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Tax tilting and politics: Some theory and evidence for Latin America
Institution:1. European University at St. Petersburg, 3 Gagarinskaya St., St. Petersburg 191187, Russia;2. St. Petersburg Institute for Economics and Mathematics (RAS), 36–38 Serpukhovskaya St., St. Petersburg 190013, Russia;3. Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Department of Economics and Management, Kaiserstrasse 12, Karlsruhe 76128, Germany
Abstract:A government budget deficit can exist for at least two possible reasons: tax smoothing and/or tax tilting. Under tax-smoothing, deficits are temporary phenomena resulting from the decision not to vary the tax rate in response to fluctuations in government spending (as a share of output). This is done in order to minimize the distortionary cost of taxes. Tax tilting occurs whenever the government has an incentive to discount the losses to society from taxes at a higher rate than society discounts them; hence it delays taxes or advances spending introducing an upward trend in total government debt. This paper develops a model that implies that tax-tilting tends to increase with political risk. An increase in political risk, measured by the probability of losing power, increases the rate at which the government discounts the future, causing government policy to be relatively more myopic. Hence it delays taxes or advances spending and its deficit increases. Using data from a panel of 19 Latin-American countries for the period 1984–2009, the paper presents estimation results that strongly support the proposition that an increase in political risk increases the degree of tax-tilting.
Keywords:Tax tilting  Tax smoothing  Political risk  Interaction models
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