How did behavioural responses after the introduction of an ACE affect the cost of capital?

back to overview

Reference

Kirn, T. (2016). How did behavioural responses after the introduction of an ACE affect the cost of capital?. Presented at the Joint Annual Meeting of the Austrian Economic Association and the Slovak Economic Association (NOeG-SES 2016), University of Economics Bratislava.

Publication type

Presentation at Scholarly Conference

Abstract

This paper examines the impact of an Allowance for Corporate Equity (ACE) on the cost of capital. As the Belgian SMEs have gradually reduced their leverage ratio after the ACE came into force, the analysis disentangles the policy induced direct effect from the impact of the behavioural response on the cost of capital. The main identification strategy is based on variation in the behavioural response of the firm due to the gradual adjustment of their leverage ratio. To disentangle the policy induced direct effect from the impact of the behavioural response, a counterfactual decomposition is carried out by the inference procedure of Chernozhukov et al. (2013). This quasi-natural experiment demonstrates that the ACE significantly reduced the cost of capital. Secondly, the results illustrate that the behavioural impact gained importance by time. Thirdly, a reciprocal influence between the direct and the indirect effect is found, as the direct effect becomes stronger, if firms decrease their leverage ratio. Overall, the findings confirm that reducing the tax discrimination between debt and equity has significantly decreased the cost of equity and reduced the debt bias. This result is relevant for the tax policy discussion in many countries that have introduced or consider introducing a full or an incremental ACE, like the reform package of the third series of corporate tax reforms (CTR III) in Switzerland.

Research

Microsimulation und Model Development
Auftragsforschung, since June 2009

Content of this project is the ongoing development of the Liechtenstein micro-simulation models. There are two basic models: microLIE: PIT is the model of the personal income tax system and microLIE: ... more ...

Persons

Organizational Units

  • Chair for Tax Management and the Laws of Liechtenstein and International Taxation

Original Source URL

Link