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Durability of capital goods: taxes and market structure

Abstract

This paper examines the durability of capital goods produced under different market structures when tax considerations are included. Since investment tax credit and depreciation allowances are realized by the owner of the durable good, the durability of products produced by an industry which sells its output differs from that of an industry which rents. For each of these two commercial forms, both monopolistic and competitive market structure are considered. Potential gains from different forms of regulation are discussed.
Authors:
Raviv, A; [1]  Zemel, E
  1. Carnegie-Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh
Publication Date:
Apr 01, 1977
Product Type:
Journal Article
Reference Number:
EPA-; EDB-77-106498
Resource Relation:
Journal Name: Econometrica; (United Kingdom); Journal Volume: 45:3
Subject:
29 ENERGY PLANNING, POLICY AND ECONOMY; COMMERCIAL SECTOR; MARKET; ECONOMICS; INDUSTRY; PRODUCTION; CAPITAL; COMMODITIES; COMPETITION; RESOURCES; TAXES; TRADE; 290200* - Energy Planning & Policy- Economics & Sociology; 290400 - Energy Planning & Policy- Energy Resources
OSTI ID:
7108262
Country of Origin:
United Kingdom
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Journal ID: CODEN: ECMTA
Submitting Site:
TIC
Size:
Pages: 703-717
Announcement Date:
Jul 01, 1977

Citation Formats

Raviv, A, and Zemel, E. Durability of capital goods: taxes and market structure. United Kingdom: N. p., 1977. Web. doi:10.2307/1911683.
Raviv, A, & Zemel, E. Durability of capital goods: taxes and market structure. United Kingdom. https://doi.org/10.2307/1911683
Raviv, A, and Zemel, E. 1977. "Durability of capital goods: taxes and market structure." United Kingdom. https://doi.org/10.2307/1911683.
@misc{etde_7108262,
title = {Durability of capital goods: taxes and market structure}
author = {Raviv, A, and Zemel, E}
abstractNote = {This paper examines the durability of capital goods produced under different market structures when tax considerations are included. Since investment tax credit and depreciation allowances are realized by the owner of the durable good, the durability of products produced by an industry which sells its output differs from that of an industry which rents. For each of these two commercial forms, both monopolistic and competitive market structure are considered. Potential gains from different forms of regulation are discussed.}
doi = {10.2307/1911683}
journal = []
volume = {45:3}
journal type = {AC}
place = {United Kingdom}
year = {1977}
month = {Apr}
}