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Chapter 3: Empirical Approaches to Policy
Analysis
Empirical public finance is the use of data and statistical methodologies to measure the impact of government policy on individuals and markets.
Key issue in empirical public finance is separating causation from correlation. Correlated means that two economic variables
move together. Casual means that one of the variables is
causing the movement in the other.
MEASURING CAUSATION WITH DATA WE’D LIKE TO HAVE:
RANDOMIZED TRIALS
Randomized trials are one often effective way of assessing causality.
Trials typically proceed by taking a group of volunteers and randomly assigning them to either a “treatment” group that gets the intervention, or a “control” group that is denied the intervention. With random assignment, the assignment of the
intervention is not determined by anything about the subjects.
As a result, with large enough sample sizes, the treatment group is identical to the control group in every facet but one: the treatment group gets the intervention.
Why We Need to Go Beyond Randomized Trials
Randomized trials present some problems: They can be expensive. They can take a long time to complete. They may raise ethical issues (especially in the
context of medical treatments). The inferences from them may not generalize to
the population as a whole. Subjects may drop out of the experiment for
non-random reasons, a problem known as attrition.
Time Series Analysis
Time series analysis documents the correlation between the variables of interest over time. It is difficult to identify causal effects
when there are slow moving trends and other factors are changing.
Sharp changes in a policy variable over time, may create opportunities for valid inference.
Figure 2
Cross-Sectional Regression Analysis
Cross-sectional regression analysis is a statistical method for assessing the relationship between two variables while holding other factors constant.
“Cross-sectional” means comparing many individuals at one point in time.
An example: Where the control variables account for
race, education, age, and location
HOURS TANF CONTRO Li i i i
Quasi-Experiments Economists typically cannot set up randomized
trials for many public policy discussions. Yet, the time-series and cross-sectional approaches are often unsatisfactory.
Quasi-experiments are changes in the economic environment that create roughly identical treatment and control groups for studying the effect of that environmental change. This allows researchers to take advantage of
randomization created by external forces.
An Example of a Quasi-Experiment
New Jersey raises their state minimum wage. Pennsylvania does not. We are interested in the effect of the minimum
wage on employment. We could look at the employment of low-skilled
workers in NJ before and after the minimum wage increase.
But other things in the economy might be occurring. So, we can see how employment changed in PN over
the same interval. The difference in employment in NJ, before and
after, compared to the difference in employment in PN, before and after, may reveal the causal effect of minimum wages changes, if NJ and PN are identical (similar?) in other respects.
Chapter 18: Introduction to Taxation
This lecture discusses a few institutional and theoretical issues for understanding tax policy. Overview of the types of taxation that
exist in the U.S. at different governmental levels.
Federal income tax. Structure of the income tax.
Figure 1 The federal government relies heavily on the individual income tax
and the payroll tax.State and local governments rely more heavily on sales taxes and
property taxes.
Figure 2
Other countries are more dependent on consumption taxes
than the United States.
Figure 3
Marginal tax rates rise with taxable income, with a current
maximum rate of 35%.
Be clear: even a taxpayers with TI of $400,000 pays10% on her first $14,300, 15% on the next $43,800, etc.
A Set of Important Taxation Concepts:
Measuring the fairness of tax systems
A marginal tax rate is the percentage that is paid in taxes on the next dollar earned.
An average tax rate is the percentage of total income is that is paid in taxes.
Most think a progressive tax system is fairest, in that it respects the ability to pay. A progressive tax system is one in which effective average
tax rates rise with income. A proportional tax system is one in which effective average
rates do not change with income, so that everyone pays the same proportion of their income in taxes.
A regressive tax system is one in which effective average tax rates fall with income.
Measuring the fairness of tax systems
Effective versus statutory rates
Another important distinction is between statutory and effective tax rates.
Statutory tax rates are tax rates laid out in the legal tax schedule.
Effective tax rates are tax rates an individual actually pays. The two diverge because
There are many exemptions and deductions from taxable income, which reduces the tax base.
As we will discuss next chapter, the burden of some taxes can be shifted.
Measuring the fairness of tax systems
Vertical and horizontal equity
Two distributional goals are frequently cited in measuring tax fairness.
Vertical equity is the principle that groups with more resources should pay higher taxes than groups with fewer resources. Could be motivated by utilitarian SWF, that calls for
redistribution. Horizontal equity is the principle that similar
individuals who make different economic choices should be treated similarly by the tax system. In reality, horizontal inequities are hard to define,
because the person endogenously made a choice to earn more or less.
Defining the income tax base: The Haig-Simons comprehensive income
definition
The Haig-Simons comprehensive income definition defines taxable resources as the change in an individual’s power to consume during the year.
It is best viewed as a measure of ability to pay – regardless of the actual choices in terms of consumption and savings.
In reality, the U.S. tax system deviates from this definition in many ways, for example, the exclusion of employer-provided health insurance. In practice it is very difficult to implement the Haig-Simons
income concept. Problems include Adjusting for an individual’s ability to pay (property and casualty losses,
medical expenses, state and local taxes); the costs of earning income; and difficult to value items (imputed rent on owner-occupied housing).
Externality/Public goods rationales for deviating from
Haig-Simons: Tax expenditures
Tax expenditures are government revenue losses attributable to tax law provisions that allow special exclusions, exemptions, or deductions from gross income, or that provide a special credit, preferential tax rate or deferral of liability.
The government measures how much tax revenue is lost by excluding health insurance from taxable compensation, or allowing deductibility of charitable contributions. Overall, in 2005, the government is projected to lose
$740 billion through all tax expenditures, the largest of which is the exclusion of employer-provided health insurance.
Tax deductions vs. tax credits
Tax credits are more equitable than deductions. The value of deductions (such as for home
mortgage interest or charitable contributions) rises with a person’s marginal tax rate, making them regressive.
Credits are equally available for all incomes, so they are progressive.
In reality, a tax credit may not be very progressive if those with low tax liabilities cannot have the excess of the credit refunded. A tax credit is refundable if it is available to
individuals even if they pay few or no taxes.
THE APPROPRIATE UNIT OF TAXATION
The problem of the “marriage tax”
Choosing the appropriate unit of taxation is a difficult task as well. Should the government impose taxes on family income or individual income?
It is not possible to design a tax system that achieves the following three goals: Progressivity. Across-Family Horizontal Equity (i.e., uses
the family as the unit of taxation). Across-Marriage Horizontal Equity (e.g.,
marriage neutrality).
The appropriate unit of taxation
Marriage taxes in practice Why the concern about marriage taxes?
Horizontal equity. The tax might discourage marriage. The high marginal tax rate on the secondary earner.
This last problem could be solved with a secondary earner deduction.
There is no empirical evidence that the “marriage penalty” does discourage marriage. But people might still be concerned about the
“optics” of the tax system providing a financial incentive for some not to marry.
The appropriate unit of taxation
Marriage taxes in practice The U.S. is unusual in that it has a tax
system based on family income. 19 OECD countries tax husbands and wives
individually. 5 OECD countries offer marriage subsidies
through family taxation with income splitting – which lowers the tax burden with a progressive tax schedule.
Only 2 other OECD nations have pure family taxation system similar to the U.S. Ireland and Norway…