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Assumes full employment SupportiveArgument1 #231728 Diamond's study assumes the Romney tax plan is implemented under conditions of full employment. This is obviously not realistic now or for the immediate future, leading in an over-estimation of the growth-induced boost to tax revenue [UNABLE TO LOCATE THIS IN DIAMOND PAPER] | There is no apparent reference to the full employment assumption in the Diamond paper. Dylan Mathews makes the claim in the cited article, where he thanks Alan Auerbach of the University of California, Berkeley, for pointing it out. |
+Citations (1) - CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[1] Wonkblog’s comprehensive guide to the debate over Romney’s tax plan
Author: Dylan Mathews - Washington Post blogger Publication info: 27 September 2012 Cited by: Peter Baldwin 7:20 AM 22 October 2012 GMT Citerank: (3) 231730Assumes revenue neutralityIn his simulation leading to the 5.4 percent growth estimate Diamond assumes that the Romney tax plan is revenue neutral. Yet Rosen is using the Diamond growth estimate to show that the plan can be revenue-neutral. Therefore the argument is circular.1198CE71, 232070Objections to DiamondOne of America's leading tax economists, Alan Auerbach, has pointed to two defects in the applicability of the model used by Diamond to simulate the effect of the Romney tax plan. Auerbach's points are attributed in a blog post by Dylan Mathews. The claimed defects are appended to this node.13EF597B, 232183Political resistanceThe TPC and its defenders point out that they have been conservative in their analysis in that they have set the bar low for the Romney plan - only testing if it is mathematically possible. Given the popularity of many of the concessions many of the mooted changes would be hard to do in practise.1198CE71 URL:
| Excerpt / Summary Rosen: What about growth? Harvey Rosen, a public finance expert at Princeton, argued that the Romney tax plan will increase economic growth dramatically, which in turn would raise revenue and negate the need for tax increases on the middle-class. He finds that if the Romney plan increases economic growth by 3 percentage points relative to where it would be under current policies — a huge, and many economists think implausible, boost — then Romney’s numbers might work out. But behind his analysis lurk two assumptions that might not add up. Rosen bases his growth estimates on a study of Romney’s plan done by Rice economist John Diamond. Diamond assumes that Romney’s plan is implemented under conditions of full employment. That’s important because it means that if you eliminate tax breaks for one industry and they have to fire workers, those workers can relatively easily find jobs in another industry. But barring a miraculous labor market recovery in the next few months, that won’t be the situation when Romney takes office. In the current world, wiping out tax breaks for an industry could lead to displaced workers who simply join the ranks of the unemployed, dragging down growth. But more damaging for Rosen’s case is that Diamond’s study assumes that Romney’s plan is revenue-neutral before you take economic growth into account.* That is, Diamond assumes that the tax cuts have been fully paid for first, and that’s part of why they do so much for growth. Rosen, conversely, is making the case that you don’t need to fully pay for the tax cuts because growth will fill in the gap. So the Diamond-Romney tax plan and the Rosen-Romney tax plan are quite different, and growth estimates that apply to the first don’t necessarily apply to the second. |
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