美国私营企业中的血汗股权

Sweat Equity in U.S. Private Business*

Quarterly Journal of Economics · 2020
被引 64
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

研究私营企业主为建立客户群和无形资产投入的时间与费用所形成的血汗股权,估算其价值达美国GDP的1.2倍,并分析其对税收政策效应的影响。

Abstract

Abstract We develop a theory of sweat equity—the value of business owners’ time and expenses to build customer bases, client lists, and other intangible assets. We discipline the theory using data from U.S. national accounts, business censuses, and brokered sales to estimate a value for sweat equity in the private business sector equal to 1.2 times U.S. GDP, which is about the same magnitude as the value of fixed assets in use in these businesses. For a typical owner, 26% of the sweat equity is transferable through inheritance or sale. The equity values are positively correlated with business incomes and standard measures of markups based on accounting data, but not with owners’ financial assets or standard measures of business total factor productivity. We use our theory to show that abstracting from sweat activity leads to a significant understatement of the effects of lowering business income tax rates on private business activity for both the extensive and intensive margins. Despite finding larger responses, our model’s implied tax elasticities of establishments and owner hours are in line with empirical estimates in the public finance literature. Allowing for financial constraints and superstar firms does not overturn our main findings.

汗股权无形资产私人企业税收弹性