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123 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2001)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0120 and id is 1 raw text is: December 10, 2001 No. 123
FEDERAL REVENUE AND
EXPENDITURE ESTIMATING:
A FLAWED PROCESS THAT LEADS
TO BAD FISCAL POLICY
Summary
Although most private sector forecasting models
recognize that changes in tax rates or other
features of the tax code affect the aggregate
economy in various ways, government revenue
estimators at the Treasury and the Joint Committee
on Taxation (JCT) deliberately ignore tax-driven
effects on the aggregate economy when attempting
to measure the revenue consequences of proposed
tax changes.
Government revenue estimators claim their models
are dynamic because they sometimes allow for
modest changes in which products are produced,
where income is earned, and how income is spent
as a result of tax changes. But because the models
assume that tax   changes never affect total
production, total employment, total earnings, total
saving and investment, economic growth, or any
other features  of   the  aggregate  economy,
government revenue    estimation  models  are
essentially static.
When tax changes improve production incentives
at the margin, output and incomes rise, which

expands the tax base and yields positive revenue
feedbacks. When tax changes worsen marginal
production incentives, they yield negative revenue
feedbacks. By ignoring these effects, the Treasury
and the JCT deliver highly misleading revenue
estimates, and highly misleading advice to the
Congress and the Administration.
Tax reforms with large positive work and saving
incentives - such as an across-the-board cut in
tax rates, a lower capital gains tax rate, faster
capital cost recovery allowances, and elimination
of the alternative minimum tax - would have
much smaller revenue costs than government
estimators claim. Spending increases that have no
positive incentive effects, or transfer payments that
discourage work or saving, would decrease GDP,
not add to it, and would cost more than initially
forecast by reducing government revenues.
Government revenue estimates could, and should,
be more accurate:
 Government revenue estimation models should
include dynamic macroeconomic effects.
 The dynamic effects in the models should be
based on behavioral changes motivated by price
signals (i.e., the microeconomic price and
incentive effects of tax and spending changes),
not on theoretically unsound and empirically
discredited Keynesian  theories of demand
management.
 The models should recognize that we live in a
global economy. Taxing U.S.-sited capital less
heavily can quickly attract large amounts of
domestic  and foreign  saving  to finance
additional investment in the United States.
 The assumptions and equations that government
estimators use in their models should be made
public so that people outside the government
may judge whether the models are reasonable.
 The JCT is moving too slowly toward new
estimation methods, and the Treasury has not
even begun. They must be urged, respectively, to
move faster and to get started for the good of
the country.

Institute for
Research on the
Economics of
Taxation

IRET is a non-profit, tax exempt 501 c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing the
public about policies that will promote economic growth and efficient operation of the free market economy.
1730 K Street, N.W., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 9 Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www.iret.org

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