Inheritance and inter-vivos gifts are central mechanisms of wealth transmission and a core object of public economics. Switzerland is a high-leverage setting because it combines high private wealth with strong fiscal federalism, where inheritance and gift taxes are largely cantonal. This working paper develops a Switzerland-focused empirical narrative using a harmonized long-run panel from OECD Revenue Statistics for estate, inheritance and gift taxes (tax code 4300; sub-codes 4310 and 4320 where available). It (i) benchmarks Swiss 4300 revenues in levels and shares, (ii) places 4300 within the broader property-tax mix (4000), jointly with recurrent net wealth taxes (4200), and (iii) provides transparent summaries of Switzerland’s relative drift using a two-way fixed-effects “Switzerland × trend” specification and exact placebo (randomization-inference) distributions for treated-minus-others differences over 1990–2022 and 2018–2022. The goal is measurement discipline rather than causal identification: aggregate revenues cannot identify transfer flows or behavioral mechanisms, but they help anchor cross-country comparisons and motivate a microdata agenda exploiting Swiss cantonal variation. Replication materials are provided under the associated Zenodo record/DOI.
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Eduardo Dietrich Zimmermann
Universidade Federal do Paraná
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Eduardo Dietrich Zimmermann (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6994058c4e9c9e835dfd66cd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18649102