Categories
Economics

[1519] Of fiscal stimulus meets Ricardo

As calls for fiscal stimulus to jumpstart the US economy turn into roars, the White House presented a one-time tax break as a plan.[1] The plan however failed to convince the market that there is light at the end of the tunnel. Stock exchanges in the US continue to slide down while dragging along other exchanges across the world. Why is that so?

Others have pointed out Friedman’s permanent income hypothesis; temporary change in income does not affect spending. For me on the other hand, David Ricardo comes to mind yet again.

The issue with a temporary tax cut is that it is temporary. The tax cut adds up to the US budget deficit and a knowledgeable rational taxpayer would realize that somebody has to fund that deficit. Thus, the expectation that a tax cut today means an equivalent tax hike in the future. That expectation translate into a scenario which people will save the extra disposable income to pay future hike while consumption stays the same as if there were no change in tax level at all. This is more or less a Ricardian conclusion.

The problem with such reasoning is that individuals may actually appreciate extra cash in their hand in time during times of strained cash flow. The Ricardian conclusion fails to consider temporal discount that people apply to future cash flow. Yet, how many people actually operate their perception of future income in present value?

Regardless, at the moment at least, reality on the ground seems to indicate that one-time tax break might not work, just like in previous cases.[2]

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

[1] — WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said on Friday that the government was considering a $140 billion to $150 billion stimulus package, and swift action was needed to safeguard the economy from a downturn.

[…]

He declined to give specifics on the stimulus package under discussion, but said a significant part would be in the form of tax relief for consumers. [Paulson says mulling $140-150 billion stimulus plan. Reuters. January 18 2008][↩]

[2] In 2001 — despite the thoroughness and general acceptance of these studies — Congress and the White House once again chose a one-shot tax rebate to deal with an economic slowdown in 2001.

To his credit, Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill cautioned against the rebate. “I was here when we tried that in 1975, and it just didn’t work,” he said. “If we want to change consumption patterns, we need to make permanent changes in peoples’ tax burdens.” But President George W. Bush overruled his Treasury secretary and approved the rebate idea. Checks of $300 to $600 per taxpayer were sent out in the late summer. Contemporaneous polls by Gallup, Bloomberg and the University of Michigan all found that the vast bulk of consumers expected to save the money or use it to pay bills. Subsequent studies confirmed these forecasts.

In short, there is virtually no empirical evidence that tax rebates are an effective response to economic slowdowns. The increased personal saving doesn’t help the economy because the federal budget deficit, which can be thought of as negative saving, offsets all of it in the aggregate. The main benefit of a tax rebate would seem to be political — giving politicians a way of appearing to be doing something about the nation’s economic problems that is superficially plausible. [Feel-Good Economics. Bruce Bartlett. WSJ. January 19 2008][↩]

Categories
Economics

[1060] Of tax reduction, not subsidy increase please!

Crude oil prices have been falling lately and certain quarters are calling for the reduction of fuel prices in Malaysia. That call includes implicit demand for increase in subsidy. Anwar Ibrahim is one of them.

I oppose any subsidy increase that distorts the market. In fact, to combat externalities caused by fossil fuel consumption, I advocate the imposition of tax to internalize the externalities. Unfortunately, taxation is politically unpalatable. As an alternative to subsidy increase or taxation, I propose a policy better than subsidy increase as well as pragmatic at the same time; a third way — a proportionate decrease in taxes.

That means any saving made by the government through the reduction of subsidy as well as the fall in crude oil prices should be fully used to fund tax cut across the board.

The term saving here needs to be defined. Saving means the amount would need to be paid by the government for subsidy if crude oil prices had not fallen from the price level when the latest subsidy regime was announced.

Why is this policy better than the call to increase subsidy?

This policy is less distortionary. Not only it does not increase distortion caused by subsidy, it also reduces distortion caused by taxation through tax reduction. Apart from economic consideration, tax reduction might have favorable impact comparable to the political effect of subsidy increase effect — it would please the mob, for better or for worse.