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A calibrated model of debt recycling with interest costs and tax shields: viability under different fiscal regimes and jurisdictions

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Listed:
  • Carlo von der Osten
  • Sabrina Aufiero
  • Pierpaolo Vivo
  • Fabio Caccioli
  • Silvia Bartolucci

Abstract

Debt recycling is a leveraged equity management strategy in which homeowners use accumulated home equity to finance investments, applying the resulting returns to accelerate mortgage repayment. We propose a novel framework to model equity and mortgage dynamics in presence of mortgage interest rates, borrowing costs on equity-backed credit lines, and tax shields arising from interest deductibility. The model is calibrated on three jurisdictions -- Australia, Germany, and Switzerland -- representing diverse interest rate environments and fiscal regimes. Results demonstrate that introducing positive interest rates without tax shields contracts success regions and lengthens repayment times, while tax shields partially reverse these effects by reducing effective borrowing costs and adding equity boosts from mortgage interest deductibility. Country-specific outcomes vary systematically, and rental properties consistently outperform owner-occupied housing due to mortgage interest deductibility provisions.

Suggested Citation

  • Carlo von der Osten & Sabrina Aufiero & Pierpaolo Vivo & Fabio Caccioli & Silvia Bartolucci, 2025. "A calibrated model of debt recycling with interest costs and tax shields: viability under different fiscal regimes and jurisdictions," Papers 2511.18614, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2511.18614
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    References listed on IDEAS

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