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1. Rosen ArgumentSoutien0 #231726 Professor Harvey Rosen of Princeton university maintains the dynamic effects are sufficient to make the Romney plan viable.The crucial step in his analysis is to estimate the boost to GDP the Romney plan would produce using an economic growth model - and then to derive the revenue impact. | The excerpt from his paper cited below outlines his methodology for deriving the the macro-dynamic effects he says are missing from the TPC analysis (he also looks at the same micro-dynamic issues that the TPC does include - but his main argument concerns macro-effects). He calculates the effect on revenue of assuming a 3, 5 and 7 GDP effect over a decade - but concludes that 3 percent is the most reasonable figure. To justify this he relies on a paper by John Diamond of Rice University which sets out the results of simulations of the Romney tax plan using a widely used general equilibrium growth model. This model produces a 5 percent estimate which Rosen adjusts down since it assumes that all the Bush tax cuts expire, which Rosen thinks leads to an inflated GDP impact. Since Rosen's analysis depends crucially on the Diamond study it is added as a supportive node to this one - as are other studies that claim a significant macro-dynamic growth effect. |
+Citations (1) - CitationsAjouter une citationList by: CiterankMapLink[1] Growth, Distribution and Tax Reform: Thoughts on the Romney Proposal
En citant: Harvey Rosen - Princeton University Publication info: September 2012 Cité par: Peter Baldwin 6:46 AM 22 October 2012 GMT Citerank: (3) 231723Ignores growth potentialA number of critics of the TPC study claim it ignores the potential for major tax reform to increase economic growth through its effect on labor supply and capital formation. They argue such 'macro dynamic' effects make the Romney plan viable without burdening low to middle income earners.13EF597B, 232181Rosen - Zero result unwarrantedThe problem with the TPC approach is that, conceding the estimation difficulties, to include no estimate is to implicitly set the dynamic growth effect at zero.13EF597B, 232791Rosen paperGrowth, Distribution and Tax Reform: Thoughts on the Romney Proposal.1198CE71 URL:
| Extrait - Step 3. Increase wage and capital income in order to take into account the macro-dynamic behavioral effects of the Romney proposal, that is, the effects on the size of the economy. Then multiply the increases in before-tax income by the applicable marginal tax rates. This immediately raises the question of how much the proposal would increase growth.
Although both economic theory and historical experience suggest that a tax system with lower marginal rates and a broader base would enhance growth, there is considerable controversy with respect to the quantitative impact. Put another way, the honest answer is that no one knows for sure.12 Economic behavior is very complicated, and let’s face it, economic forecasters haven’t exactly covered themselves in glory during the past few years. But, as I emphasized above, it by no means follows that a zero response is the right answer. Given the uncertainty that attaches to these types of estimates, it makes sense to see how the results would differ assuming several different values for the growth-induced increase in incomes. I therefore include estimates for 3, 5, and 7 percentage points.
Although both economic theory and historical experience suggest that a tax system with lower marginal rates and a broader base would enhance growth, there is considerable controversy with respect to the quantitative impact. Put another way, the honest answer is that no one knows for sure.12 Economic behavior is very complicated, and let’s face it, economic forecasters haven’t exactly covered themselves in glory during the past few years. But, as I emphasized above, it by no means follows that a zero response is the right answer. Given the uncertainty that attaches to these types of estimates, it makes sense to see how the results would differ assuming several different values for the growth-induced increase in incomes. I therefore include estimates for 3, 5, and 7 percentage points.
The 5 percent figure is consistent with Diamond’s [2012] analysis, which is the only paper I have seen that embeds the Romney plan in a modern growth model. Diamond’s computations are based on the assumption that the baseline is the law that will apply if the 2001/2003 tax changes are allowed to lapse, at least for high-income taxpayers. I refer to this as the “2013 law.” The 2013 law embodies considerably higher tax rates than the 2012 law, so it is likely that the reform-induced increases in growth would be less with the 2012 than the 2013 baseline. That’s because the more efficient the starting point, the lower are the incremental benefits of introducing a tax system with lower rates and a broader base. Therefore, my guess is that the growth effects using the 2012 baseline are lower than Diamond’s estimate; 3 percentage points seems a reasonable figure. |
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