Abstract

We consider how state income tax changes affect the demand for municipal bonds by in-state investors. A tax increase (decrease) makes investing in municipal bonds more (less) desirable, and theory predicts a change in demand by investors until the yields on municipal bonds reach a new equilibrium. Using a sample of state-specific municipal bond funds, we find states with tax decreases have net outflows in the following year of almost 1.54% per percentage point drop in tax rates, while tax increases lead to inflows around 0.58%. We find that the response to tax changes is not the immediate reallocation predicted in perfect markets with no frictions.

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