Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5098261 | Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control | 2015 | 28 Pages |
Abstract
The standard assumption in macroeconomics that government spending is unproductive can have substantive implications for tax and spending policy. Productive government spending introduces a positive feedback between the tax rate, the productive capacity of the economy, and tax revenue. We allow marginal tax revenue to be optimally allocated between productive subsidies to human capital and utility-enhancing government consumption and calculate Laffer Curves for the US. Productive government spending yields higher revenue-maximizing tax rates, steeper slopes at low tax rates and higher peaks. The differences are particularly pronounced for the labor-tax Laffer curve. The use of tax revenue is an important determinant of the actual revenue that a tax rate increase generates.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Mathematics
Control and Optimization
Authors
Betty C. Daniel, Si Gao,