Saturday, January 3, 2009

"Simeon Djankov argues for the merits of tax cuts over increased government spending as a form of fiscal stimulus"

Tyler Cowen helps Ryan Hahn of the World Bank's Crisis Talk by pointing out a paper that supports his distrust of government spending as a stimulus, as opposed to tax breaks. My view has both:

"Tax Cuts vs. Government Spending

Simeon Djankov argues for the merits of tax cuts over increased government spending as a form of fiscal stimulus, particularly in some eastern European countries. (The two policies are of course not mutually exclusive, but each will have different costs and benefits.) A new paper from NBER on What Are the Effects of Fiscal Policy Shocks? offers additional support for this line of thinking. According to the abstract:

We propose and apply a new approach for analyzing the effects of fiscal policy using vector autoregressions. Specifically, we use sign restrictions to identify a government revenue shock as well as a government spending shock, while controlling for a generic business cycle shock and a monetary policy shock. We explicitly allow for the possibility of announcement effects, i.e., that a current fiscal policy shock changes fiscal policy variables in the future, but not at present. We construct the impulse responses to three linear combinations of these fiscal shocks, corresponding to the three scenarios of deficit-spending, deficit-financed tax cuts and a balanced budget spending expansion. We apply the method to US quarterly data from 1955-2000. We find that deficit-financed tax cuts work best among these three scenarios to improve GDP, with a maximal present value multiplier of five dollars of total additional GDP per each dollar of the total cut in government revenue five years after the shock.

(Hat tip: Tyler Cowen)"

Let me state my plan again:

1) Government needs to spend money on the social safety net, including helping states with this problem .

2) Infrastructure Investment is a good use of government spending.

3) There should be tax cuts to try and alleviate the fear and aversion to risk, which I hold to be our main problem. After all, that's why consumption is down.

So, I suppose I don't disagree with the paper at all.

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