This paper proposes two metrics to correctly measure under optimal capital structures the impact of corporate statutory tax rates (a) on the effective tax rate, and (b) on the operational risk of capital investment projects and their parent firm's project portfolio. For illustrative and explanatory purposes as well as for ensuring a realistic coverage of a wide spectrum of risky capital investment projects, both metrics are applied to a stationary in mean and variance stochastic NPVτ model under the Canadian open-class corporate taxation system. The Marshallian partial equilibrium adjustment mechanism is brought into play to ensure through efficient financial markets that firms operating within any domestic economic sector are concomitantly subjected to financial equilibrium conditions, thereby enabling firms to converge in the very short run to an optimal after-tax leveraged net cost of capital. This paper concludes that current macroeconomic neo-classical rate-based marginal effective tax rate (METR) metrics systematically and significantly underestimate business organizations' microeconomic NPVτ-based corporate effective tax rates. Furthermore, increasing both the corporate statutory tax rate and the cross-correlation coefficient between portfolio projects will markedly increase a parent firm's project portfolio operational risk while impeding its capacity to reduce it.
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