What Does the Taxable Income Elasticity Say about Dynamic Responses to Tax Changes?

The taxable income elasticity is relevant to dynamic scoring because it broadly encompasses many ways taxpayers respond to changes in tax rates. The elasticity includes, for example, changes in labor supply and participation, savings and portfolio allocation, the form of compensation, the timing of...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American economic review 2005-05, Vol.95 (2), p.426-431
Hauptverfasser: Carroll, Robert, Warren Hrung
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Warren Hrung
description The taxable income elasticity is relevant to dynamic scoring because it broadly encompasses many ways taxpayers respond to changes in tax rates. The elasticity includes, for example, changes in labor supply and participation, savings and portfolio allocation, the form of compensation, the timing of income and deductions, and tax evasion and avoidance on the tax base, all subsumed in this one statistic. This one statistic summarizes how the tax base expands or contracts in response to changes in tax rates and, consequently, the extent taxpayer behavior offsets the static revenue loss (gain) of tax rate reductions (increases). In contrast to convention revenues estimates, which assume that output and other key macroeconomic aggregates remain fixed when considering changes in the tax law, the taxable income elasticity imposes no such constraint. Nevertheless, some macro-dynamic responses, such as investment and savings-related supply-side effects and crowding out, are only partially captured in the taxable income elasticity, and demand effects are generally not reflected at all.
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source Business Source Complete; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; American Economic Association Web
subjects Adjusted gross income
Aggregates
Behavior
Compensation
Corporate income taxes
Dynamic Scoring
Economic development
Economic models
Effective income tax rates
Elasticity
Elasticity of demand
Estimated taxes
Estimates
Fiscal policy
GDP
Gross Domestic Product
Income elasticity
Income estimates
Income tax
Income taxes
Labor supply
Macroeconomics
Policy analysis
Public finance
Revenue
Simulation
Studies
Tax base
Tax rates
Tax reform
Tax returns
Tax systems
Taxable income
Taxpayers
Taxpaying
U.S.A
Wages & salaries
title What Does the Taxable Income Elasticity Say about Dynamic Responses to Tax Changes?
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