Tax competition leads to higher long-term rates, defying economic consensus.
The article explores how tax competition between two countries affects capital income tax rates. They use a neoclassical growth model with perfect capital mobility to show that taxes can be higher with capital mobility than without it. The study finds that source-based capital income tax rates are positive in the short run and zero in the long run due to a dynamic capital-tax externality. The convergence to zero is slower in an open economy compared to a closed one.