Publication | Closed Access
Capital Structure Decisions Under Classical and Imputation Tax Systems: A Natural Test for Tax Effects in Australia
30
Citations
37
References
2006
Year
Optimal TaxationCorporate TaxTax RegimesLawImputation Tax SystemsFinancial StructureTax IncentiveCorporate TaxationEconomic AnalysisEstate TaxTax PolicyInternational TaxationTax LawFiscal PolicyEconomicsAccountingCapital Structure DecisionsImputation EraTax AvoidanceFinanceFinancial EconomicsFederal TaxEconomic PolicyReal InvestmentBusinessTax EffectsCapital Structure
The paper investigates determinants of capital structure, focusing on tax incentives for debt. The paper makes use of a panel of Australian firms in two tax regimes: a classical regime, and a dividend imputation regime. An important feature is the identification of the economic model using Bayesian selection methods. This methodology offers a new way of examining and assessing interactions between variables where there are competing explanations, noisy data and no unifying theory. As hypothesized, the results demonstrate a significant tax coefficient during the classical era and an insignificant tax coefficient in the imputation era. Risk and signalling variables, represented by firm size, Z-score, operating risk and asset base are also found to help explain capital structure choice.
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