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Published in: Public Choice 3-4/2017

12-12-2016

On the political economy of national tax revenue forecasts: evidence from OECD countries

Authors: Beate Jochimsen, Robert Lehmann

Published in: Public Choice | Issue 3-4/2017

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Abstract

Sustainable budgets are important quality signals for the electorate. Politicians might thus have an incentive to influence tax revenue forecasts, which are widely regarded as a key element of national budget plans. Looking at the time period from 1996 to 2012, we systematically analyze whether national tax revenue forecasts in 18 OECD countries are biased due to political manipulation. Drawing on theories from the field of political economy, we test three hypotheses using panel estimation techniques. We find support for partisan politics. Left-wing governments seem to produce more optimistic, or less pessimistic, tax revenue forecasts than do right-wing ones. Contrary to the theoretical prediction based on the “common pool” problem, we find that more fragmented governments and parliaments tend to produce more pessimistic, or less optimistic, tax revenue forecasts. We find no empirical evidence that political business cycles play a role in tax revenue forecasts.

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Appendix
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Footnotes
1
The countries in the sample are: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America. Our cross-section has 19 entries, however, since we have two competing forecasts for the United States: one from the executive and the other from the legislative.
 
2
A study on tax revenue forecasts in Swiss cantons and characteristics of the finance minister is provided by Chatagny (2015).
 
3
Note that every state has a veto on the figures published by the OECD. This veto can introduce a political bias into the OECD’s macroeconomic projections. However, if this is indeed the case, the OECD figures are even better proxies and allow us to estimate the political parameters even more precisely, since the part of the political distortion introduced via biased macroeconomic projections is now captured.
 
4
The data can be downloaded from the interactive data base at http://​www.​politicaldatayea​rbook.​com.
 
5
Instead of using FEPERC as the dependent variable, we also tested the political business cycle hypothesis with the absolute percentage error. We found no significant effects. We also experimented with pre- and post-electoral year dummies. Regardless of how we defined the dummies, we found no significant effects.
 
6
One referee suggested estimating the model by splitting up the Schmidt Index into four dummies, with the baseline category SCHMIDT = 5. We performed such a regression and confirmed our findings from the baseline estimation. Additionally, we tested the joint significance of the dummies and discovered that they are jointly significantly different from zero.
 
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Metadata
Title
On the political economy of national tax revenue forecasts: evidence from OECD countries
Authors
Beate Jochimsen
Robert Lehmann
Publication date
12-12-2016
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Public Choice / Issue 3-4/2017
Print ISSN: 0048-5829
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7101
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11127-016-0391-y

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