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I am sorry but I have to agree with MVL. The tax paid is not equal to the amount of the tax drag (that’s why it has a different name), or said differently, the tax paid differs from “the return if no tax was deducted minus the after tax return” (the latter being the correct input in the numerator of the formula). In your example €28 is the tax drag. The tax paid should be around €23 if I am not mistaken.sunseeker wrote:
Which is the taxes paid along the timelines. Sorry guys what else can be that is subtracted from your income if not taxes?
See below some examples ;
“For example, €100 invested at 6 percent per annum for ten years in an envi- ronment in which returns are taxed each year at a rate of 30 percent will accumulate to be €100[1 + 0.06(1 − 0.30)]10 = €150.90. Had returns not been taxed, this investment would have grown to €100[1 + 0.06(1 − 0.00)]10 = €179.08, a difference of €28.18. Notice that taxes reduce the potential gain on investment by (€179.08 − €150.90)/ (€179.08 − €100.00) = €28.18/€79.08 = 35.6 percent, which is more than the ordinary income tax rate. This suggests that the tax drag on capital accumulation compounds over time when taxes are paid each year. (Tax drag refers to the negative effect of taxes on after-tax returns.) “
Taxes paid 28.18 during the period (at the numerator level)