This paper estimates the role of both tax and non-tax determinants in the choice in Sweden to be a closely-held corporation vs. a proprietorship, using individual data for 2004 to 2008 on owners of closely-held businesses. While lower-income individuals face relatively neutral incentives, higher income individuals face strong tax incentives to be corporate. The data suggest a relatively strong correlation between these tax incentives and the likelihood that a firm is corporate. Many conventional non-tax determinants are confirmed in the data as well.
Working Paper No. 982
Taxes and the Choice of Organizational Form by Entrepreneurs in Sweden
Working Paper
Reference
Edmark, Karin and Roger Gordon (2013). “Taxes and the Choice of Organizational Form by Entrepreneurs in Sweden”. IFN Working Paper No. 982. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).
Edmark, Karin and Roger Gordon (2013). “Taxes and the Choice of Organizational Form by Entrepreneurs in Sweden”. IFN Working Paper No. 982. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).
Authors
Karin Edmark, Roger Gordon