Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
965303 Journal of Macroeconomics 2015 15 Pages PDF
Abstract
I analyze the effects of tax policy changes on US Total Factor Productivity. VAR estimates show that permanent and exogenous tax increases have strong, permanent, and negative effects on TFP which represent about 80% of change in output following the tax increase. I then build a DSGE model which has learning-by-doing and endogenous TFP evolution. The benchmark model is able to replicate the empirical impulse responses. However, when I calibrate the model as in the literature, the effect of taxes on TFP is substantially less elastic than in the data. I argue that this divergence may arise because tax changes labeled as exogenous can give spurious results or because of a mis-specified model.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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