The Psychology of Taxing Capital Income: Evidence from a Survey Experiment on the Realization Rule
How to tax capital income is a critical issue today. The realization rule—requiring that property usually must be sold before gains are taxed—is central to taxing capital income, but often decreases the efficiency, equity, and simplicity of the tax system. Estimates suggest that the realization rule costs the government over $2 trillion over 10 years. Given these problems, it is unclear why the rule exists for assets that are easy to value and sell. Scholars have long speculated about the role of the public’s views here, but little is known empirically about them. We conduct the first survey experiment to understand the psychology of the realization rule, which has broad implications for the taxation of capital income. We have three main findings. First, respondents strongly prefer to wait to tax gains on stocks until sale: 75% to 25%. This pattern persists across a variety of other assets and policy framings: indeed, nearly half of those without stock prefer raising everyone’s taxes (including their own) to taxing unsold stock gains. But the flip side is that there is surprisingly strong support for taxing gains on assets at sale or transfer, including at death, in areas where current law never taxes those gains. Second, these views change only modestly after randomized participants observe a policy debate composed of videos explaining both the pros and cons of taxing before sale, though the pro and con treatments have large effects individually. And, third, among many possible explanations of these attitudes, we find particular evidence for four: using a different mental account for unsold gains than other ways of getting richer; a tendency to support the status quo; concerns about complexity; and a desire to tax consumption, not income, in the context of capital gains.
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