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Volume 31 Number 2 December 2006 |
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Regulatory Revenues and the Choice of the CAPM: Australia Versus New Zealand |
| Martin Lally |
Abstract |
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This paper compares the revenues resulting from the Officer model, which is
generally used by Australian regulatory bodies, the simplified Brennan-Lally
model, which is used by the New Zealand regulatory body, the
Sharpe-Lintner-Mossin model, which is widely used in other regulatory
regimes, and a comprehensive model that is free of simplifying assumptions
concerning the tax environment and the extent to which firms attach
imputation credits to dividends. The question of which of the three
simplified models is best depends upon the proportion of a firm's company tax
that is passed through as imputation credits, the utilisation rate on
imputation credits, the extent to which ordinary income is taxed more heavily
than capital gains, and the issue of whether revenue underestimates are
considered to be more important than revenue overestimates. If the
utilisation rate is considered to be close to 1, ordinary income is
considered to be more heavily taxed than capital gains, and revenue
underestimates are considered to be more serious than overestimates, then the
Officer model will be inferior to the other two simplified models regardless
of the proportion of a firm's company taxes that are passed through as
imputation credits. By contrast, if revenue underestimates and overestimates
are considered equally significant, then the Officer model will be superior
to the other two simplified models, in so far as at least 75% of a firm's
company taxes are passed through as imputation credits.
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Keywords |
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REGULATION; CAPITAL ASSET PRICING MODELS
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Contact DetailsMartin LallySchool of Economics and Finance, Victoria University of Wellington, PO Box 600, Wellington, New Zealand E-mail: martin.lally@vuw.ac.nz |
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