Authors
Santosh Anagol, Allan Davids, Benjamin B. Lockwood, Tarun Ramadorai
- Acknowledgements & Disclosure
- We wish to acknowledge the National Treasury of South Africa for providing us with access to anonymized tax administrative data. We thank Analytics at Wharton and the Penn Wharton Budget Model for funding support. The views expressed in this paper are our own and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Treasury of South Africa. We are grateful to Wian Boonzaaier, Ana Gamarra Rondinel, Henrik Kleven, Dylan Moore, Jacob Mortenson, Alex Rees-Jones, Joel Slemrod, Jakob Søgaard, David Thesmar, Andrew Whitten, Eric Zwick, and seminar participants at the University of Pretoria, Economic Research South Africa (ERSA), the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, Imperial College, IIPF 2023, LAGV 2021, LMU Munich, CREST, the NBER Public Economics Meetings, the Toulouse School of Economics, the University of Cape Town, and the South African Revenue Services for helpful comments and to Michael Partridge, Afras Sial, and Laila Voss for excellent research assistance. All errors are our own. This paper subsumes and replaces the working paper titled “Do Firms Have a Preference for Paying Exactly Zero Tax?” The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.3386/w32597
- Published in
- United States of America
Table of Contents
- Introduction 3
- Model 7
- Baseline bunching model with frictionless choice 7
- A model of sparsity-based frictions 11
- A tractable case: uniform sparsity 13
- Identification of Model Parameters 20
- Estimation 21
- Simulations 24
- Performance of our estimator and the conventional bunching estimator 25
- Performance of the notch-based bunching estimator 28
- Empirical application 29
- Setting: small business and individual taxation in South Africa 29
- Small business taxation in South Africa 29
- Personal taxation in South Africa 30
- Results 31
- Results from small business tax returns 31
- Results from personal income tax returns 34
- Conclusion 34
- Details of Bunching in the Presence of a Tax Notch 54
- Proof of Proposition 3 55
- Separate Identification of Income Elasticity and Lumpiness Parameter 58
- Details of the conventional kink-based bunching estimator 68
- Robustness to polynomial degree 69
- Alternative specifications for the conventional approach 70
- Comparison to the conventional notch-based bunching estimator 71
- Details of the South African tax system 73
- Appendix Tables and Figures 75