No. B97-27

CAPITAL GAINS TAXATION AND TAX AVOIDANCE: NEW EVIDENCE FROM PANEL DATA

Abstract

Previous theoretical analyses of the capital gains tax have suggested that investors have considerable opportunity to avoid the tax. Yet, past empirical work has found relatively little evidence of such activity. Using a previously unavailable panel data set with a very large sample of high-income individuals, this paper aims to bring the theory and evidence closer together by examining the behavior of individual taxpayers over time.

Though confirming past findings that avoidance of tax on realized capital gains is not prevalent, we do observe that tax avoidance activity increased after the passage of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, and that high-income, high-wealth and more sophisticated taxpayers were most likely to avoid tax. However, the efficacy of tax avoidance strategies depends on being able to avoid tax for long periods, and we find that most tax avoidance is of relatively short duration. Thus, the effective tax rate on realized capital gains is very close to the statutory rate in all years and tax brackets.

Alan J. Auerbach
University of California, Berkeley
Department of Economics
549 Evans Hall
Berkeley, CA 94720-3880

Leonard E. Burman
The Urban Institute
2100 M Street NW
Washington, DC 20037-1207

Jonathan M. Siegel
University of California, Berkeley
Department of Economics
549 Evans Hall
Berkeley, CA 94720-3880

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