Is the value added tax a useful macroeconomic stabilization instrument?
Date
2013
Authors
Claus, Iris
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Butterworths
Abstract
The value added tax (VAT) has been proposed as a macroeconomic stabilization instrument. This paper considers some practical implications of a variable VAT rate. It then develops a dynamic general equilibrium model to assess its usefulness as a stabilization instrument. A variable rate VAT would no longer be less distortionary than other taxes. It would distort between current and future consumption, i.e. savings and investment decisions, and hence raise the economic costs of taxation. Moreover, a variable VAT rate would be less effective in dampening business cycles than the conventional stabilization tool, an interest rate. This is because of additional adverse supply effects. A change in the interest rate affects this period's savings and investment decisions, whereas a variable VAT rate would influence savings and investment decisions over time. A variable VAT rate is therefore unlikely to be a useful stabilization instrument.
Description
Keywords
Keywords: Economic costs of taxation; Interest rate; Macroeconomic stabilization; Value added tax
Citation
Collections
Source
Economic Modelling
Type
Journal article
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2037-12-31
Downloads
File
Description