Concepedia

Concept

gift tax

Parents

921

Publications

51.1K

Citations

1.4K

Authors

603

Institutions

About

Gift tax is a fiscal mechanism imposing a levy on the gratuitous transfer of assets between living individuals (inter vivos transfers), typically borne by the donor. As an academic concept and research area, it investigates the economic, legal, and behavioral dimensions of taxing wealth transfers made without full consideration. Research in this domain examines its structural components, such as exclusion thresholds, valuation rules, and donor liability; its behavioral impacts on saving, investment, and philanthropic decisions; its role in wealth redistribution and intergenerational equity; and its interaction with other components of the transfer tax system, notably the estate tax. Key characteristics studied include the principle of donor liability, the application of annual and lifetime exclusions, and its objective within the broader tax policy framework. Its significance as a research topic stems from its influence on capital formation, philanthropic activity, and wealth concentration, positioning it as a critical subject within public finance, law, and applied economics.

Top Authors

Rankings shown are based on concept H-Index.

JA

Tulane University

WG

Brookings Institution

JS

University of Michigan

HO

Uppsala University

PP

University of Liège

Top Institutions

Rankings shown are based on concept H-Index.

National Bureau of Economic Research

Cambridge, United States

University of Michigan

Ann Arbor, United States

University of California, Berkeley

Berkeley, United States

Uppsala University

Uppsala, Sweden

Top Venues

Rankings shown are based on concept H-Index.