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2021 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

11. Tax and Stabilisation of the Economy

Author : Parthasarathi Shome

Published in: Taxation History, Theory, Law and Administration

Publisher: Springer International Publishing

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Abstract

One of the government’s roles is to maintain aggregate demand in the economy which is consistent with stability in employment. When the economy is in recession, government should bolster it by taxing less; and, when the economy’s demand outpaces supply, government should cut the excess demand back by taxing more. This is called counter-cyclical tax policy. A progressive tax structure achieves this objective and is called an automatic stabiliser. The objective of this chapter is to examine the economic stabilisation capability of a tax structure. Relatedly, it examines the concepts of ‘buoyancy’ and ‘elasticity’ of tax structures that measure the revenue response to rises in income. It analyses the impact of progressivity of taxes in an inflationary environment when it is possible for nominal incomes to rise, though not real incomes. Nevertheless, higher nominal incomes would drag taxpayers to higher tax brackets. This phenomenon is termed ‘fiscal drag’. To alleviate it, some inflation adjustment in tax payments is called for. On the other hand, during inflationary times, any slowness or lags in revenue collection deplete the real value of revenue collected. Tax administrations should structure revenue flows to guard against it. These aspects are considered in this chapter.

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Footnotes
1
Singer (1976) goes into some detail of this concept in Chap. 8.
 
2
If the entire economy is being considered, income may be construed as national income.
 
3
Musgrave (1959) and Herber (1975) elaborate on this elasticity concept in Chaps. 21 and 24, respectively.
 
4
Musgrave (1959), op. cit., introduced the two components in Chap. 21.
 
5
Musgrave (1959), op. cit., p. 507.
 
6
Only a lumpsum tax will have ER = 0. This is because, as Herber (1975), op. cit., explains, it is a tax on a ‘person as a person’, and not upon his income, wealth or commodity purchases (p. 568). Its aggregate is not related to the movements in income.
 
7
Ytrend is derived by statistically minimizing its distance—both above and below—from YNT.
 
8
See Chap. 10, Sect. 10.​2, to revisit the technical concept of a progressive income tax.
 
9
In India, the central government’s tax/GDP ratio has been around 10 per cent, with slightly higher collection from commodity taxes (higher than 5 per cent) than income taxes (less than 5 per cent). The years 2004-08 were a golden age for the rate of growth of tax revenue growth in real terms and income tax collection surpassed that of commodity taxes.
 
10
Nominal incomes are in currency (Rupee) terms while real incomes are incomes after adjustment for inflation.
 
11
See Tanzi(1977) analysed this issue for Argentina. Other countries that have suffered high inflation with deleterious ramification on tax revenue include Bolivia, Brazil, Nicaragua, Peru and Venezuela, among others. The problem appeared in the 1980s and appears from time to time to the present day.
 
12
This assumption is needed because if the elasticity is, higher than one, then as we argued earlier, the effect of collection lag can be mitigated.
 
13
Once elasticity is not unitary, the results on total real tax revenue as a result of changes in the rate of inflation become more complex. But they still indicate how lags reduce the real value of each revenue rupee collected compared with the real value of a tax liability of a rupee at the time when it accrues—in other words, in relation to what real revenue would be in a lagless world.
 
Literature
go back to reference Herber, Bernard P. 1975. Modern Public Finance. 3rd ed. Homewood: Richard D. Irwin Inc. Herber, Bernard P. 1975. Modern Public Finance. 3rd ed. Homewood: Richard D. Irwin Inc.
go back to reference Musgrave, Richard A. 1959. The Theory of Public Finance: The Study of Public Economy, International student edition. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co. Musgrave, Richard A. 1959. The Theory of Public Finance: The Study of Public Economy, International student edition. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co.
go back to reference Singer, Neil M. 1976. Public Microeconomics—An Introduction to Government Finance. 2nd ed. Boston: Little Brown and Company. Singer, Neil M. 1976. Public Microeconomics—An Introduction to Government Finance. 2nd ed. Boston: Little Brown and Company.
go back to reference Tanzi, Vito. 1977. Inflation, Lags in Collection, and the Real Value of Tax Revenue. IMF Economic Review 24: 154–167.CrossRef Tanzi, Vito. 1977. Inflation, Lags in Collection, and the Real Value of Tax Revenue. IMF Economic Review 24: 154–167.CrossRef
Metadata
Title
Tax and Stabilisation of the Economy
Author
Parthasarathi Shome
Copyright Year
2021
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-68214-9_11