Abstract

In an earlier paper, titled Non-linear effects of tax changes on output: The role of the initial level of taxation, we estimated tax multipliers using (i) a novel dataset on value-added taxes for 51 countries (21 industrial and 30 developing) for the period 1970-2014, and (ii) the so-called narrative approach developed by Romer and Romer (2010) to properly identify exogenous tax changes. The main finding is that, in line with existing theoretical distortionary and disincentive-based arguments, the effect of tax changes on output is highly non-linear. The tax multiplier is essentially zero under relatively low/moderate initial tax rate levels and more negative as the initial tax rate and the size of the change in the tax rate increase. This companion paper first shows that these findings have important policy implications, given that the initial level of taxes varies greatly across countries and thus so will the potential output effect of changing tax rates. The paper then turns to some specific policy applications. It focuses on the relevance of the arguments for revenue mobilization in countries with low levels of provision of public goods and social and infrastructure gaps, as well as in commodity-dependent countries. The paper then considers some practical implications for the standard debt sustainability analysis. Lastly, it evaluates the implications of the findings for the Laffer curve. Institutional subscribers to the NBER working paper series, and residents of developing countries may download this paper without additional charge at www.nber.org.

Highlights

  • 1 Introduction In Gunter et al (2021), we estimate tax multipliers using (i) a novel dataset on value-added taxes for 51 countries (21 industrial and 30 developing) for the period 1970-2014 and (ii) the narrative approach developed by Romer and Romer (2010) to properly identify exogenous tax changes

  • In line with existing theoretical distortionary and disincentivebased arguments, we show that the e¤ect of tax changes on output is essentially zero for relatively low initial tax rate levels or small tax changes and becomes increasingly negative under higher initial tax rates or larger tax changes

  • We focused on commodity-dependent countries and showed that countries with “excessive” dependence on commodity revenues tend to have a relative low VAT rate or none at all

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Summary

Introduction

In Gunter et al (2021), we estimate tax multipliers using (i) a novel dataset on value-added taxes for 51 countries (21 industrial and 30 developing) for the period 1970-2014 and (ii) the narrative approach developed by Romer and Romer (2010) to properly identify exogenous tax changes. This ...gure reports the estimated tax multiplier after two years, evaluated at alternative initial tax rate levels and di¤erent sizes of the tax change. The evidence shows that the output e¤ect of tax changes is, highly non-linear These ...ndings have important policy implications given that the initial level of taxes varies greatly across countries and so will the potential output e¤ect of changing tax rates. The 2 percentage-point increase that took place in Ecuador in January 2000 (when the VAT changed from 10 to 12 percent) should not, in and on itself, have a¤ected GDP This companion paper discusses some relevant policy applications that result from the non-linear e¤ects of tax changes on output.

Policy implications I
Policy implications II
Policy implications III
Policy implications IV
Findings
Concluding remarks

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