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Åsa Hansson. Photo.

Åsa Hansson

Associate professor

Åsa Hansson. Photo.

Tax policy and entrepreneurship: Empirical evidence from Sweden

Author

  • Åsa Hansson

Summary, in English

This paper examines the relationship between income taxes and the decision to become self-employed using data from Sweden. By making it possible to track a large number of individuals over extended time periods and across a number of tax rate changes while controlling for important additional determinants, available tax-return information from Sweden allows for statistical estimation of the influence income taxes have on the probability of becoming self-employed. The changing tax rate structure combined with the fact that the Swedish tax system does not provide additional tax benefits to small business-entrepreneurs compared with those who work as employees, provides a powerful setting through which to examine the tax-rate structure’s influence on individuals’ choice to become self-employed. Contrary to many earlier studies based on US data, this paper finds that both average and marginal taxes have a negative impact on the decision to become self-employed.

Department/s

  • Department of Economics

Publishing year

2012

Language

English

Pages

495-513

Publication/Series

Small Business Economics

Volume

38

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Springer

Topic

  • Economics
  • Engineering and Technology

Keywords

  • tax policy
  • Firm start-ups
  • self-employment
  • income taxes

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0921-898X