The Inflation-adjusted Rate of Return on Corporate Debt and Equity, 1966-1980


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"This report has two main objectives: First, to determine whether the real tax rate on investment income has proven sensitive to inflation; second, to determine the extent to which real returns to debt and equity, based on published data, differ from those based on inflation-adjusted data. The scope of the inflationary distortion in corporate income is assessed, and the resulting estimate is used to calculate the real after-tax rate of return on Canadian corporate debt and equity for the 1966-80 period. The author departs from previous studies of the Canadian corporate sector in his definition of returns to corporate activity. His definition reflects the view that the cost of corporate capital is governed by the after-tax returns accruing to individual investors from their debt and equity claims on the corporate sector. Two empirical regularities are found: 1) the real after-tax rate of return on debt and equity calculated with full inflation accounting is consistently below the rate based on unadjusted data; and, 2) the inflation-adjusted real tax rate on investment income appears to increase with inflation over the sample period." -- Abstract.




Stocks, Bonds, Bills, and Inflation


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Capital Formation and Inflation


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The Great Inflation


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Controlling inflation is among the most important objectives of economic policy. By maintaining price stability, policy makers are able to reduce uncertainty, improve price-monitoring mechanisms, and facilitate more efficient planning and allocation of resources, thereby raising productivity. This volume focuses on understanding the causes of the Great Inflation of the 1970s and ’80s, which saw rising inflation in many nations, and which propelled interest rates across the developing world into the double digits. In the decades since, the immediate cause of the period’s rise in inflation has been the subject of considerable debate. Among the areas of contention are the role of monetary policy in driving inflation and the implications this had both for policy design and for evaluating the performance of those who set the policy. Here, contributors map monetary policy from the 1960s to the present, shedding light on the ways in which the lessons of the Great Inflation were absorbed and applied to today’s global and increasingly complex economic environment.













Rapport Techniques


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The Goal of Price Stability


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Corporate Capital Structures in the United States


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The research reported in this volume represents the second stage of a wide-ranging National Bureau of Economic Research effort to investigate "The Changing Role of Debt and Equity in Financing U.S. Capital Formation." The first group of studies sponsored under this project, which have been published individually and summarized in a 1982 volume bearing the same title (Friedman 1982), addressed several key issues relevant to corporate sector behavior along with such other aspects of the evolving financial underpinnings of U.S. capital formation as household saving incentives, international capital flows, and government debt management. In the project's second series of studies, presented at the National Bureau of Economic Research conference in January 1983 and published here for the first time along with commentaries from that conference, the central focus is the financial side of capital formation undertaken by the U.S. corporate business sector. At the same time, because corporations' securities must be held, a parallel focus is on the behavior of the markets that price these claims.