01307nas a2200169 4500008004100000245008500041210006900126260002500195490000700220520069800227653001500925100001800940700001700958700002200975700002300997856011701020 2009 eng d00aEmpirical Evidence on the Revenue Effects of State Corporate Income Tax Policies0 aEmpirical Evidence on the Revenue Effects of State Corporate Inc aWashington, DCc20090 v623 aUsing fixed-effects models of state corporate income tax (SCIT) revenues that account for the endogeneity of apportionment formula weights and tax rates, we find that states with a double-weighted sales factor experience lower SCIT revenues than do states with an equally-weighted sales factor, while higher statutory tax rates are associated with higher SCIT revenues. We also find that several other tax policies have statistically and economically significant associations with SCIT revenues. Use of a throwback rule and defining business income more broadly are associated with higher SCIT revenues, while combined reporting surprisingly is not significantly associated with SCIT revenues.10aAccounting1 aGupta, Sanjay1 aMoore, Jared1 aGramlich, Jeffrey1 aHofmann, Mary, Ann u/biblio/empirical-evidence-revenue-effects-state-corporate-income-tax-policies-000519nas a2200145 4500008004100000245007500041210006900116260000900185300001000194490000700204653001500211100002200226700001800248856010700266 1998 eng d00aNew Evidence on Participation in Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs)0 aNew Evidence on Participation in Individual Retirement Accounts  c1998 a57-820 v2010aAccounting1 aFrischmann, Peter1 aGupta, Sanjay u/biblio/new-evidence-participation-individual-retirement-accounts-iras