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Title: Public Economics


1
Chapter 21 Economic Growth
2
Reading
  • Essential reading
  • Hindriks, J and G.D. Myles Intermediate Public
    Economics. (Cambridge MIT Press, 2005) Chapter
    21.
  • Further reading
  • Barro, R.J. (1990) Government spending in a
    simple model of endogenous growth, Journal of
    Political Economy, 98, S103 S125.
  • Barro, R.J. (1991) Economic growth in a cross
    section of countries, Quarterly Journal of
    Economics, 106, 407 444.
  • Barro, R.J. and Sala-I-Martin, X. (1995) Economic
    Growth (New York McGraw-Hill),
  • Lucas, R.E. (1990) Supply-side economics an
    analytical review, Oxford Economic Papers, 42,
    293 316.
  • Slemrod, J. (1995) What do cross-country studies
    teach about government involvement, prosperity,
    and economic growth, Brookings Papers on
    Economic Activity, 373 - 431.

3
Reading
  • Solow, R.M. (1970) Growth Theory An Exposition
    (Oxford Oxford University Press).
  • Stokey, N.L. and Rebelo, S. (1995) Growth
    effects of flat-rate taxes, Journal of Political
    Economy, 103, 519 550.
  • Challenging reading
  • Aghion, P. and Howitt, P. (1998) Endogenous
    Growth Theory (Cambridge MIT Press),
  • Chamley, C. (1981) The welfare cost of capital
    income taxation in a growing economy, Journal of
    Political Economy, 89, 468 496.
  • Chamley, C. (1986) Optimal taxation of capital
    income in general equilibrium with infinite
    lives, Econometrica, 54, 607 622.
  • De La Croix, D. and Michel, P. (2002) A Theory of
    Economic Growth (Cambridge Cambridge University
    Press).

4
Reading
  • Dowrick, S. (1993) Government consumption its
    effects on productivity growth and investment in
    N. Gemmel (ed.) The Growth of the Public Sector.
    Theories and Evidence (Aldershot Edward Elgar).
  • Easterly, W. (1993) How much do distortions
    affect growth?, Journal of Monetary Economics,
    32, 187 212.
  • Easterly, W. and Rebelo, S. (1993) Fiscal policy
    and economic growth, Journal of Monetary
    Economics, 32, 417 458.
  • Engen, E.M. and Skinner, J. (1996) Taxation and
    economic growth, NBER Working Paper No. 5826.
  • Jones, L.E., Manuelli, R.E. and Rossi, P.E.
    (1993) Optimal taxation in models of endogenous
    growth, Journal of Political Economy, 101, 485
    517.
  • Judd, K. (1985) Redistributive taxation in a
    simple perfect foresight model, Journal of
    Public Economics, 28, 59 83.

5
Reading
  • King, R.G. and Rebelo, S. (1990) Public policy
    and endogenous growth developing neoclassical
    implications, Journal of Political Economy, 98,
    S126 S150.
  • Levine, R. and Renelt, D. (1992) A sensitivity
    analysis of cross-country growth models,
    American Economic Review, 82, 942 963.
  • Mendoza, E., Milesi-Ferretti, G.M and Asea, P.
    (1997) On the ineffectiveness of tax policy in
    altering long-run growth Harberger's
    superneutrality conjecture, Journal of Public
    Economics, 66, 99 126.
  • Pecorino, P. (1993) Tax structure and growth in
    a model with human capital, Journal of Public
    Economics, 52, 251 271.
  • Plosser, C. (1993) The search for growth, in
    Federal Reserve of Kansas City symposium series,
    Policies for Long Run Growth, 57 86, (Kansas
    City).

6
Introduction
  • Economic growth is the basis of increased
    prosperity
  • Growth comes from capital accumulation and
    innovation
  • Taxation can affect incentives but can also
    finance productive public expenditure
  • The level of taxes has risen in most countries
  • This raises questions about the effect of
    taxation on growth

7
Exogenous Growth
  • Exogenous growth theory developed in the 1950s
    and 1960s
  • The theory assumes technical progress occurs
    exogenously
  • It does not try to explain technical progress
  • In the Solow growth model capital and labor are
    combined with constant returns to scale and there
    is a single consumer
  • Growth occurs through capital accumulation

8
Exogenous Growth
  • Assume a production function Yt F(Kt, Lt) where
    Kt and Lt are capital and labor inputs at time t
  • Let the saving rate be fixed at s, 0 lt s lt 1
  • Investment at time t is It sF(Kt, Lt)
  • With depreciation rate d capital stock at t 1
    is Kt1 It 1 dKt
  • sF(Kt, Lt) 1
    dKt
  • This capital accumulation equation determines the
    evolution of capital through time

9
Exogenous Growth
  • Constant returns imply
  • Yt LtF(Kt/Lt, 1) Ltf(kt), kt Kt/Lt
  • In terms of the capital-labor ratio the capital
    accumulation condition becomes
  • 1 nkt1 sf(kt) 1
    dkt
  • A steady state is achieved when the capital-labor
    ratio is constant
  • The steady state capital-labor ratio k is defined
    by
  • sf(k) - n dk
    0
  • This is interpreted as the long-run equilibrium

10
Exogenous Growth
  • Fig. 21.1 plots the evolution of kt assuming that
    f(kt) kta
  • This gives the capital accumulation equation
  • kt1 (skta 1dkt)/(1 n)
  • Using k0 1, n 0.05, d 0.05, s 0.2 and a
    0.5 the figure plots kt for 50 years
  • The steady-state level is k 4

Figure 21.1 Dynamics of the capital stock
11
Exogenous Growth
  • The determination of the steady state is shown in
    Fig. 21.2
  • The steady state is at the intersection of (n
    d)k and sf(k)
  • Consumption is the difference between f(k) and
    sf(k)
  • In the steady state consumption per capita Ct/Lt
    is constant
  • This places a limit on the growth of living
    standards

Figure 21.2 The steady state
12
Exogenous Growth
  • Policy can affect the outcome by changing the
    saving rate, s, or shifting the production
    function, f(k)
  • But a one-off change cannot affect the long-run
    growth rate
  • A sustained increase in growth can only come
    through continuous upward movement in f(k)
  • This can occur through technical progress
  • But the cause of the progress requires
    explanation

13
Exogenous Growth
  • For each saving rate there is an equilibrium k
  • Consumption is given by c(s) f(k(s)) n
    dk(s)
  • c(s) is maximized by s which solves
  • f'(k(s )) n d
  • The level of capital k k(s) is the Golden
    Rule capital-labor ratio
  • This is shown in Fig. 21.3

Figure 21.3 The Golden Rule
14
Exogenous Growth
  • To see the effect of the saving rate assume y
    ka, a lt 1
  • The steady state then satisfies ska n dk so
  • k (s/(n d))1/(1-a)
  • Consumption is plotted as a function of s in Fig.
    21.4
  • The saving rate can have a significant effect on
    consumption

Figure 21.4 Consumption and the saving rate
15
Exogenous Growth
  • The Chamley-Judd results shows that there should
    be no tax on capital income in the long-run
  • Table 21.1 reports the welfare cost of imposing a
    capital tax
  • The increase in consumption arises from removal
    of the tax
  • The welfare cost is large as a percent of the tax
    revenue

Initial tax rate () Increase in consumption () Welfare cost ( of tax revenue)
30 3.30 11
50 8.38 26
Source Chamley (1981) Table 21.1 Welfare cost
of taxation
16
Endogenous Growth
  • Endogenous growth models explain the causes of
    growth through individual choices
  • There are several explanations available
  • These include
  • The AK model assumes constant returns
  • Human capital can be incorporated alongside
    physical capital
  • Technological innovation can introduce new
    products
  • The government can provide a productive public
    input

17
Barro Model
  • The Barro model includes public expenditure as an
    input
  • The public input is financed by a tax on output
  • The utility function of the consumer is

18
Barro Model
  • Profit-maximization determines the demand for
    capital and labor
  • The model can be solved explicitly
  • The growth rate of consumption can be written as
  • Taxation has both a positive and a negative
    effect

19
Barro Model
  • With a productive public input there is a role
    for taxation
  • Taxation finances the public input and can
    generate growth
  • Raising the tax rate too high reduces growth
  • This identifies the concept of an optimal size of
    public sector

Figure 21.5 Tax rate and consumption growth
20
Policy Reform
  • There is significant research on the form of the
    best tax system for economic growth
  • Much of this has focused on the effect of the
    corporate tax
  • In 2002 the top rate was 40 percent in the US, 30
    percent in the UK and 38.4 percent in Germany
  • These values are above the optimal value of zero
  • Simulations have considered the welfare effect of
    reforming the tax system

21
Policy Reform
  • There is a distinction between level and growth
    effects
  • In Fig. 21.6 the move from a to c is a level
    effect
  • The increase along a to e is a growth effect
  • Taxation can have level and growth effects

Figure 21.6 Level and growth effects
22
Policy Reform
Figure 21.7 Growth effects of tax reform
23
Empirical Evidence
  • There has been considerable empirical
    investigation of the relation between taxation
    and growth
  • The prediction of theory is ambiguous
  • Consider the model of a productive public good
  • Relation between tax and growth was non-monotonic
  • A similar outcome will apply for many models
  • This motivate the analysis of empirical evidence

24
Empirical Evidence
  • A first view of the data is shown in Fig. 21.8
  • This plots the US growth rate (lower line) and
    tax revenue as a proportion of GDP (upper line)
  • The trend lines show a steady rise in tax but a
    very minor decrease in growth
  • There is no obvious relation

Source US Department of Commerce Figure 21.8 US
tax and growth rates
25
Empirical Evidence
  • Fig. 21.9 reports tax and growth data for the UK
  • Tax revenues have grown
  • The trend line for GDP growth is upward sloping
  • The figure provides evidence of a positive
    relation
  • The difficulty in this analysis is constructing
    the counterfactual

Source Feinstein (1972), UK Revenue Statistics,
Economic Trends Figure 21.9 UK tax and growth
rates
26
Empirical Evidence
  • It should be the marginal rate of tax that
    matters
  • Fig. 21.10 illustrates the problem of defining
    the marginal rate of tax
  • There is no single rate with a non-linear tax
  • The construction is further complicated by
    deductions and incentives
  • Many definitions of the marginal rate have been
    used in empirical work

Figure 21.10 Average and marginal tax rates
27
Empirical Evidence
  • The figure shows GDP and tax rates for a
    cross-section of countries
  • It shows the negative relation reported by
    Plosser
  • This has been presented as evidence of a general
    effect

28
Empirical Evidence
  • But the downward trend is driven by the outliers
  • Three countries that are unusual
  • Korea
  • Czech Republic
  • Slovak Republic
  • The negative relation almost disappears when
    these are removed

29
Empirical Evidence
With Outliers
Without Outliers
30
Empirical Evidence
  • Data on expenditure and growth for OECD
  • No strong relationship is apparent
  • Linear trend line shows weak negative
  • Polynomial shows observations around a maximum

31
Empirical Evidence
  • Slemrod (1995) suggests two structural relations
  • Taxation causes distortions and lowers GDP
  • Growth in GDP raises demand for expenditure
  • Estimation has not resolved simultaneity
  • If expenditure is chosen to maximize the rate of
    growth
  • For similar countries observations clustered
    round the maximum
  • If countries are different no meaningful
    relationship

32
Empirical Evidence
  • Easterly and Rebelo show that the negative
    relation virtually disappears when initial GDP is
    added to regression
  • They also consider alternative definitions of the
    marginal tax rate and a range of determinants of
    growth (school enrolments, assassinations,
    revolutions, war casualties)
  • Conclude there is little evidence of a link
    between tax rates and growth

33
Empirical Evidence
  • Are there any variables correlated with growth in
    cross-country data?
  • Barro (1991)
  • Initial GDP (-)
  • Education ()
  • Government consumption (-)
  • Deviation from PPP (-)
  • Revolutions (-), Assassinations (-)
  • Robustness tests reduced the set of variables to
    East Asian dummy, Investment price, Years open,
    Primary schooling, Fraction Confucion

34
Empirical Evidence
  • The evidence that taxation reduces growth is weak
  • Personal and corporate income taxes have the
    strongest negative effect
  • No empirical variable can summarise the tax
    system
  • There is an absence of structural modelling
  • Causality is unclear
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