TY - JOUR AU - Skinner,Jonathan TI - The Dynamic Efficiency Cost of Not taxing Housing JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 3454 PY - 1990 Y2 - September 1990 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w3454 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w3454.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Jonathan S. Skinner Department of Economics 6106 Rockefeller Hall Dartmouth College Hanover, NH 03755 Tel: 603/646-2535 Fax: 603/646-2122 E-Mail: jonathan.skinner@dartmouth.edu AB - Housing assets comprise nearly one-third of household wealth rot effectively escape income taxation. When housing is included in the life cycle model, the capital income tax is shown to be far more distortionary than previously thought. The reason is that capital income taxation stimulates the price of (untaxed) housing capital and thereby crowds out nonhousing wealth in the long-run. Even when aggregate saving is unaffected by the after-tax rate of return, the crowding out of nonhousing wealth erodes the tax base end generates very high measures of marginal excess burden. Movements in U.S. aggregate wealth are consistent with the predictions of the model. Overall household wealth as a ratio of national income in 1989 is nearly identical to the ratio in 1955, but the ratio of housing assets to nonhousing wealth has grown by 30 percent since 1970. In short, capital income taxation may attenuate capital accumulation through its impact on housing prices rather than through traditional incentive effects. ER -