The authors study the evolution of Swedish wealth taxation, since its introduction in 1911 until it was abolished in 2007. The rules concerning the valuation of assets, deductions/exemptions, and tax schedules are described and used to calculate marginal and average wealth tax rates for a number of differently endowed owners of family firms and individual fortunes. There were three major tax hikes: in 1934, when the wealth tax was more than doubled; in 1948, when tax rates doubled again; and in 1971, for owners of large wealth. Effective tax rates peaked in 1973 for owners of large firms and in 1983, for individuals with large non-corporate wealth. Tax rates for small-firm owners and small fortunes were substantially lower, but the difference was smaller if reduction rules applied. Aggregate wealth tax revenues were relatively small: they never exceeded 0.4 percent of GDP in the postwar period and amounted to 0.16 percent of GDP in 2006.
Swedish Taxation: Developments since 1862
Swedish Wealth Taxation (1911–2007)
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