Pap
Pap
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NOTE: Staff working papers in the Finance and Economics Discussion Series (FEDS) are preliminary
materials circulated to stimulate discussion and critical comment. The analysis and conclusions set forth
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Taxes and the Fed: Theory and Evidence from Equities
Abstract
We provide a critical theoretical and empirical analysis that suggests a key driver of fiscal effects
on equity markets is the Federal Reserve. For the Post-1980 era, tax cuts lead to higher cash flow
news and higher discount rates. The discount rate news tends to dominate such that tax cuts are
associated with lower equity returns. This result is flipped for the Pre-1980 era. Our results are
confirmed across multiple measures of tax shocks (narrative, SVAR, municipal bonds, etc.) at
different frequencies (daily, quarterly, annual). We motivate our empirical findings with a standard
New Keynesian model (in addition to the FRB/US model) that exhibits a shift in the aggressiveness
of monetary policy. Moreover in our theoretical framework, downward nominal wage rigidities
account for observed asymmetries in the response to tax cuts versus tax increases.
Helpful comments and suggestions provided by Anthony Diercks advisor Max Croce, Geert Bekaert, John Cochrane, Thorsten
Drautzburg, Yuriy Gorodnichenko, Urban Jermann, Arvind Krishnamurthy, Thomas Laubach, Martin Lettau, Karel Mertens,
Virgiliu Midrigan, Glenn Rudebusch, Paul Tetlock, Annette Vissing-Jorgenson, Lu Zhang, and seminar participants from multiple
conferences and institutions.
Federal Reserve Board, Monetary and Financial Market Analysis 20th Street and Constitution Avenue N.W., Washington, D.C.
20551, Anthony.M.Diercks@frb.gov. http://www.anthonydiercks.com/ The analysis and conclusions set forth in this paper are
those of the authors and do not indicate concurrence by other members of the research staff or the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System.
Finance Area, Tepper Business School, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, wwaller@andrew.cmu.edu.
1
1. Introduction
Following the 2016 presidential election, the stock market, the value of the dollar, and inflation com-
pensation measures increased significantly. Some observers suggest these observations provide evidence
that the promise of tax cuts substantially boost the stock market. Yet as of the end of the second quarter in
2017, the value of the dollar, inflation compensation, and the implied tax measures based on municipal bond
spreads have all returned to their pre-election levels suggesting little effect of potential tax changes on finan-
cial markets. Despite these reversals, the stock market remains 18% above its level prior to the election. The
lack of equity market reversion calls into question how important the promise of tax cuts were to the stock
market. In the vein of previous studies exploring the relationship between policy and equity markets,1 we
provide a critical theoretical and empirical analysis that suggests that the Federal Reserve is a key driver of
fiscal effects on equity markets. The Federal Reserves reaction function plays a crucial role in determining
the relative magnitudes of the effects of taxes on cash flow news and discount rate news in equity markets.
With the Federal Reserves more aggressive stance toward economic activity since 1980,2 we find that tax
cuts are associated with lower excess equity returns, despite our findings of positive effects on cash flow
news.
The more aggressive monetary policy since 1980 has two primary effects: (1) monetary policy is raising
rates to a greater extent in response to tax cuts, increasing the size of the discount rate channel and (2) the
higher rates endogenously feed back negatively to economic activity in the form of less positive cash flow
news in response to tax cuts. We conduct similar analysis for the Pre-1980 era and come to the opposite
conclusion. With a less aggressive monetary policy, the cash flow news is larger than the discount rate news,
and tax cuts are associated with higher equity returns. These empirical findings are motivated by a standard
theoretical New Keynesian model that exhibits a shift in the aggressiveness of monetary policy.
Our results are not dependent upon any specific calibration and instead hold for a wide set of commonly
used values, which we confirm across each of the parameters in the model. Moreover, the FRB/US model
1 See Ai and Bansal (2016), Belo, Gala, and Li (2013), Croce, Kung, Nguyen, and Schmid (2012), Da, Warachka, and Yun
(2016), Gallmeyer, Hollifield, and Zin (2005), Gomes, Michaelides, and Polkovnichenko (2012), among others discussed in more
detail in our literature review.
2 See Coibion and Gorodnichenko (2011); Bhattarai, Lee, and Park (2016); Clarida, Gali, and Gertler (2000); Lubik and
2
used by the Federal Reserve predicts tax cuts being associated with lower returns.
We also document asymmetries with respect to tax changes. Specifically, we find that tax cuts have
larger and more significant effects than tax increases. Again, this can be motivated by a nonlinear New
Keynesian model that exhibits downward nominal wage rigidities. The basic intuition is that an income tax
cut incentivizes households to work more causing wages to decline. However in the presence of downward
nominal wage rigidities, wages do not fully adjust to this change in labor supply such that the increase in
labor demanded is reduced. With not as much labor demanded, output and dividends increase less so that
cash flow news is less positive. Combining the less positive cash flow news with the increase in interest
Moving to the empirics, we first use tax shocks based on Romer and Romer (2010) and incorporate them
into a Campbell and Shiller (1988) news decomposition to back out the effects on cash flow and discount rate
news. We take additional steps to ensure the exogeneity of these shocks by focusing also on the surprise
shocks as outlined by Mertens and Ravn (2012), as well as the orthogonalized SVAR shocks also discussed
in Mertens and Ravn (2014). Through ordered probit tests, we show that the shocks are not predictable based
on financial market data, a concern raised by Leeper, Walker, and Yang (2013); Yang (2005); Mertens and
In addition to results based on a time-varying parameter VAR, statistical tests suggest a structural break
in our data in 1980. Splitting the sample at this date, we demonstrate that the relative magnitudes of the
cash flow and discount rate channels shift, with discount rate news becoming larger Post-1980. The larger
effect on discount rate news dominates, so that tax cuts are associated with lower returns, consistent with
We further empirically examine whether tax increases or tax cuts yield significant asymmetric effects on
equity markets. We find that tax cuts are driving the significance and that when we isolate the effects of tax
increases, the effects are smaller and less significant. This is consistent with Jones, Olson, and Wohar (2015)
in terms of macro effects and also consistent with our nonlinear New Keynesian model with downwardly
Admittedly, the narrative shocks of Romer and Romer (2010) are quite heterogenous relative to the
capital, labor, and income taxes in our model. To this end, we explore more narrowly defined personal tax
3
shocks to ensure that our empirics mirror the channels operating in our theory. Our main results carry through
when we shift our definition of tax shocks to the narrative personal tax shocks of Mertens and Ravn (2013)
or to a definition of expected personal taxes based on municipal bond spreads as in Leeper, Walker, and Yang
With the main empirical analysis conducted at the quarterly frequency, we show further robustness by
using changes in expected future tax rates at higher frequencies based on municipal bond data. We continue
to find a positive relationship between tax rates and equity excess returns based on event windows ranging
Additionally, we replicate the results of Sialm (2009) using annual data and show that the effect of tax
yields on equity returns flips signs if the sample is split in 1980 (rather than in 1960 as in Sialm (2009)).
Using multiple robustness checks, we find that the effect of taxes on equity returns switches from negative
to positive for the post-1980 period, which is consistent with both our theoretical and empirical analysis.
Furthermore, we note that Sialm (2005, 2006) does not model monetary policy, leaving open the theoreti-
cal possibility for the positive relationship between dividend taxes and equity returns in a non-endowment
economy. We confirm these findings in a Real Business Cycle model, and show that once we incorporate
nominal rigidities and a monetary policy rule that aggressively responds to economic activity, the results
flip.
The remainder of the paper proceeds as follows. Section 2 discusses the related literature. Section 3
provides the theoretical framework for our analysis. Section 4 presents our data and methodology. Section
5 discusses our main empirical results. Section 6 provides some additional tests and Section 7 concludes.
2. Related Literature
The extant literature, both theoretical and empirical, lacks consensus regarding the impact of tax changes
on equity markets. In the time series, Tavares and Valkanov (2001) and Sialm (2006, 2009) find a negative
relationship. However, studies that focus on a broader range of countries in addition to the United States tend
to find no effect or in fact a positive relationship, as in Ardagna (2009); Afonso and Sousa (2011, 2012); and
Agnello and Sousa (2013). Unlike our results, none of these studies examine the impact of monetary policy
4
Study Sign of Tax Increase Method Type of Taxes
Ayers, Cloyd, and Robinson (2002) Negative Event Study of 1993 Tax Cut, Panel Individual income (i.e. dividend tax rate)
Auerbach and Hassett (2005) Negative Event Study of 2003 Tax Cut, Panel Cap Gains, Dividend
Lang and Shackelford (2000) Negative Event Study of 1997 Tax Cut, Panel Capital Gains
McGrattan and Prescott (2005) Negative RBC model, Intangible Capital Cons., Divs, Interest, Labor, Property, Corp. Income
Sialm (2009) Negative Time Series and Cross Section, Ann Dividend, Cap Gain (SR, LR)
Sialm (2005) Negative Theoretical, Endow. Economy Consumption Tax
Sialm (2006) Negative Theoretical, Endow. Economy Dividend Tax
Tavares and Valkanov (2001) Negative SVAR, 1960-2000 US Share of tax receipts (exluding transfers) in GDP
Dai, Maydew, Shackelford, and Zhang (2008) Ambiguous/Negative Event Study of 1997 Tax Cut, Panel
Arin, Mamun, and Purushothman (2009) No Effect/Negative SVAR, 1973-2005 Intl Labor Tax, Indirect (Corporate Tax)
Amromin, Harrison, and Sharpe (2008) No Effect Event Study of 2003 Tax Cut, Panel Dividend Tax
Ardagna (2009) Positive 1960-2002 Intl, Ann
Afonso and Sousa (2011) Positive (Small) SVAR, 1970-2007 Intl, Qtrly Govt. Revenue, NIPA Table 3.2, line 36
Afonso and Sousa (2012) Positive (Small) B-SVAR, 1970-2007 Intl, Qtrly Govt. Revenue, NIPA Table 3.2, line 36
Agnello and Sousa (2013) Positive (Temporary) P-VAR, Intl Primary Deficit Shocks
Hanlon and Heitzman (2010) Literature Review
Theoretical implications in McGrattan and Prescott (2005) and Sialm (2005, 2006, 2009) predict nega-
tive stock returns in response to tax increases. In contrast to these theoretical models, we focus on a New
Keynesian model that explicitly models monetary policy, which we find is a crucial modeling choice. Ayers,
Cloyd, and Robinson (2002); Auerbach and Hassett (2005); Lang and Shackelford (2000); Dai, Maydew,
Shackelford, and Zhang (2008); and Amromin, Harrison, and Sharpe (2008) run panel regressions and event
studies around various tax cuts in 1993, 1997, and 2003. Their findings range from negative to no effect
with respect to a tax increase. However, this approach controls, at least in part, for discount rate news that
is an integral part to our story. To this end, we use a Campbell and Shiller (1988) news decomposition.
News decompositions consist of splitting the movements in unexpected stock market returns into two
fundamental components news about future discount rates and news about future cash flows. The news
component of both channels reflect changes in investors expectations, which can be proxied based on the
methods of Campbell and Shiller (1988). While our focus is on which channels are influenced by tax shocks,
our analysis speaks to the relative importance of discount rates versus cash flows, a central discussion of
finance. Campbell and Shiller (1988); Campbell (1991); Campbell and Ammer (1993); Vuolteenaho (2002);
Chen and Zhao (2009) among others focus on the volatility of asset prices being driven by volatility in
discount rate news. Cash flow news as the primary driver of asset volatility is emphasized by Bansal and
Yaron (2004); Bansal, Dittmar, and Lundblad (2005); Lettau and Ludvigson (2005); Santos and Veronesi
(2010); Cohen, Polk, and Vuolteenaho (2009); Da (2009); Hansen, Heaton, and Li (2008).
Previous studies have used similar empirical methods to derive the effects of monetary policy on the
stock market, but not fiscal policy. Patelis (1997); Bernanke and Kuttner (2005); and Maio (2014) have all
found monetary policy imposing significant effects on the stock market using a news decomposition. For
instance, Bernanke and Kuttner (2005) find that unexpected monetary policy shocks impact stock market
5
returns predominantly through the future excess returns channel, whereas the effect on real interest rates and
These findings also add to a rich literature exploring the relationship between policy and equity returns,
more broadly. Ai and Bansal (2016) explore the macro announcement premium in the context of uncertainty
aversion. Belo and Yu (2013) look at the relationship between government investment and returns at the
aggregate and firm level, while Belo, Gala, and Li (2013) focus on industry exposure to government spending
and find predictable variation in cash flows and stock returns over political cycles. Croce, Kung, Nguyen,
and Schmid (2012), Croce, Nguyen, Raymond, and Schmid (2017), and Croce, Nguyen, and Schmid (2012,
2013) study the link between debt, taxation, and returns in a general equilibrium RBC framework, while Da,
Warachka, and Yun (2016) focus on state-level fiscal policies. Pastor and Veronesi (2012, 2013, 2017) study
the link between stock prices and risk premia with an explicit focus on political uncertainty along with the
political cycle. Gallmeyer, Hollifield, and Zin (2005) focuses on the relationship between various monetary
policy rules and the term structure of interest rates, while Kung (2015) studies the equilibrium relationship
between monetary policy and the term structure of interest rates in a model with endogenous growth. In
contrast to the above studies, we document that a shift in monetary policy significantly changes the response
Finally, our paper is not the first to suggest that bad news (in our case, tax increases) can be associated with
higher equity returns. Boyd, Hu, and Jagannathan (2005) find that bad news coming from unemployment
data is usually good for stocks. Their empirical study suggests interest rate expectations fall on bad labor
market news during expansions, which results in a positive effect on stock prices. Likewise, good news (in
our case, tax cuts) can be associated with lower equity returns, as shown in McQueen and Roley (1993).
They find that when the economy is strong, the stock market responds negatively to news about higher real
economic activity and this is caused by a larger increase in discount rates relative to expected cash flows.
In a separate and independent manuscript completed after our paper, Mumtaz and Theodoridis (2017) find
that positive (negative) shocks to government spending (taxes) lead to a rise (fall) in stock prices in the US
post-1980.3 Additionally, Evans and Marshall (2009) show that an expansionary labor supply shock or a
6
preference/demand shock4 leads to a positive response in profits, but a much bigger response of interest
rates. The overall effect on the market return is negative, so that good news is bad news for the stock
market. Blanchard (1981) and Orphanides (1992) also provide equilibrium and empirical support for the
notion that good news can be bad for the stock market, depending on the state of the economy.
3. Model
3.1. Households
The economy is populated by a continuum of identical infinitely lived households. Each household has
preferences defined for consumption, c t , and labor hours, h t . Preferences are based on the standard CRRA
utility function
1
X .c t .1 h t /1 /1 1
E0 t (1)
1
tD0
where E t denotes the expectations operator conditional on information available at time t, 2 .0; 1/ is
the subjective discount factor, c t is the consumption, and h t is labor. The consumption good is assumed to
be a composite good produced with a continuum of differentiated goods, ci t , i 2 0; 1, via the aggregator
function
Z 1 1=.1 1=/
1 1=
ct D ci t di (2)
0
where the parameter > 1 denotes the intratemporal elasticity of substitution across different varieties of
consumption goods. For any given level of consumption of the composite good, purchases of each variety i in
R1
period t must solve the dual problem of minimizing total expenditure, 0 Pit cit d i subject to the aggregation
constraint above, where Pit denotes the nominal price of a good of variety i at time t. Upon solving this
demonstrating that neither the relatively small scale of our model nor the specific form of our Taylor Rule is necessary to drive
our results. On the empirical side, we provide evidence using a variety of alternate specifications and identification strategies, such
as higher frequency results using municipal bond data, results using valuation ratios rather than returns as in Sialm (2009), and
cross-sectional results.
4 Note, Mulligan (2002) interprets this shock as a labor market distortion, such as a change in tax rates.
7
problem, the optimal level of cit is given by ci t D PPitt c t and P t is a nominal price index given
hR i1=.1 /
1 1
by P t 0 Pi t d i . This price index has the property that the minimum cost of a bundle of
Households are assumed to have access to a complete set of nominal contingent claims. The households
x t C1 xt
E t d t;s C ct C it C t D C .1 tD / .w t h t C u t k t / C q t tD k t C t (3)
Pt Pt
where d t;s is the stochastic discount factor, defined such that E t d t;s xs is the nominal value in period t of a
random nominal payment xs in period s t. The variable i t denotes investment, t is the lump sum tax, tD
is the distortionary income tax rate, w t is the real wage, u t is the rental rate of capital, k t denotes capital, and
q t denotes the market price of one unit of installed capital. The term tD q t k t denotes deprecation allowance
for tax purposes and t denotes profits received from ownership of firms net of income taxes.
it
k t C1 D .1 /k t C i t t (4)
it 1
where the function represents investment adjustment costs that take the form .x/ D 1 2 .x 1/2
and 0. Without adjustment costs on investment, the price of capital would never change because the
supply would be perfectly elastic and always equal to one. We show in the robustness section that our results
do not depend on this parameter and for parsimony, set D 0. Households are assumed to be subject to a
Households are assumed to have differentiated job skills that provide them monopolistically competitive
power over the labor supply. They choose their wage and labor supply taking the firms demand for their labor
type. Following Kim and Ruge-Murcia (2009), labor market frictions create adjustment costs in nominal
8
wages and take the form of the linex function
exp. .W tn =W tn 1 1// C .W tn =W tn 1 / 1
nt D .W tn =W tn 1 / D (5)
2
where W tn is the nominal wage and and are cost parameters. This function allows for the costs associated
with wage decreases to rise exponentially, while costs associated with wage increases to rise linearly. This
creates an asymmetry that is consistent with the notion of downward nominal wage rigidities.
When households choose W tn , they equate the marginal costs and benefits of increasing W tn , as shown
below
0 1 ct 1 h t C1
!t D . 1/.1 / C E t m t;t C1 w t C1 ! t C1 0t C1 (6)
leis t w t .1 td / ht
where ! t D W tn =W tn 1 . As noted by Kim and Ruge-Murcia (2009), the costs decrease in hours worked as
firms substitute away from more expensive labor input and the wage adjustment cost. The benefits are the
increase in labor income per hour worked, the increase in leisure time as firms reduce their demand for labor
The government issues one-period nominal risk-free bonds, B t , collects tax revenues P t t , and spends
an exogenous amount each period, g t . In real terms, the governments budget constraint is
Rt 1
bt D bt 1 C gt t (7)
t
where lower case letters denote real values, t P t =P t 1 denotes gross consumer price inflation, R t
denotes the gross one-period risk free nominal interest rate in period t.
Total tax revenues are t D tD y t C tL . The fiscal rule is defined so that tax revenues must rise with
debt
t D C 1 .R t 1bt 1 R b / (8)
9
where
1 denotes how fast taxes are paid back, and B denote the deterministic steady state values of
t and B t respectively. To isolate the effects of the tax rate, we allow lump sum taxes to adjust in order to
balance the budget. Note that if we did not setup taxes in this way, any distortionary tax rate change would
be followed by an opposite reaction in the following periods, coming from the above rule as debt changes.5
To analyze the effect of tax shocks, a normal, mean zero shock is appended to the distortionary tax rate
such that
utax
t D utt ax1 C tax
t (10)
The standard deviation is set to match the standard deviation of the tax shocks coming from Romer and
Romer (2010) and the persistence is set to a high value to be consistent with the empirical analysis. We show
in the robustness section that our main results do not depend on these parameters.
The monetary authority sets the short-term nominal interest rate according to a simple feedback rule.
ln.R t =R / D r ln.R t 1 =R
/ C .1 r / ln. t = / C y ln.y t =y / (11)
3.3. Firms
Aggregate demand for good i is denoted by ai t D cit C iit C git D .Pi t =P t / a given the aggregation
t
5 Isolating the effects of tax rate changes in this way is also consistent with Sims and Wolff (2016).
6 We focus on output growth rather than the output gap for multiple reasons: (1) Output growth is observable whereas the output
gap is a function of two unobserved variables, the natural rate of unemployment and the potential level of output; (2) Real-time
output gaps tend to significantly differ from ex-post output gaps (Belke and Klose, 2011); (3) Smets and Wouters (2007), Orphanides
(2004), and Campbell, Pflueger, and Viceira (2017) find no significance on the output gap for Post-Volcker. In contrast, Smets and
Wouters (2007) do find significance on output growth for Post-Volcker. In addition, our own estimates based on Greenbook Data find
significance for output growth but not the output gap for the Post-Volcker time period. Furthermore, Coibion and Gorodnichenko
(2015) find significant changes to the output growth variable across the Pre and Post-Volcker regimes whereas they find no significant
difference in the output gap level. Moreover, including an output gap level does not change our analysis so we exclude it for
parsimony.
10
constraint. It is assumed that the firm must satisfy demand at the posted price so that firms maximize expected
Pit
z t kit h1it at (12)
Pt
Firms are assumed to face a quadratic cost of adjusting nominal prices as in Rotemberg (1982), with the cost
2
t
1 Yt
2 ss
where captures the degree of nominal rigidity. The problem for firm j is then to maximize the discounted
2
t
t D P t .j /Y t .j / mc t Y t .j /P t 1 Yt Pt
2 ss
Firms can change their price in each period subject to the adjustment costs. Therefore, all firms face the fame
problem and will choose the same price and same quantity. This yields a symmetric equilibrium, P t .j / D P t
" #
1
/ 1 .1 1
t t c t C1 .1 1 h t C1 /.1 /
y tC1 t C1 t C1
.1 /Cmc t 1 CE t 1 D0
ss ss ct 1 ht y t ss ss
This is the non-linear Phillips curve that relates current inflation to future expected inflation and to the level
of output.
Rounding out the model, the resource constraint for the entire economy is
yt D ct C it C gt C t yt C wt ht t (13)
11
where captures the price adjustment costs and t captures wage adjustment costs.
3.4. Return
We follow standard theory and define the return in our theoretical model as follows
P t C1 C D t C1
RDI V
tC1 D (14)
Pt
where P t D E t M t C1 RDI V
t C1 and D t D Y t wt Lt I t .7 Typically, dividends are defined as a levered
claim to consumption in the finance literature. This is because consumption based asset pricing models are
frequently modeled as endowment economies where consumption and dividends are exogenous. In contrast,
our setup is a richer and more fully specified framework that defines dividends as a function of endogenous
For the sake of our theoretical income tax experiments, we modify the cash flow in the return equation
such that
D t D 1
D;t Dt (15)
where D;t D
tD is the dividend tax rate and is proportional to the income tax rate. On one extreme,
D 0,
and this assumes that 0% of equity is held by taxable investors. On the other extreme, D 1, which assumes
that 100% is held by taxable investors. Instead, we follow Sialm (2009) and use data from the FED2004
Flow of Funds that suggests D 0:55, or 55% of equity is held by taxable investors.
3.5. Calibration
Many of the deep structural parameters have been set to the values in Schmitt-Groh and Uribe (2007).
For completeness, we check the robustness of our results with respect to each parameter in Section 1 of
the Appendix. Since the goal of Schmitt-Groh and Uribe (2007) was to determine optimal policy and
not necessarily to match empirical moments when specifying fiscal and monetary policy, we turn to prior
literature to set the remaining parameters in our model. The four parameters that we are unable to obtain
12
from Schmitt-Groh and Uribe (2007) are
1 , the speed of tax repayment, , the inflation coefficient, y ,
the output growth coefficient, and R , the inertia coefficient in the monetary policy rule. For fiscal policy,
our choice for the speed of tax repayment comes from recent estimates by Drautzburg and Uhlig (2015),
which we set to 0.03. Since lump sum taxes help balance the budget (which allows us to isolate the effects
of distortionary tax shocks), this parameter does not meaningfully alter the quantitative results.
For monetary policy, we follow Coibion and Gorodnichenko (2015), who estimate parameters in the
monetary policy rule for the Pre-Volcker and Post-Volcker eras. For the Post-Volcker era, we use their
estimated coefficients of 0.90 for the inertia coefficient, 1.58 for the inflation coefficient, and 2.21 for the
output growth coefficient. We show in Section 1 of the Appendix that our results are not highly sensitive
to the values presented here. Moreover in Section 2 of the Appendix, we follow Orphanides (2004) and
Coibion and Gorodnichenko (2015) to estimate the policy rule with Greenbook data through 2007.8 Again,
the results of these tests are consistent with the theoretical implications presented below.
For the Pre-Volcker setting, Coibion and Gorodnichenko (2015) find a lower output growth coefficient
and a lower inflation coefficient and our estimates confirm these lower values in comparison to the Post-
Volcker time period. Our own estimates suggest lowering the output growth coefficient to 0.94, lowering
the inflation coefficient to 1.32, and setting an inertia coefficient to 0.91.9 We note that the change in the
Our DSGE model results present the exact mapping from the initial tax shock to the endogenous re-
sponses of returns and cash flows implied by the solution to the model. We solve the model by taking a
second order approximation of the nonlinear equilibrium conditions. We start with a discussion of the im-
pact of an exogenous income tax rate increase on the economy as depicted in Figure 1.
Figure 1 presents the impulse response functions for an exogenous income tax rate increase under the
Post-Volcker and Pre-Volcker calibrations. To better understand the importance of the cash flow channel ver-
sus the discount rate channel in determining equity prices, we compute the excess returns for two additional
8 While Sims and Zha (2006) and others focus on a shift in the volatility of policy shocks to explain changes in inflation through
time, differences in our estimated loadings across regimes are sufficient to generate our main theoretical implications.
9 Section 2 of the Appendix details our estimation.
13
Parameter Value Description
1
0.2 Intertemporal Elasticity of Substitution
0.3 Cost share of capital
0.999 Quarterly subjective discount rate (Real risk-free rate 4%)
7 Price Elasticity of Demand
(Midpoint of Schmitt-Grohe Uribe (2007) = 5 and Coibion and Gorodnichenko (2011) = 10)
0.025 Quarterly Depreciation Rate
35 Price Adjustment Costs, (Kim and Ruge-Murcia, 2007)
0.25 Set to match Labor = 0.25 (See Robustness Section)
0 Investment Adjustment Cost Parameter
G 0.87 Serial correlation of government spending
G 0.016 Standard deviation of innovation to government purchases
z 0.8556 Serial correlation of productivity shock
z 0.0064 Standard deviation of innovation to productivity shock
0.9999 Serial correlation of tax shock (See Robustness Section)
0.0022 Standard deviation of innovation to tax rate Romer and Romer (2007)
1000 Wage adjustment costs parameter (Kim and Ruge-Murcia, 2007)
3800 Asymmetric wage adjustment costs parameter (Kim and Ruge-Murcia, 2007)
scenarios defined below: (1) Discount Rate Only and (2) Cash Flow Only. Specifically, we define
where MSS and DS S are the steady-state values of the SDF and dividends, respectively.
The Discount Rate Only scenario completely shuts down variation in the cash flow channel, so that the
price of equity is purely a function of the sum of future SDF values. As denoted by the dashed blue line,
the exogenous tax increase leads to a higher excess equity return as real interest rates decline (the real SDF
rises) due to the negative wealth effects of the higher tax rate on consumption growth.
The Cash Flow Only scenario shuts down variation in the discount rate channel, so that the price of
equity is purely a function of the future dividends discounted by the deterministic steady state of the real
SDF. As denoted by the red dot-dashed line, it is clear that the excess equity return would be negative with
only cash flow news. The higher income tax rate reduces output growth over the medium to long run, and
By activating both the cash flow and discount rate channels, we arrive at the black lines in Figure 1. In
the left panel (Post-Volcker), the discount rate effect dominates so that the excess equity return has a positive
14
response. For the Post-Volcker calibration, a sizable weight in the Taylor Rule is placed on output growth.
This stabilizing effect generates a greater relative decline in real interest rates in response to the exogenous
income tax rate increase. In addition, the greater policy response to the negative economic effects of the tax
shock also helps dampen the decline in cash flow news. We explore the effects of each coefficient in the
In contrast, for the right panel (Pre-Volcker), a smaller coefficient on output growth in the monetary
policy rule implies a smaller relative decline in real interest rates. In addition, the smaller policy response to
the negative economic effects of the tax shock amplifies the decline in cash flow news. As a result, the cash
flow news dominates and the effect of the tax increase is a negative current excess return.
3.6.1. Pre-Volcker
Figure 2 presents the impulse response functions for an exogenous income tax rate increase for the Pre-
Volcker, Post-Volcker, and RBC calibrations. The difference between the Pre-Volcker and Post-Volcker
calibrations is isolated to the Taylor Rule. Specifically, the Pre-Volcker calibration (red dashed line) features
a lower inflation coefficient, and a significantly lower output growth coefficient. With the lower output
growth coefficient in the monetary policy reaction function, real interest rates do not decline as much and
For the Pre-Volcker calibration, the negative substitution effect dominates so that investment growth
declines initially. Specifically, monetary policy responds less to the negative effects of the tax increase due
to the lower output growth coefficient, which reduces the incentive to invest. Since the level of investment
falls below its long-run level, investment growth is positive in the subsequent periods. While the initial
decline in investment does lead to positive dividend growth at first, the increase in investment growth in
later periods combined with the greater decline in output (compared to the Post-Volcker) leads to a larger
negative sum of dividend growth. Therefore, the cashflow channel is larger. At the same time, the discount
rate channel is smaller when compared to the Post-Volcker scenario. This combination of more negative
cash flow news and less negative discount rate news causes a negative excess equity return because the cash
15
3.6.2. Post-Volcker
For the Post-Volcker scenario (the dashed blue line) , recall that dividends are an endogenous function
of the production and investment decisions (D t D Y t wt Lt I t ); thus, the decline in dividends is caused
by the incipient increase in investment due to the negative wealth effect. Dividend growth in the medium
to long run is subdued as output growth also declines due to the higher income tax rate.10 As previously
mentioned, real interest rates decline to a greater extent under the Post-Volcker regime because monetary
policy responds to a greater extent through the higher coefficient on output growth.11
3.6.3. RBC
The solid black line reflects the Real Business Cycle Model. The Real Business Cycle model differs
from the New Keynesian model by eliminating the monetary policy rule and keeping inflation constant
while removing wage rigidities. Doing so replicates the natural level of output, which is the output that
would occur with flexible prices. It provides a benchmark to show the importance of incorporating a role for
monetary policy and nominal rigidities. As shown in Figure 2, dividends falls slightly more than the NK:
Post-Volcker model and real interest rates do not fall as much in the medium-long run. This entails a larger
relative effect on cash flow news versus discount rate news, so the overall effect is a negative current excess
return. In contrast to the Pre-Volcker and RBC settings, the Post-Volcker monetary policy of putting greater
weight on output growth leads to a larger effect on real interest rate news and a smaller decline in dividends,
so that the discount rate channel dominates and the current excess return for Post-Volcker is positive.
This section explores the theory and intuition for why the tax shock generates asymmetric responses
depending on its direction, as shown in Figure 3. Recall that for the Post-Volcker regime income tax rate
10 Output growth largely follows the response of labor, and labor briefly rises before declining in response to the positive tax
shock. These dynamics are similar to the responses one might see for a news shock. While the initial rise in labor might at first
be counterintuitive, note that capital is predetermined, so that in the first period, the negative effects of the tax shock on the capital
stock (via lower investment) do not occur until later periods, and the marginal product of labor is at first higher than it will be in
subsequent periods when capital is lower.
11 Another way to think about the effects on the real interest rates is to note that with the presence of capital, the real interest
rates are largely equivalent to the after tax marginal product of capital. In the Post-Volcker setting, investment is higher than in the
Pre-Volcker setting and the capital stock is higher in the medium to long run (due to the greater response to output in the Post-Volcker
setting). A higher capital stock mechanically reduces the marginal product of capital, and although this effect is slightly tempered
by the higher level of labor in the Post-Volcker setting, the overall effect is a greater decline in real interest rates when compared to
the Pre-Volcker setting.
16
increase (blue dashed line), the negative wealth effect dominates so that consumption declines, while invest-
ment and labor initially rise. Beyond the initial period of the shock, both labor and investment continue to
decline until they reach their long-run levels due to the higher tax rate. While labor and capital both decline
(which would have opposite effects on the marginal product of labor), the decline in labor supply dominates
so that wages rise. When wages rise, wage adjustment costs are smaller compared to the case of falling
In contrast to the tax increase, the tax cut (black dashed line) generates a positive wealth effect so that
consumption rises while investment and labor initially decline. Beyond the initial period of the shock, the
benefits of the tax cut lead to a higher labor supply and higher investment. The higher labor supply dominates
so that wages decline in the medium to long run. However in comparison to a wage increase, a wage decline
generates greater adjustment costs, which reflect the downward nominal rigidities in the model. With wages
declining less due to the greater adjustment costs, the demand for labor is lower, and investment and output
Relating these dynamics back to the current excess return, we see that the excess equity return declines
more in response to the tax cut (evidenced by the red line showing the difference in responses to a tax increase
and tax cut). This decrease can mainly be attributed to the cash flow channel, as dividends do not rise as
much in response to the tax cut. The dynamics for the dividends can be explained by separating the short
In the short run, investment does not decline as much (dividends do not increase as much) due to the
positive wealth effect being dampened by the increased wage adjustment costs as wages decline over the
medium to long run. In the medium to long run, investment does not rise as much (which should lead to a
greater increase in dividends), but this effect is offset by the fact that output also does not rise as much (recall
that D t D Y t w t L t I t ). The smaller increase in output over the medium to long run due to the increased
wage adjustment costs dominates so that dividends do not rise as much over the medium to long run for the
Combining both the short-run effect (relatively smaller decline in investment due to smaller positive
wealth effect) and medium to long run effect (relatively smaller increase in output due to wage adjustment
costs coming from lower wages) leads to an unambiguously smaller increase in dividends for the tax cut. The
17
overall effect is a greater decline in the equity return for the tax cut. To summarize, the presence of downward
nominal wage rigidities (i.e. asymmetric wage adjustment costs) provides a theoretical foundation for why
tax cuts could lead to larger effects on equity markets than tax increases.
The right panel removes downward nominal wage rigidities, and shows that the difference across each
impulse response function is essentially zero. This demonstrates the importance of including downward
nominal wage rigidities in order to generate asymmetric responses to tax cuts and tax increases.
In order to further decompose the impact of an exogenous tax increase on excess equity returns and to
develop a framework for which to empirically test the predictions of our model, we turn to the basic frame-
work of Campbell and Shiller (1988); Campbell (1991); and Campbell and Ammer (1993). Those studies
show that according to a simple dynamic accounting identity, innovations in current equity excess returns
can be decomposed as follows into revisions of future expected cash flows, revisions of future expected
1
X 1
X
j
rex;t C1 E t .rex;t C1 / D.E tC1 Et / d t C1Cj .E t C1 Et / j rex;t C1Cj
j D0 j D1
1
(16)
X
j
.E t C1 Et / rreal;t C1Cj
j D0
where
1
X
NCF ;t C1 .E tC1 Et / j d t C1Cj D rex;t C1 E t .rex;t C1 / C Nex;t C1 C Nreal;t C1 (18)
j D0
X1
Nex;t C1 .E t C1 Et / j rex;t C1Cj (19)
j D1
X1
f
Nreal;t C1 .E t C1 Et / j rreal;t C1Cj (20)
j D0
18
represent revisions about future cash-flows, revisions in future expected excess returns, and revisions in
future real interest rates, respectively. The monthly discount factor is set to 0.9962, following the previ-
ous literature (Campbell and Ammer, 1993; Bernanke and Kuttner, 2005) and is used to match the steady
state average annual dividend yield of 5%. As previously stated, the above relationships reflect dynamic
Table 1 reports the discounted sum of these effects on equity, summarizes the IRFs presented in Figure 2,
and provides a benchmark for our empirical results. Over the Post-Volcker period, a one standard deviation
increase in the taxes (0.22%) corresponds to a 0.0515% increase in excess equity returns. With an exogenous
increase in taxes, news about both future real interest rates and cash flows is negative. The decrease in
discounted future cash flows of -0.2103% is offset by the decrease in discount rates of -0.2588%. Most of
this change in future discount rates is driven by news about future real interest rates rather than information
about future equity premia, as monetary policy stabilizes output to a greater extent. Responses for a negative
tax shock exhibit the asymmetries discussed in Section 3.6.4 with a one standard deviation decrease in taxes
Panel B of Table 1 presents results for the Pre-Volcker calibration. In this case, a one standard deviation
increase in the tax rate leads to a 0.0502% decrease in excess equity returns. Again, both news about future
real interest rates and cash flows is negative consistent with the findings in Gale and Orszag (2003) and
Romer and Romer (2010), respectively. However in the Pre-Volcker period, the cash flow news channel
dominates the real interest rate news channel such that the overall impact on equity returns is negative.
Panel C of Table 1 presents results for the RBC calibration. Recall, the RBC calibration replicates the
natural level of output by removing monetary policy and nominal rigidities. Similar to the previous panels,
a tax increase leads to negative cash flow and discount rate news. Similar to the Pre-Volcker framework, the
cash flow news channel is larger so that the overall effect of tax increase is a 0.0555% decrease in excess
equity returns.
19
3.8. Model Robustness
As a first pass, we verify that our choice of parameters in our calibrated model do not impact the theo-
retical predictions of the model. Namely, we demonstrate that the decline in excess returns in response to a
tax cut is robust to perturbing all the parameters above and below their benchmark values. Specific results
along with a full discussion and intuition are available in Section 1 of the Appendix.
While an exploration of the effects of monetary policy on real interest rates requires New Keynesian
features, neither the relatively small scale of our model nor the specific form of our Taylor Rule is necessary
to drive the changes to the discount rate and cash flow macroeconomic news channels across monetary policy
regimes. In this section, we explore the robustness of our theoretical implications to an alternative modeling
framework closely related to the model presented in Fleischman and Roberts (2011), the FRB/US model.12
This large-scale model of the U.S. economy allows for nonlinear interactions among endogenous variables
and serves as one of several workhorse models that the Federal Reserve Board staff consults for forecasting
and the analysis of macroeconomic issues, including both monetary and fiscal policy.
Our approach is to take this model off the shelf and simulate the results of our fiscal policy experi-
ment. Specifically, we peturb nominal personal tax receipts (TFPN ) by 0.22% of taxable income (YPN
GF T N GS T N ) for ten years from 2020Q1 to 2029Q4.13 Results are similar to our findings based on the
DSGE model. Current excess equity returns increase following an exogenous increase in the tax rate with
both cash flow and discount rate news falling following the shock. As before, the discount rate news channels
dominate the cash flow news driving the increase in equity returns. Specifically, the current excess return
rises 0.28%, and the discount rate news declines by 0.98% and the cash flow news declines by 0.70%.14
In addition, when the output gap coefficient is decreased as in the case of our Pre-Volcker calibration, the
discount rate news channel decreases in absolute magnitude leading to a lower current excess equity return
12 For more information, see Brayton, Laubach, and Reifschneider (2014) and cites therein.
13 We shock nominal personal tax receipts directly to prevent the endogenous persistence in the tax rate (TRFP ) from amplifying
where we can more easily control for the duration of the fiscal policy experiment, we find that our main results remain.
20
response.
This section describes our empirical implementation of the equity return decomposition presented in the
previous section, the sources of data which we employ, and the identification strategy we use to construct a
In order to empirically implement the news decomposition described above, we require proxies for the
expectations appearing in Equation 16. We follow the approach of Bernanke and Kuttner (2005) and write
Z t C1 D AZ t C w t C1 (21)
where Z t C1 is a stacked np 1 vector containing the real interest rate, the excess equity return, and other
variables that are considered useful for forecasting excess equity returns. The state vector we consider is
given by
where rex;t is the CRSP value-weighted return in excess of the risk-free rate; rreal;t is the real interest rate,
defined as the 3-Month Treasury bill rate divided by quarterly CPI; r t denotes the change in the nominal
3-Month Treasury bill rate; SPREAD t denotes the difference between the yields on the 10-year T-Bill and
3-month T-Bill; d t p t denotes the log dividend-price ratio for the S&P 500; REL t is the difference between
the 3-Month T-Bill and its 12-month moving average. Data are as in Welch and Goyal (2008).15
Our analysis focuses on the post-World War II period for which we can construct a series of tax policy
shocks, 1947Q1 to 2007Q4. As discussed in the previous section, the hypothesized response of equity prices
to fiscal policy shocks is highly dependent on monetary policy regime. To capture the Pre- and Post-Volcker
21
period in our data, we define the following subsamples: 1947Q1-1980Q2, and 1980Q3-2008Q2. We identify
the cutoff between 1980Q2 and 1980Q3 statistically. Specifically, we test for multiple unknown structural
breaks in the VAR system given in Equation 21 using the SupW test of Andrews (1993). We allow for
heteroskedasticity within regimes and implement the fixed regressor bootstrap of Hansen (2000) to calculate
the critical values for our conditional model. This cutoff also has economic importance as inflation peaked
in March 1980 following the beginning of the Volcker policy experiment in October 1979.16
With the VAR expressed as above, the discounted sum of revisions in expectations are estimated as
follows by Campbell (1991); Campbell and Ammer (1993); and Bernanke and Kuttner (2005):
1
X
Nex;t C1 .E t C1 Et / j rex;t C1Cj
j D1 (23)
D e10 A.I A/ 1
w t C1
1
X
Nreal;t C1 .E t C1 Et / j rreal;tC1Cj
j D0 (24)
D e20 .I A/ 1
w t C1
1
X
NCF ;t C1 .E t C1 Et / j d t C1Cj
j D0
(25)
D rex;t C1 E t .rex;t C1 / C Nex;t C1 C Nreal;tC1
D e10 C e10 A.I A/ 1 C e20 .I A/ 1 w t C1
In the above equations, e1 is a vector whose first element is equal to one and zero otherwise, which
corresponds to the position of the excess return on the CRSP value-weighted index in the VAR, and e2 is a
vector whose second element is equal to one and zero otherwise, corresponding to the position of the real
interest rate in the VAR. In the above equations, cash-flow news is the residual of the unexpected excess
return that cannot be explained by future excess returns and future real interest rates. Calculating cash-flow
news as the residual has the advantage of not having to directly model the dynamics of dividends, which
16 Ourmain results are quantitatively similar using cutoffs throughout the Volcker policy experiment of 1979Q3 to 1984Q1. For
example, Coibion and Gorodnichenko (2015) use 1983Q1 as the cutoff between the Pre- and Post-Volcker monetary policy regimes.
22
often exhibit seasonality and are non-stationary.
Including variables beyond the excess equity return and real risk free rate are important for improving the
forecast of future news about discount rates and cash-flows. For instance, both r t and REL t are known to
be good predictors of the real interest rate. As pointed out in Campbell and Ammer (1993), the relative bill
rate helps to capture the longer-run dynamics of changes in the interest rate without introducing long lags
that drive up the number of parameters to be estimated. The SPREAD t variable has been popular in the
predictability of returns literature as Campbell (1991) shows it tracks the business cycle relatively well. The
aggregate dividend-price ratio is another popular predictor of aggregate stock returns (see Cochrane (2008))
and is appealing from a theoretical perspective based on the Campbell and Shiller (1988) decomposition.
To gauge the impact of exogenous shocks to fiscal policy on these variables of interest, we include a
proxy for changes to fiscal policy in the VAR as an exogenous variable. Specifically, we let
w t C1 D F IS CAL t C1 C u t C1 (26)
where F ISCAL tC1 represents an exogenous shock to fiscal policy. The effects of the fiscal shock on current
(unexpected) excess returns, future excess return news, real interest rate news, and cash flow news are then
given by
Note that both the VAR dynamics and coefficient are relevant for characterizing the effects of fiscal policy.
To calculate standard errors for our news decomposition, we compute a recursive wild bootstrap as in
Mertens and Ravn (2013).17 Specifically, we estimate the VAR given in Equation 21 to obtain b
A and a vector
17 The VAR(1) system we implement removes much of the autocorrelation in the systems residuals. Specifically, the Durbin-
Watson test statistics for the pre- and post-Volcker periods yield p-values of 0.605 and 0.743, respectively. The Ljung-Box test on
the residuals of excess equity returns also fails to reject the null hypothesis of no autocorrelation for both subsamples at a lag length
23
b t C1 . For each bootstrap replication b D 1; :::; 2500, we draw a series of residuals
of residuals, w
bbtC1 D w
w b t C1 ebtC1 ; (31)
where e btC1 is a random variable taking on values of -1 or 1 with probability 0.5. We also generate a series
After estimating the effects of the fiscal shock given by equations 27-30 for each bootstrapped sample, we
Clearly from the above discussion, obtaining an unbiased estimate of the effect of a fiscal policy shock
on current excess returns relies on the exogeneity of the fiscal policy shock used in estimating Equation 26.18
In this subsection, we describe the four series of plausibly exogenous tax shocks used to obtain our primary
results: All Shocks, SVAR Shocks, Surprise Shocks, and Surprise SVAR Shocks.
We follow Romer and Romer (2010) in identifying All Shocks via a narrative approach. They conduct
a narrative analysis that focuses on identifying all significant federal tax actions from 1947 to 2007. The
sources used to identify the shocks are public government documents coming from both the executive branch
(e.g. Economic Report of the President) and the legislative branch (e.g. Congressional Record). Fifty
significant exogenous federal tax actions are identified and analysis is limited to tax actions that actually
change tax liabilities. The size of tax changes are measured at the time of implementation and are normalized
Common measures of tax shocks typically focus on changes in overall revenues and changes in cyclically
adjusted revenues (see Blanchard and Perotti (2002)). A concern with using these measures for tax shocks
is that they could reflect endogenous policy responses to the economic environment. The goal in using the
of 20.
18 While much macroeconomic literature has focused on this question, Leeper, Walker, and Yang (2013) provides an overview of
24
narrative analysis is to avoid the potential correlation of tax shocks with influences on aggregate outcomes.
To accomplish this, federal tax actions are classified into four categories: spending-driven, countercyclical,
deficit-driven, and for long-run growth. Spending-driven and countercyclical tax actions are considered en-
dogenous tax changes because they are typically taken in response to current or future economic conditions.
Once we exclude such actions from our analysis, we focus on the remaining deficit-driven tax change and the
long-run tax change aimed at raising growth in the long run. Both of these types of tax changes are claimed
to not be motivated by current or future short-run economic conditions. By focusing on these unexpected
policy actions, we can more clearly discern the stock market reaction to tax changes.
Research by Mertens and Ravn (2014) highlights the potential for measurement error in narrative shock
series such as our All Shocks variable due to necessary judgement calls in their construction, censoring prob-
lems when changes to the tax code are deemed revenue neutral, and discrepancies between actual changes
in tax revenues and the projected changes in tax liabilities captured by narrative shock series. To overcome
these measurement error issues, we construct the series SVAR Shocks following their proxy structural VAR
(SVAR) methodology. Specifically, this technique uses a series of narrative shocks, All Shocks, to identify
the structural shocks to a VAR such as the one in Blanchard and Perotti (2002). We estimate the impact
of discretionary tax shocks from a VAR using data on total tax revenues T t , government spending G t , and
where Z t D T t ; G t ; Y t 0 , d t contains deterministic terms including a constant, linear and quadratic terms,
u t D " t (34)
19 Data are from NIPA. Output is GDP in line 1 from Table 1.1.5; government spending is Federal Government Consumption
Expenditures and Gross Investment in line 6 from Table 3.9.5; total tax revenue is Federal Current Tax Receipts in line 2 of Table
3.2 plus Contributions for Government Social Insurance in line 11 of Table 3.2 less corporate income taxes from Federal Reserve
Banks (line 8 in Table 3.2). All series are deflated by the GDP deflator in line 1 from Table 1.1.9 and by the civilian population ages
16+ obtained from Francis and Ramey (2009).
25
While Blanchard and Perotti (2002), outline a series of identifying restrictions to map the reduced-form
residuals u t to the structural residuals " t . Mertens and Ravn (2014) augment the approach of Blanchard and
Perotti (2002) via two sets of additional identifying restrictions incorporating the information in the narrative
shocks m t
Em t "Tt D 0 (35)
Em t "G Y
t D Em t " t D 0 (36)
such that
T D Eu t m t (37)
where T is the first column of . Equation 35 states that the narrative shock series is contemporaneously
correlated with the structural tax shock. Equation 36 requires the narrative shock series to be uncorrelated
with contemporaneous spending and output shocks. Taken together, we obtain our second set of exogenous
tax shocks, SVAR Shocks by (1) estimating the reduced form VAR given by Equation 33, (2) regressing the
reduced form residuals on the narrative shocks series m t (i.e. our All Shocks series), and (3) rescaling the
response functions as in the BlanchardPerotti SVAR to generate the intended effect on tax revenues.
It is important to note that the timing of implementation for tax changes matters from a theoretical per-
spective. Yang (2005) and Leeper, Walker, and Yang (2013) point out the differences between anticipated
and unanticipated tax changes. Romer and Romer (2010) take this into account and find only slight evidence
of expectational effects. They find that the relationship between exogenous tax increases (when liabilities
actually change) and output is robust while including a proxy for fiscal news. Moreover, Figure 4 of Mertens
and Ravn (2012) shows that not correctly timing the implementation should bias our results toward finding
no effect.20 However, this evidence of expectational effects may only be true with respect to other macro
variables, and not financial variables as we use. To address some of these concerns and provide further ev-
idence, we consider the series of surprise narrative shocks in Mertens and Ravn (2012) as a third series of
20 Specifically,
the longer the lag between announcement and implementation the more negative the effect on output post-
announcement and the lower the overall effect on output once the tax change is implemented.
26
potentially exogenous tax shocks, Surprise Shocks. Our final series of tax shocks, Surprise SVAR Shocks, is
a series constructed by using the Surprise Shocks series as instruments m t in the proxy SVAR of Mertens
While statistical tests of exogeneity provide only evidence of exogeneity, we follow Mertens and Ravn
(2012) in running ordered probit tests to determine if our state variable can predict future signed binary tax
shocks as measured by our four series. While the optimal lag length determined by BIC is one, we present
the results of the ordered probit tests in Table 2 for both lag length one and lag length four. While evidence is
somewhat mixed for our All Shocks series, we fail to reject the null hypothesis of exogeneity with respect to
the financial state variables over the full sample for each of our other three tax shock series.22 These results
are consistent with the findings of Mertens and Ravn (2012), who find that tax shocks are not predictable
The concurrent effects of monetary policy are also frequently suggested as a possible issue with our es-
timation. We address this concern in two ways. First, we incorporate the federal funds rate as an additional
state variable and find quantitatively similar results. Second, we perform a Hall (1986) and Evans (1992) test
by regressing our tax shocks on the monetary policy shocks used in Bernanke and Kuttner (2005). Specif-
ically, we regress our tax shocks on four lags of our tax shocks, contemporaneous monetary policy shocks
and four lags of monetary policy shocks. We fail to reject the hypothesis of exogeneity (p-value = 0.4649)
over the period where both of these shocks are available, 1989Q2 to 2007Q4.
5. Results
In this section, we present our main results on the impact of tax policy on equity returns for the Pre- and
Post-Volcker periods. We then examine asymmetries in equity responses to fiscal policy shocks as predicted
by our model. We finally turn to whether our estimated responses are a function of changes to personal or
corporate taxes.
21 Our results are quantitatively similar using four series of unanticipated shocks identified by Mertens and Ravn (2012). Two
series dated effective dates of the tax changes, one raw series and one series filtered using the proxy SVAR, and two series using
the dates that the tax changes were signed, one raw series and one series filtered using the proxy SVAR.
22 Findings are quantitatively similar using linear probability models and Granger causality tests as in Hall (1986) and Evans
(1992).
27
Table 3 presents some of the main results of our study and shows the impact of various tax shocks on
each asset pricing channel. Panels A and B reflect estimates based on the Post- and Pre-Volcker time periods,
respectively, while Panel C shows the difference across time periods. For the Post-Volcker time period, we
find a one standard deviation increase in the tax rate (0.22 percent) is associated with a quarterly positive
equity excess return of 0.07 to 0.47 percent.23 The low end of this range of values is in line with with our
For each type of shock, Panel A also shows that the tax increase has had a negative effect on cash flow
news. However, the effect on real interest rate news is also negative, along with future excess returns, making
the discount rate news channel larger than the cash flow news channel. Again, the relative magnitudes of the
cash flow and real interest rate channel (1.5 times greater than the cash flow channel on the low end) are in
line with our theoretical estimate of a real interest rate channel that is 1.25 times greater than the cash flow
channel.
Importantly, regardless of the type of shock, the positive effect of tax shocks on the current excess return
is found to be significant at 1 percent levels. Additionally, our most exogenous measure of tax shocks in the
far right column, the Surprise SVAR shocks, also find significance for explaining this effect with regards to
the real interest rate news and cash flow news channels.
Panel B focuses on the Pre-Volcker time period. Regardless of the shock, we find that tax increases
have a significant negative effect on returns at the 1 percent level. The channels that drive this result are not
uniform across each shock, as the signs change depending on whether or not the shocks are based on the
SVAR.
Table 4 addresses the relevant question of whether or not equity markets respond symmetrically to tax
cuts versus tax increases. Similar to Table 3, there are three panels reflecting the Post and Pre-Volcker
time periods along with their Difference, but now we isolate the effects coming from Positive and Negative
shocks.
Panel A shows that for 3 out of the 4 shocks, the tax cuts are associated with greater effects on equity
23 Equivalently, a 1 percent tax increase is associated with a 0.33 to 2.32 percent higher current excess return.
28
markets and drive most of the significance. As was the case in Table 3 when both positive and negative
were combined, the tax cuts are leading to greater cash flow news, but discount rate news is also increasing.
The discount rate news is counteracting the positive cash flow news to such an extent that tax cuts are
associated with lower current excess returns. This finding that tax cuts have larger effects on equity markets
is consistent with the theoretical analysis in Table 1, which was based on a nonlinear New Keynesian model
with downward nominal wage rigidities. Recall, the mechanism is that downward nominal wage rigidities
prevent wages from falling as much when supply of labor increases. These relatively higher wages reduce
labor demand, which reduces output, dividends, and cash flow news and leads to a more negative current
excess return. This mechanism is not pertinent to a tax increase, which can lead to a lower labor supply and
Panel B shows the Pre-Volcker time period. Similar to Panel A, the tax cuts seem to drive the significance,
with 3 out of the 4 shocks suggesting tax cuts have greater effects than tax increases. And in contrast to Panel
A, tax cuts are now associated with positive effects on current excess returns. These findings are roughly
consistent with the theoretical analysis in Table 1. We find it interesting that both our theoretical and empirical
analysis suggest that tax cuts tend to have greater effects than tax increases, regardless of the time period.
Of interest is ensuring that equity returns respond to the personal income tax channel identified in our
model, rather than changes in corporate income taxes. We investigate this channel in the following subsec-
tion.
While our four exogenous tax shock series do not differentiate between these two channels, we appeal
to three alternative measures identified in the macroeconomics and finance literature to identify the personal
income tax channel, specifically. The first two measures, Personal Tax Shocks and Personal Tax SVAR
Shocks, are identified through narrative accounts of federal tax liability changes by Mertens and Ravn (2013).
As before, the Personal Tax SVAR Shocks series uses the narrative shocks as instruments for structural shocks
to tax revenues through the proxy SVAR methodology of Mertens and Ravn (2014). The third measure
is a market-based measure used by Leeper, Walker, and Yang (2013) and Kueng (2015). These papers have
the insight that, in the United States, municipal bonds are exempt from federal taxes, and the differential
29
tax treatment of municipal and treasury bonds can help identify news about tax changes.24 Specifically if a
municipal bond and a taxable bond have the same term to maturity, callability, market risk, credit risk, and
so on, then
T
X
Y tM
t D 1 D !k ke (38)
Yt
kDt
where Y tM is the yield at time t on a municipal bond maturing at time T , Y t is the yield at time t on a
taxable bond maturing at time T , and ke is the expected future tax rate at time k. Put differently, the one
minus the current municipal bond spread is a weighted average of discounted expected future tax rates. Our
empirical implementation uses yields from the Bond Buyer Go 20-Bond Municipal Bond Index, consisting
of 20 general obligation bonds that mature in 20 years, and the yields on the 20-year treasury to construct of
time series of . Similar in spirit to the augmented structural VAR in Leeper, Walker, and Yang (2013), we
use changes in as instruments for structural shocks to tax revenues through the proxy SVAR methodology
Table 5 shows similar results to those presented in previous tables. Specifically, the Post-Volcker time
period shown in Panel A suggests a tax increase results in a significantly positive effect on the current excess
return. Across each shock, the discount rate news dominates the cash flow news so that the overall effect is
positive. Panel B, the Pre-Volcker time period, shows the opposite effect. For this time period, the discount
rate news (sum of real interest rates and future excess returns) tends to be less negative across the different
6. Additional Tests
This section provides additional robustness tests of our main results. We first test our hypotheses within
the framework of Sialm (2009). Next, we test equity responses to changes in tax policy at a higher frequency
than the quarterly results presented above. We also present evidence that our documented responses across
monetary policy regimes are robust to economic expansion and contractions, as well as recent periods when
24 See Poterba (1989); Fortune (1996); Park (1997); Kueng (2015) for evidence that changes in municipal bond spreads predict
30
monetary policys role may be diminished due to the zero lower bound on nominal interest rates. Finally, we
estimate our model using a time varying parameter VAR framework and verify that our results are robust to
Sialm (2009) investigates, both in the time-series and cross section, whether changes in taxes have had
an impact on US equity prices. Over the period between 1913 and 2006, an effective tax yield series is
constructed for the marginal investor that takes into account variation over time in federal income taxes,
dividend taxes, and short- and long-term capital gains. This tax yield, along with numerous controls, is used
in annual time series regressions to back out its relationship with equity valuations.
We replicate Sialm (2009) using the exact same data and methodology. To show further robustness for
the results, Sialm (2009) splits the sample in half at 1960 and shows that both sub-samples continue to reflect
a negative relationship between tax yield and equity valuations. We perform a similar test, but instead split
the data in 1980. We split the time series at 1980 to reflect the change in the stance of monetary policy, as our
previous theoretical and empirical results suggest there should be a change in sign from negative to positive.
Table 6 shows our replication results with multiple robustness checks for the Pre-Volcker and Post-
Volcker periods. These robustness checks are borrowed exactly from Table 4, p.1370 of Sialm (2009). The
additional control variables are the interest rate, inflation rate, growth rate, quality spread, term spread, and
time trend. As pointed out in Sialm (2009), each of these variables are important to control for when trying to
extract the effects of tax yield on equity valuations. Results are qualitatively similar when the Post-Volcker
sample is extended to 2015 and the set of regressors is expanded to include ZLB, a binary variable equal to
one in years after 2008 and zero, otherwise, designed to capture periods in which the zero lower bound on
As can be seen from Table 6, the signs flip from negative to positive, and continue to remain highly
significant. Using a completely independent series from our own empirical analysis above, this provides
additional evidence for our story that the relationship between equity and taxes changed after 1980.
31
6.2. High Frequency Results
A potential concern of our results is that the response to fiscal policy shocks may be conflated with other
news over a quarterly horizon. In other words, the frequency of our analysis may not be narrow enough to
precisely identify the response of equity returns to news about future tax policy. A similar vein of doubt is
the critique of Leeper, Walker, and Yang (2013) who point out theoretical differences between the response
to unanticipated and anticipated tax shocks and highlight the importance of investor foresight in interpreting
fiscal policy responses. This point is especially important when dealing with a forward-looking efficient
stock market, which should have already incorporated information regarding expected changes in future tax
rates. While the series constructed in Section 4.2 rely on quarterly macroeconomic series to implement the
proxy SVAR method of Mertens and Ravn (2014), the measure of expected future tax rates introduced
in Section 5.2 is available at a higher frequency for a portion of our sample period. In this subsection, we
estimate the responses of current excess equity returns to daily and weekly changes in expected future tax
rates. Due to the forecasting requirements of our news decomposition, we do not further decompose current
excess equity returns due to noise in the forecasts of future returns at higher frequencies.
where rex;t !t Cj is the cumulative return in the CRSP value-weighted index in excess of the risk-free rate
over the event window t to t C j , t is the change in the expected future tax rate over t 1 to t, and
C ont rols t is a vector of additional controls. As defined in Section 5.2, t is equal to one minus the ratio
of the yield on municipal bond and the yield on a treasury bond of equal maturity. Our primary variable
of interest in these regressions is which captures the response in excess equity returns to changes in .
Given the limited time-series availability of at a high frequency, this variable is a natural complement to
the estimate of the current excess equity return responses presented in Panel B of Table 3.
We begin with results of daily return regressions. While these regressions have the tightest event win-
dows for identification purposes, a daily measure of t is available for a relatively short time period. For
these regressions, we use the Bloomberg BVAL Muni Benchmarks for yields on municipal bonds. This yield
curve is constructed with yields from high quality US municipal bonds with an average rating of Aaa from
32
Moodys and S&P and is available daily from 2009Q1 to 2015Q4. We consider maturities of 5, 10, and
30 years for our analysis. This data is only available over a limited sample period during the Post-Volcker
regime. We consider specifications both with and without Spread even though some of the concern of
credit spreads driving changes in are mitigated by yields based on Aaa instruments.
Panel A of Table 7 presents the results of these daily return regressions over one day windows and one
week windows. Beginning with the 5 year maturity, we see a significant positive relationship between excess
returns and the change in our implied tax measure. The implied effect on excess return becomes larger with
each maturity, suggesting a high persistence, which is consistent with our alternative measures of tax shocks,
We also investigate the impact of changes in on weekly excess returns. For these regressions, we use
the Bond Buyer Go 20-Bond Municipal Bond Index for yields on municipal bonds. This index consists of 20
general obligation bonds that mature in 20 years. The average rating of the 20 bonds is roughly equivalent to
Moodys Investors Services Aa2 rating and Standard & Poors Corporationss AA rating. Given the lower
rating of these municipal bonds, changes in credit spreads during the financial crisis, rather than changes in
expected future tax rates, may have driven changes in . For this reason, we estimate these weekly regressions
over two sample periods: 1980Q2 to 2008Q2 and 1980Q2 to 2015Q4. The first period avoids the financial
crisis and lines up well with the sample period we explore in our main results. The second period controls
for changes in credit spreads, Spread , explicitly by including the change in the spread between Baa-rated
Research suggests that recessionary and expansionary environments drive the interpretation of macroe-
conomic news as good or bad rather than being primarily driven by monetary policy regime.26 To test this
hypothesis within our setting, we include NBER, a binary variable equal to one if the observation occurs dur-
ing an NBER-dated recession and equal to zero otherwise, and its interaction with our fiscal policy variable.
Panel B of Table 7 presents the results of these regressions over one week windows, one month windows,
two month windows, and one quarter windows. Across each horizon, we find a significant positive effect of
the implied tax change on the excess return. The implied coefficient on the (0,12) Event Window (quarter
26 See McQueen and Roley (1993); Boyd, Hu, and Jagannathan (2005); Goldberg and Grisse (2013); Law, Song, and Yaron (2016)
among others.
33
horizon) corresponds to a 0.3438% increase in the excess return for a 1% increase in our tax rate. For com-
parison, our previous empirical estimates based on the SVAR Surprise tax shocks in Table 3 was 0.071%
for a one standard deviation increase in the tax rate (0.22%). Instead of assuming a 1% change but a 0.22%
change, the expected effect based on this regression is 0.075%, which is very close to the estimates based on
the SVAR Surprise tax shocks. In these regressions, we do not find that interaction between and NBER
This panel also enables us to examine the impact of the zero lower bound on nominal interest rates on
our findings, as in Law, Song, and Yaron (2016). Compared to Specifications 7 and 8 Panel A, we see little
change in the parameter estimates in Specifications 1 and 2 of Panel B after including data outside of the
financial crisis when the zero lower bound (ZLB) in interest rates was binding. In other words, the lack of
slack in adjusting nominal interest rates seems to have little impact on the response of real equity returns to
changes in expected tax rates and is insufficient to change the sign of our estimates.27
Our previous results do not rule out an omitted variable, such as a change in an aggregate risk factor,
being correlated with both market returns and fiscal policy shocks. In this section, we provide cross-sectional
evidence that our measure of fiscal policy shocks from the last section, , is not merely a proxy for changes
in aggregate risk.
We replace the market returns in Table 7 with long-short portfolio returns formed on firm characteristics
that proxy for a firms exposure to personal income tax shocks. By forming a long-short portfolio, these
returns should, at least partially, account for contemporaneous changes in risk insomuch as we are able to
construct portfolio legs with similar quantities of risk. To motivate these measures, we note that revisions
in future discount rates should be the same across the long and short legs if they have similar exposure
to aggregate risk. Thus, the timing and size of future after-tax cash flows should determine the differential
returns. Since the impact of tax increase on cash flow news is negative, we would expect firms with relatively
low after-tax cash flows to outperform firms with relatively high after-tax cash flows.
34
First, we sort stocks into portfolios based on tercile of Payout Ratio, equal to total dividends (CompuStat
field DVT) divided by net income (CompuStat field NI), as of June in the previous year following Fama
and French (1993). Panel A of Table 8 presents the parameter estimates from the regression of long-short
portfolio returns on . As predicted, firms with low payout ratios outperform those with high payout
ratios when expected future tax rates increase. While the difference at short maturities, that is when future
tax increases are expected to be short lived, are modest and often indistinguishable from zero. At longer
horizons, the differential return is statistically and economically significant. For a 30-year maturity of , low
payout ratio stocks outperform high payout ratio stocks by roughly 1% for a one standard deviation increase
in the tax rate (0.22%) at both the one day and one week window.
Next, we look at Institutional Ownership as a proxy of the proportion of equity held by taxable investors.
Institutional ownership may be positively correlated with payout ratio as documented by Allen, Bernardo,
and Welch (2000) with these effects working in opposite directions with respect to a firms exposure to fiscal
policy. Therefore, we control for a firms payout ratio by forming portfolios based on sorting firms first into
terciles of payout ratio and then terciles of institutional ownership. Institutional Ownership is equal to the
dollar amount of positions reported in 13F filings divided by the market capitalization of the firm, as June in
the previous year. Again we find that firms with high institutional ownership or a relatively low proportion
of equity held by taxable investors (low exposure to changes in future tax rates) tend to outperfom firms with
low institutional ownership (high exposure to changes in future tax rates), especially at longer maturities of
and for firms with higher dividends paid (larger payout ratios). For example at a maturity of of ten years,
we find that high institutional ownership firms outperform low institutional ownership firms by roughly 62
basis points in the middle tercile of payout ratio and 98 basis points for high payout ratio firms at the one
day window when future tax rates increase by one standard deviation.
Admittedly, our portfolios may differ in their quantities of risk. Panel B of Table 8 repeats the above
analysis replacing the raw returns of each portfolio leg with the abnormal return from the Fama-French three
i;t and bi;t are estimated using rolling regressions over the previous twelve months. Panel B of
where b
35
8 reports the loadings from the regression of long-short abnormal returns on . The results are largely
While we provide both theoretical and statistical evidence supporting a focus on broad monetary policy
regimes, our choice of sample periods may seem somewhat ad hoc. To this end, we estimate a Bayesian
time varying parameter VAR (TVP-VAR) in the spirit of Primiceri (2005). This model allows both the VAR
loadings in Equation 21 and the loadings on fiscal policy in Equation 26. While specifics pertaining to
the estimated model and our results within the framework of this model are available in Section 3 of the
Appendix, we briefly summarize our main takeaways from this analysis below.
For many of the estimates, the 68 percent coverage intervals are quite wide and do not allow us to reject
the null of zero response. However for both the All Shocks and Surprise Shocks series, the coverage interval
for overall equity response in the Post-Volcker period is positive with the range covering the fixed-loading
responses reported in Table 3. Results are similar for the difference in the overall response across the two
monetary policy regimes as well. The overall equity response increases with the onset of the Post-Volcker
regime, and the size of the estimated difference in the TVP-VAR is in line with those reported in the main
7. Conclusion
With the recent increase in attention on fiscal policy, we provide a critical theoretical and empirical
analysis that suggests a key driver of tax effects on equity markets is the Federal Reserve. With a more
aggressive stance of monetary policy to inflation and/or real activity since 1980, we find that tax cuts are
associated with lower excess equity returns, despite our findings of positive effects on cash flow news.
We conduct similar analysis for the Pre-1980 era and come to the opposite conclusion. With a less
aggressive monetary policy, the cash flow news is larger than the discount rate news, and tax cuts are as-
sociated with higher equity returns. These empirical findings are easily motivated by a standard theoretical
New Keynesian model that exhibits a shift in the aggressiveness of monetary policy.
Our empirical analysis is based on a wide range of measures for tax shocks, including those based on
Romer and Romer (2010), Mertens and Ravn (2012), municipal bond yield data, and also the tax yield data
36
from Sialm (2009). These data series allow us to provide inference at the weekly, monthly, quarterly, and
annual frequencies. And each of these series comes to the same conclusion: tax cuts are associated with
Overall, some will suggest the recent run-up in the stock market seems to contradict both our theoretical
and empirical analysis. We posit that our findings remain valid and that the recent experience could be due to
a few issues: (1) there are additional factors at play such as changes in regulation, government spending, and
repatriation that may be important, (2) because of the proximity to the zero lower bound monetary policy
may not be acting as aggressively as it did in previous post-1980 tightening cycles, and (3) investors are
unusually optimistic.
37
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Figure 1: Post- vs Pre-Volcker : Cash Flow versus Discount Rate Channels
This figure shows the excess equity returns across the Pre and Post Volcker regimes in response
to a one standard deviation income tax rate increase (0.22%). The only difference across the two
calibrations is the definition of the monetary policy rule. In the Pre-Volcker, D 1:32, y D
0:94, R D 0:91. In the Post-Volcker, D 1:58, y D 2:21, R D 0:9. We isolate the effects
of each channel by showing what the excess return would be if only one channel was active at a
time. The left panel, the Post-Volcker, shows the excess return would be negative if the excess
return was only a function of cash flow news (dashed red line). Instead, the discount rate channel
dominates and the overall effect is positive. The right panel, the Pre-Volcker, shows the excess
return would be positive if the excess return was only a function of discount rate news (dashed blue
line). Instead, the cash flow channel dominates and the overall effect is negative. The discount rate
channel dominates for the Post-Volcker because of the greater response to output growth, which
generates greater changes in real interest rates and dampens the decline in cash flow news.
0.4
5 10 15 20 0 5 10 15 20 25
Quarters (t) Quarters (t)
Dividends Output
Percent (deviation from steady state)
0 0.1
0.1 0.05
0.2 0
0.3 0.05
0.4 0.1
0 5 10 15 20 25 0 5 10 15 20 25
Quarters (t) Quarters (t)
0.02
2 47
0.04
4
0.06
6 0.08
0 5 10 15 20 25 0 5 10 15 20 25
Quarters (t) Quarters (t)
Figure 2: Post vs Pre-Volcker vs RBC Responses to Increase in Income Tax Rate
This figure displays economic variables across the Pre and Post Volcker regimes and the RBC
model, in response to a one standard deviation income tax rate increase (0.22%). The only differ-
ence across the two calibrations is the definition of the monetary policy rule. In the Pre-Volcker,
D 1:32, y D 0:94, R D 0:91. In the Post-Volcker, D 1:58, y D 2:21, R D 0:9. The
RBC framework eliminates the monetary policy rule and removes nominal rigidities. This figure
shows the importance of incorporating a role for monetary policy and nominal rigidities. In contrast
to the Pre-Volcker (dashed red line) and RBC (solid black line) settings, the Post-Volcker (dashed
blue line) monetary policy of putting greater weight on output growth leads to a larger effect on real
interest rate news and a smaller decline in dividends, so that the discount rate channel dominates
and the current excess return for Post-Volcker is positive.
0.05
NK: PostVolcker, 0
0 NK: PreVolcker
RBC Model 0.5
0.05
0.1 1
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 0 5 10 15 20 25 30
Quarters (t) Quarters (t)
Dividends Output
Percent (deviation from steady state) Percent (deviation from steady state)
1 0.2
0
0
0.2
1
0.4
2 0.6
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 0 5 10 15 20 25 30
Quarters (t) Quarters (t)
Real Interest Rate Consumption
Percent (deviation from steady state) Percent (deviation from steady state)
0.01 0
0.1
0
0.2
0.01
0.3
0.02 0.4
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 0 5 10 15 20 25 30
Quarters (t) Quarters (t)
48
Figure 3: Asymmetric Responses Due to Downward Nominal Wage Rigidities
This figure shows the responses in the Post-Volcker regime to a tax cut (dashed black line), a tax increase (dashed blue line),
and the difference (multiplied by 10 for ease of exposition) in responses to the tax cut and tax increase (solid red line). The left
panel, which exhibits downward nominal wage rigidities, shows that in response to an income tax cut, labor supply rises with the
increased incentive to work causing wages to decline. However, wages do not fall as much in the presence of downward nominal
wage rigidities so that labor demand doesnt rise as much. With not as much labor demand, output along with dividends increase
less so that cash flow news is less positive and the overall effect is a larger negative effect on equity returns when compared to the
positive effects coming from tax increases. The right panel shows the case with no downward nominal wage rigidities, and the
difference (solid red line) is nearly zero across each response. This demonstrates the potential importance of including downward
nominal wage rigidities to generate the asymmetric responses.
With Downward Nominal Wage Rigidities No Downward Nominal Wage Rigidities
Excess Equity Return Output Excess Equity Return Output
Percent (deviation from steady state) Percent (deviation from steady state) Percent (deviation from steady state) Percent (deviation from steady state)
0.1 0.2 0.1 0.2
Difference*10 Difference*10
0.05 0.1 0.05 0.1
W Investment W Investment
Percent (deviation from steady state) Percent (deviation from steady state) Percent (deviation from steady state) Percent (deviation from steady state)
0.04 0.4 0.04 0.4
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
Panel A: Post-Volcker
Current Excess Return 0:0515 0:0528 0:0013
Future Excess Return 0:0030 0:0034 0:0005
Real Interest Rate News 0:2588 0:2574 0:0014
Cash Flow News 0:2103 0:2080 0:0023
Panel B: Pre-Volcker
Current Excess Return 0:0502 0:0494 0:0008
Future Excess Return 0:0513 0:0523 0:0011
Real Interest Rate News 0:2272 0:2258 0:0014
Cash Flow News 0:3287 0:3276 0:0011
50
Table 2: Tests for exogeneity of tax shocks
The table reports the results for tests of exogeneity of the tax shocks using ordered probit regres-
sions. The values reported are p-values of likelihood ratio tests of the hypothesis that 1 lag and 1
to 4 lags of the state variables have no predictive power for the timing of tax changes. The state
variables are the excess return, real interest rate, change in the 3-month T-bill rate, the difference
in yields on the 10-year T-Note and 3-month T-Bill, the log dividend price ratio, and the difference
between the 3-month T-Bill and its 12-month moving average. All tests are specified as H0 W D 0
against H1 W 0 where is the coefficient vector of lagged observables. Tax shocks are de-
scribed in Section 4.2.
Surprise
SVAR Surprise
All Shocks SVAR
Shocks Shocks
Shocks
51
Table 3: The impact of exogenous tax shocks on equity returns
This table reports the impact of exogenous tax shocks on the current excess equity return, and the
discounted sums of future excess equity returns, current and future real interest rates, and current
and future dividends (cash flows). The six-variable VAR(1) used to construct excess equity return
and real interest rate forecasts is estimated over the sample indicated in the column headings. The
VAR state variables are defined in the text. Tax shocks are described in Section 4.2. Standard errors
are calculated by the bootstrap algorithm discussed in Section 4. ; ; and denote significance
at the 10 percent, 5 percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively.
Surprise Surprise
All Shocks SVAR Shocks
Shocks SVAR Shocks
Panel C: Difference
Current Excess Return 0:6735 0:1762 0:1820 0:1180
Future Excess Return 0:5162 0:1740 0:2087 0:1217
Real Interest Rate News 0:6525 0:0053 0:1283 0:0240
Cash Flow News 0:4950 0:0050 0:1552 0:0278
52
Table 4: Asymmetries in the impact of exogenous tax shocks on equity returns
This table reports the impact of positive and negative exogenous tax shocks on the current excess equity return, and the discounted
sums of future excess equity returns, current and future real interest rates, and current and future dividends (cash flows). The
six-variable VAR(1) used to construct excess equity return and real interest rate forecasts is estimated over the sample indicated
in the column headings. The VAR state variables are defined in the text. Tax shocks are described in Section 4.2. Responses for
negative tax shocks are multiplied by negative one to ease exposition. Standard errors are calculated by the bootstrap algorithm
discussed in Section 4. ; ; and denote significance at the 10 percent, 5 percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively.
All Shocks SVAR Shocks Surprise Shocks Surprise SVAR Shocks
Positive Negative Positive Negative Positive Negative Positive Negative
Panel C: Difference
Current Excess Returns 0:0225 0:8572 0:1343 0:2147 0:1993 0:1537 0:0333 0:2015
Future Excess Returns 0:0408 0:6212 0:1427 0:2035 0:1752 0:2182 0:0508 0:1900
Real Interest Rate News 0:6302 0:7712 0:0410 0:0300 0:2527 0:0312 0:0372 0:0855
Cash Flow News 0:6485 0:5353 0:0325 0:0187 0:2288 0:0958 0:0198 0:0740
Table 5: Personal income tax change and equity returns
This table reports the impact of personal income tax changes on the current excess equity return,
and the discounted sums of future excess equity returns, current and future real interest rates, and
current and future dividends (cash flows). The six-variable VAR(1) used to construct excess equity
return and real interest rate forecasts is estimated over the sample indicated in the column headings.
The VAR state variables are defined in the text. Our personal income tax shock series are described
in Section 5.2. The column All Shocks from Table 3 is included for reference. Standard errors are
calculated by the bootstrap algorithm discussed in Section 4. ; ; and denote significance at
the 10 percent, 5 percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively.
Personal Tax Personal Tax SVAR
All Shocks
Shocks SVAR Shocks Shocks
Panel C: Difference
Current Excess Return 0:6735 0:3957 0:1323 0:0955
Future Excess Return 0:5162 0:4395 0:1165 0:1005
Real Interest Rate News 0:6525 0:1340 0:0020 0:0800
Cash Flow News 0:4950 0:1777 0:0177 0:0750
54
Table 6: Taxes and valuation ratios
This table replicates the regression results of Sialm (2009) splitting the sample on monetary policy
regimes. The dependent variable is equity Q and is obtained from the Federal Reserve Boards
Flow of Funds Accounts as the ratio between the market value of equities outstanding of nonfinan-
cial corporate business (FL103164003) and the net worth at market value of nonfarm nonfinancial
corporate business (FL102090005). Tax yield is defined as in Sialm (2009) as the sum of the div-
idend tax rate times the dividend yield, the short-term capital gains tax rate times the short-term
capital gains yield, and the long-term capital gains tax rate times the long-term capital gains yield.
Growth rate is the per capita real growth rate of aggregate output. Quality spread is the difference
in yields between Baa and Aaa bonds. Term spread is the difference between yields in Aaa bonds
and the one-year interest rate on commercial paper by Shiller. Data are annual. Standard errors are
Newey-West adjusted using a four-year lag. ; ; and denote significance at the 10 percent, 5
percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively.
Pre-Volcker Post-Volcker
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)
55
Table 7: Excess returns around changes in expected future tax rates
This table reports parameter estimates from the regression of excess returns on changes in expected future tax rates () and other
controls. The dependent variable in each regression is the CRSP value-weighted index return in excess of the risk-free rate over the
window specified in the column header. is the change in the expected future tax rate equal to one minus the ratio of the yield
on municipal bond and the yield on a treasury bond of equal maturity. NBER is a binary variable equal to one if the observation
occurs during an NBER-dated recession and equal to zero otherwise. Panel A reports parameter estimates for regressions using
daily excess returns. For this panel, the sample period is 2009Q1 to 2015Q4 (n D 1743). is constructed using the Bloomberg
BVAL Muni Benchmark with maturity reported in the row Maturity. Panel B reports parameter estimates for regressions using
weekly excess returns. For these panels, the sample period for odd columns is 1980Q2 to 2008Q2 (n D 1455), while the sample
period for even columns is 1980Q2 to 2015Q4 (n D 1851). is constructed using the Bond Buyer Go 20-Bond Municipal Bond
Index, which has maturity of 20 years. Standard errors are Newey-West adjusted with lag length eight. ; ; and denote
significance at the 10 percent, 5 percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively.
Panel A: Daily Event Windows
56
Maturity 2 yr 5 yr 10 yr 30 yr 2 yr 5 yr 10 yr 30 yr
(0,1) Event Window (0,4) Event Window (0,8) Event Window (0,12) Event Window
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8)
Maturity 2 yr 5 yr 10 yr 30 yr 2 yr 5 yr 10 yr 30 yr
Appendix for Taxes and the Fed
1
fall more.1 Both of these effects combine to make the current excess return less positive in response to the tax
increase. The intuition for the smaller decline in real interest rates is that as price adjustment costs become
larger, the aggregate supply curve becomes flatter so that the tax increase influences the economy less. The
dividends (D t D Y t wt Lt I t ) fall more because investment does not fall as much in the medium-long
run (the flatter supply curve reduces the effects of the tax increase on investment so investment is relatively
higher and dividends are relatively lower).
With regards to market power, as the elasticity of substitution across goods increases, the market power
declines. While this does not largely influence the real interest rate channel, it does influence the dividends.
The dividends are a function of the firms profits and as market power decreases, profits become smaller and
less volatile. With dividends declining less over the medium-long run, current excess returns become more
positive as the market power decreases.
1 Beyond the price adjustment costs value of 35, there is a monotonic relationship.
2 This monotonically holds for values declining until D 0:994. For values less than 0.994 for the subjective discount factor,
the real interest rates do not decline as much and responses level off, as shown by the channels for 0.99 in Table A.1.
3 Intertemporal elasticity of substitution values around 0.2 are consistent with a substantial literature in macroeconomics, see
for example Chari, Kehoe, and McGrattan (2002); House and Shapiro (2006); Piazzesi, Schneider, and Tuzel (2007), as well as
empirical work by Barsky, Juster, Kimball, and Shapiro (1997); Campbell and Mankiw (1989); Hall (1988).
2
1.4. Production Parameters
The capital share of income and depreciation rate parameters pin down the amount of capital. With a
higher share of capital or lower depreciation rate, investment does not rise as much initially (investment rises
initially due to the negative wealth effect) in the short-medium term as capital makes up a larger percentage
of GDP and becomes less volatile. With investment not rising as much, dividends do not decline as much,
so that the current excess return becomes more positive as the capital share of income rises or depreciation
rate declines.
3
The elasticity of substitution across labor inputs pins down the market power of households in labor
supply. The table shows that as market power increases, the cash flow news declines more. This is con-
sistent with more volatile responses of labor and investment. The more market power, the more elastic the
households labor supply so that investment and labor rise more initially, resulting in a greater initial decline
in dividends. Over the medium-long run, labor declines to a greater extent with more market power, so that
output declines more as do dividends. The overall effect is greater declines in dividends and a less positive
response of current excess returns as the market power of workers rises.
For the main results of our paper, we largely relied on estimates coming from Coibion and Gorodnichenko
(2015). Coibion and Gorodnichenko (2015) follow Orphanides (2005) and use Greenbook data and least
squares estimation for two time periods: (1) 1969-1978 and (2) 1983-2002. For the robustness of our theo-
retical results, we re-do their analysis for the time period 1979Q3 to 2007Q4. Each window between FOMC
meetings represents one time period. This provides alternative estimates for the monetary policy rule, which
is modeled as a function of the previous periods federal funds rate, the Greenbook time t inflation rate, and
the Greenbook output growth at time t .
We find values of 0.8 for the inertia coefficient, 1.8 for the inflation coefficient, and 1.15 for the output
growth for the Post-Volcker time period. These values are within confidence intervals of our main results,
4
which for clarity were 0.9 for the inertia coefficient, 1.58 for the inflation coefficient and 2.21 for the output
growth coefficient.
Since Greenbook data is only available post-1969 yielding a relatively short time series to estimate our
pre-Volcker policy rule, we supplement this data with forecasts of future inflation and output growth con-
structed using a large panel of macroeconomic data. Specifically, we regress the Greenbook forecasts used
in estimating the monetary policy rule from 1969 to 1978 on variables from the FRED-MD database selected
using an elastic net where the regularization parameters are chosen using cross validation. These estimates
are then used to form forecasts from 1959 to 1968.4 The results for the Pre-Volcker estimation are included
in the main text.
We show in Figure A.1 the responses to the setup with the estimated rule. We also show responses based
on the calibration in the main text but with different values for the output growth coefficient. Specifically,
we use one standard error deviations from the point estimate of 2.2, which is 1.4 and 3.
While we provide both theoretical and statistical evidence supporting a focus on broad monetary policy
regimes, our choice of sample periods may seem somewhat ad hoc. In this section, we estimate a Bayesian
time varying parameter VAR (TVP-VAR) in the spirit of Primiceri (2005). This model allows both the VAR
loadings in Equation 21 and the loadings on fiscal policy in Equation 26. Specifically, we estimate the
following VAR model:
Z t D X t0 AQ t C t t
(A.2)
X t0 D I 1; Z t0 1 ; F IS CAL t ;
where AQ t is a stacked vector containing all coefficients of the right hand side of equation 21. Var. t / D In
and the operator denotes the Kronecker product.
The dynamics of the time-varying parameters (A t ) are following a driftless random walk:
At D At 1 C t ; (A.3)
4 Additional details regarding these forecasts are available from the authors upon request.
5
The vector of innovations t ; t is assumed to be jointly normally distributed with variance-covariance
matrix:
" #
In 0
Var. t ; t / D ; (A.4)
0 Q
1 1
B0 N.BOLS ; 4 V .BOLS //;
2
Q I W .kQ V .B1 /; /;
OLS (A.5)
I W .I.M /; M C 1/
where has the size of the training sample, the size of the training sample defines the degrees of freedom for
Q. Finally, the parameter kQ D 0:1 defines prior beliefs about the degree of time variation in the parameters,
covariances and volatilities.5
Estimation for this reduced form VAR is carried out using Bayesian methods for the sample from 1953:Q1
to 2007:Q4. For approximating the posterior distribution, 50,000 iterations of the Gibbs sampler are used and
we drop the first 20,000 iterations for convergence. For breaking the autocorrelation of the draws, only every
10th iteration is kept. Our final estimates are therefore based on 3,000 iterations. The sample autocorrelation
functions of the draws die out rather quickly. Furthermore, the convergence diagnostics reveal satisfactory
results.6
Panel A of Figure A.2 plots the posterior median of the equity return response to the All Shocks series of
fiscal policy shocks through time. While time-series variation in the response is evident, the broad pattern
that fiscal policys effect on excess equity returns depending on monetary policy regime remains. During
the Pre-Volcker regime, stocks respond negatively to exogenous increases in the tax rate with the posterior
median response falling below zero in each period. With the onset of the Post-Volcker regime, the response
becomes positive. Moreover, these responses dont appear to vary substantially during NBER recessions with
the exception of the run-up to early 1990s recession. Panel B plots the posterior median of the combined
5 As a sensitivity check, we also experimented with other value combinations of these coefficients. The responses obtained are
robust to those presented.
6 A detailed overview can be obtained upon request.
6
response of discount rates (both real interest rates and the future equity returns) to fiscal policy shocks.
Again, responses are volatile around the 1987 crash and the early 1990s recession, but overall results are
consistent with our previous findings.
Table A.3 presents the posterior medians for all equity response channels by monetary policy regime for
each of our exogenous tax shock series. For many of the estimates, the 68 percent coverage intervals are quite
wide and do not allow us to reject the null of zero response. However for both the All Shocks and Surprise
Shocks series, the coverage interval for overall equity response in the Post-Volcker period is positive with the
range covering the fixed-loading responses reported in Table 3. Results are similar for the difference in the
overall response across the two monetary policy regimes as well. The overall equity response to increases
with the onset of the Post-Volcker regime, and the size of the estimated difference in the TVP-VAR is in line
with those reported in the main results of the paper.
7
Figure A.1: Post-Volcker Responses Based on Estimation and Robustness
This figure shows the economic responses for the Post Volcker regime (based on estimated param-
eters and the main framework at different values for the output growth coefficient) in response to
a one standard deviation income tax rate increase (0.22%). The only difference across the two cal-
ibrations is the definition of the monetary policy rule. For the Post-Volcker based on the estimated
rule, D 1:8, y D 1:15, R D 0:8. For the Post-Volcker based on the main results, D 1:58,
y D 1:4 or y D 3, and R D 0:9. We use the values of 1.4 and 3 because these are -/+ 1
standard error (0.8) based on the estimates in Coibion and Gorodnichenko (2011). The results are
similar to what are presented in the main text: in response to a tax increase, the discount rate news
dominates the cash flow news so that the overall effect is positive.
0.1
0.5
0.05
0
0
0.05 0.5
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 0 5 10 15 20 25 30
Quarters (t) Quarters (t)
Dividends Output
Percent (deviation from steady state) Percent (deviation from steady state)
0 0.2
0.2 0.1
0.4 0
0.6 0.1
0.8 0.2
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 0 5 10 15 20 25 30
Quarters (t) Quarters (t)
Real Interest Rate Consumption
3 Percent (deviation from steady state) Percent (deviation from steady state)
x 10
5 0
0.05
0
0.1 NK: PostVolcker (Main): y = 1.4
5 NK: PostVolcker (Main): y = 3.0
0.15
NK: PostVolcker Estimated
10 0.2
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 0 5 10 15 20 25 30
Quarters (t) Quarters (t)
8
Figure A.2: TVP-VAR response to tax shocks
This figure presents the time-varying effect of a positive tax shock on the current excess return and
discount rate news. Tax shocks are the All Shocks series described in Section 4.2. The estimation
follows Primiceri (2005) and is described in Section 3. The posterior median of the responses is
plotted. The shaded areas coincide with NBER recessions.
Panel A: Current Excess Return
9
Table A.1: Robustness of simulated results to changes in model parameters
This table reports the impact of a positive exogenous tax shock on the current excess equity return, and the discounted sums of
future excess equity returns, current and future real interest rates, and current and future cash flows. Data are the solutions to the
DSGE model described in Section 3. In the first column of each panel, the results from our preferred calibration is presented for
reference.
Panel A: Monetary Policy Rule Parameters
Output Growth
Inertia Coefficient Inflation Coefficient
Coefficient
( D 0:90) ( D 1:58) (y D 2:2)
Baseline 0.00 0.95 1.25 2 1.2 2.4
Current Excess Return 0:0515 0:0419 0:0534 0:0600 0:0565 0:0286 0:0434
Future Excess Return 0:0030 0:0081 0:0002 0:0135 0:0053 0:0646 0:0030
Real Interest Rate News 0:2588 0:2489 0:2624 0:3009 0:2475 0:2815 0:2704
Cash Flow News 0:2103 0:2151 0:2088 0:2274 0:1963 0:1883 0:2239
Current Excess Return 0:0515 0:0496 0:0554 0:0508 0:0486 0:0895 0:0160
Future Excess Return 0:0030 0:0011 0:0091 0:0060 0:0017 0:0026 0:0057
Real Interest Rate News 0:2588 0:2657 0:2446 0:2535 0:2528 0:2776 0:2437
Cash Flow News 0:2103 0:2150 0:1983 0:2086 0:2059 0:1907 0:2221
Table A.1: Robustness of simulated results to changes in model parameters (cont.)
Current Excess Return 0:0515 0:0309 0:0716 0:0627 0:0434 0:0515 0:0044 0:0494 0:0530
Future Excess Return 0:0030 0:0045 0:0015 0:0022 0:0029 0:0030 0:0001 0:0029 0:0027
Real Interest Rate News 0:2588 0:2511 0:2664 0:2586 0:2574 0:2588 0:0174 0:2388 0:2820
Cash Flow News 0:2103 0:2246 0:1963 0:1982 0:2169 0:2103 0:0129 0:1924 0:2317
Current Excess Return 0:0515 0:0262 0:0599 0:0630 0:0453 0:0243 0:0872 0:0734 0:0299
Future Excess Return 0:0030 0:0072 0:0043 0:0064 0:0003 0:0045 0:0014 0:0041 0:0027
Real Interest Rate News 0:2588 0:2762 0:2377 0:2400 0:2667 0:2517 0:2571 0:2278 0:2624
Cash Flow News 0:2103 0:2429 0:1821 0:1834 0:2217 0:2228 0:1713 0:1586 0:2298
Current Excess Return 0:0515 0:0502 0:0381 0:0556 0:0516 0:0498 0:0603 0:0624
Future Excess Return 0:0030 0:0513 0:0092 0:0034 0:0030 0:0030 0:0006 0:0016
Real Interest Rate News 0:2588 0:2272 0:2784 0:2712 0:2569 0:2526 0:2607 0:2573
Cash Flow News 0:2103 0:3287 0:2312 0:2121 0:2083 0:2057 0:1998 0:1933
Table A.2: Robustness of simulated results to estimated monetary policy rule
This table reports the impact of a positive exogenous tax shock on the current excess equity return, and the discounted sums of
future excess equity returns, current and future real interest rates, and current and future cash flows. Data are the solutions to the
DSGE model described in Section 3. In the first column of each panel, the results from our preferred calibration with the alternative
monetary policy rule is presented for reference.
Panel A: Monetary Policy Rule Parameters
Output Growth
Inertia Coefficient Inflation Coefficient
Coefficient
( D 0:80) ( D 1:8) (y D 1:15)
Baseline 0.00 0.9 1.5 2.5 1.05 2
Current Excess Return 0:0765 0:0730 0:0414 0:1589 0:0207 0:1377 0:0620
Future Excess Return 0:0079 0:0278 0:0498 0:0238 0:0173 0:0867 0:0045
Real Interest Rate News 0:2299 0:2217 0:2573 0:2050 0:2325 0:1892 0:2458
Cash Flow News 0:1613 0:1766 0:1660 0:0699 0:1945 0:1382 0:1884
Current Excess Return 0:0765 0:0734 0:0817 0:1469 0:0638 0:1463 0:0374
Future Excess Return 0:0079 0:0053 0:0129 0:0764 0:0022 0:0678 0:0149
Real Interest Rate News 0:2299 0:2345 0:2218 0:2351 0:2255 0:2121 0:2331
Cash Flow News 0:1613 0:1664 0:1530 0:1646 0:1595 0:1336 0:1808
Table A.2: Robustness of simulated results to estimated monetary policy rule (cont.)
Current Excess Return 0:0765 0:0837 0:0772 0:0693 0:0915 0:0590 0:0151 0:0833 0:0696
Future Excess Return 0:0079 0:0207 0:0003 0:0047 0:0262 0:0001 0:0212 0:0269 0:0103
Real Interest Rate News 0:2299 0:2209 0:2376 0:2375 0:2203 0:2194 0:1783 0:2025 0:2607
Cash Flow News 0:1613 0:1580 0:1607 0:1635 0:1550 0:1602 0:1420 0:1461 0:1808
Current Excess Return 0:0765 0:0459 0:1090 0:0470 0:0826 0:0156 0:1807 0:1573 0:0400
Future Excess Return 0:0079 0:0117 0:0326 0:0036 0:0339 0:0233 0:1036 0:0773 0:0154
Real Interest Rate News 0:2299 0:2432 0:2127 0:2888 0:2152 0:2344 0:1983 0:1906 0:2417
Cash Flow News 0:1613 0:1857 0:1363 0:2453 0:1665 0:1955 0:1211 0:1106 0:1863
Current Excess Return 0:0765 0:0502 0:0381 0:0556 0:0776 0:0779 0:0849 0:0950
Future Excess Return 0:0079 0:0513 0:0092 0:0034 0:0087 0:0102 0:0131 0:0369
Real Interest Rate News 0:2299 0:2272 0:2784 0:2712 0:2279 0:2234 0:2248 0:1815
Cash Flow News 0:1613 0:3287 0:2312 0:2121 0:1590 0:1557 0:1531 0:1234
Table A.3: The impact of exogenous tax shocks on equity returns in a TVP-VAR framework
This table reports the impact of exogenous tax shocks on the current excess equity return, and the
discounted sums of future excess equity returns, current and future real interest rates, and current
and future dividends (cash flows) in a Bayesian time varying parameter VAR (TVP-VAR) frame-
work. The six-variable VAR(1) used to construct excess equity return and real interest rate forecasts
is estimated over the sample 1947Q1 to 2007Q4. The VAR state variables are defined in the text.
Tax shocks are described in Section 4.2. The estimation follows Primiceri (2005) and is described
in Section 3. The posterior median of the responses over the Pre- and Post-Volcker periods are
reported in Panel A and B, respectively. Posterior medians in bold do not contain 0.0 in the 68 per-
cent coverage of the posterior distribution. The interval of the 68 percent coverage of the posterior
distribution is presented in parentheses below the posterior median.
Surprise Surprise SVAR
All Shocks SVAR Shocks
Shocks Shocks
Panel C: Difference
Current Excess Return -0.5785 -0.0463 -0.3719 0.0085
(-0.9299, -0.2331) (-0.1567, 0.0645) (-0.6674, -0.0824) (-0.0902, 0.1069)
Future Excess Return 0.3650 0.0290 0.2036 -0.0174
(-1.7058, 2.4682) (-1.0017, 1.0337) (-1.6167, 2.0137) (-1.0431, 0.9750)
Real Interest Rate News -0.0055 0.0069 0.0008 0.0149
(-1.6301, 1.6337) (-0.8343, 0.8318) (-1.4614, 1.4856) (-0.8023, 0.8296)
Cash Flow News -0.1913 -0.0126 -0.1563 -0.0053
(-2.6187, 2.1942) (-1.2052, 1.1919) (-2.3146, 1.9879) (-1.2540, 1.2397)
14