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by vearwhershuh
2276 days ago
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I wasn't clear: they should be tax advantaged, particularly for companies, relative to capital gains. If you tax capital gains at the marginal tax rate + 10%, they are unattractive in relative terms in most cases, even when deferred. And then letting companies deduct them against their profits encourages the companies to pay out profits (and to attempt to be profitable.) |
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However, it’s worth noting that in terms of market volume, most entities that buy shares (like pension funds) don’t pay any taxes on their dividends or stock sales, so your scheme won’t make dividends attractive to these entities and indeed would likely raise the price, making them even less interesting to those entities.
This is why pension funds don’t buy (many) munis or TIPS etc. - they gain nothing from the tax advantages.