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Government and Growth Francesco Daveri
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Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

Government and Growth

Francesco Daveri

Page 2: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

Outline

Some facts

Theory

Empirics

Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell

(1999)

Conclusions

Page 3: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

Common secular trend towards Bigger Government

Page 4: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

Big Government: bad for growth?

Not necessarily

Page 5: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

Public good provision (rule of law) enhances factor accumulation …

Page 6: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

… and efficiency

Page 7: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

.. But taxes discourage market activities

Page 8: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

.. and control of corruption is associated to high per capita GDP

Page 9: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

Theory: summing upSome Govt-related items affect growth:• Public goods (Productive expenditure) good

for growth• Distorting taxation bad for growth

… while some others are irrelevant for growth:• Non-distorting taxes (citizen tax)• Unproductive expenditure (if financed with non-

distorting taxes)

MAIN MESSAGE: composition of spending and taxation matters

Page 10: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

Empirical caseIs the empirical case as apparent as the theoretical

case ? Not really, unfortunately• Barro (1991, 1997)

– public consumption (Gov’t spending minus defense minus education) negatively related to growth.

– Spending in public goods not robustly correlated with growth

• Koester- Kormendi (1989), Easterly-Rebelo (1993): – taxes unrelated to growth along cross-sectional

dimension• Stokey-Rebelo (1995)

– taxes unrelated to growth along time series dimension in the US

Page 11: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

Issue: how to measure tax ratesQuestion: by how much is growth rate affected as Gov’t varies

tax rates?• Statutory marginal tax rates

– Rarely used in cross-country growth regressions for they are awkward to compute and update

– Moreover, nominal tax rates often different from effective tax rates

• Tax-to-GDP ratios– Marginal tax rate matters in theory; we only observe average– T/GDP = (T/tax base) * (tax base/GDP). Hence, tax-GDP ratios

may change independently of Gov’t action if income distribution varies

• Average effective tax rates (AETR)– Best available indicators: T / (tax base). – Computed for capital and labor incomes as well as consumption.

Page 12: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

What if effective rates used?• Easterly and Rebelo (EER, 1993), AETR

for 40 countries– No detected link with growth

• Mendoda, Razin and Tesar (JME, 1994), AETR for 14 Industrial countries. Updated by DAveri and Tabellini (Economic Policy, 2000)

– Weak link with growth

Page 13: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

Other methodological issues

• Gov’t spending in public goods may not reflect effective provision

• ‘Tax systems’ are hardly comparable, for tax structures, degree of enforcement and tax bases vary wildly across countries

• Kneller-Bleaney-Gemmell (KBG, 1999): most studies focus on just one side of the budget. Both sides should be included to avoid biasing results.

Page 14: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

KBG (1999)Put the Govt budget constraints in the growth

regression!

Problem: if append spending, taxes and deficit variables

perfect collinearity among fiscal regressors

… so?

Leave out one fiscal variable … which one???

Theory helps: eliminate a “non-affecting growth item” to avoid the omitted variable problem

Page 15: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

KBG (1999)

Growth= c+ j=1,..,m jXij + dcontrols + error

…eliminate the mth variable:

Growth= c+ j=1,..,(m-1) jXij + dcontrols + error

Page 16: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

KBG (1999) if the m variable is omitted:

Growth= c+ + d controls+ errors

• the null:

• coeff meaning: effect of a unit change in the relevant variable offset by a unit change in the omitted category

the implicit financing element is the mth

Page 17: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

Data

22 developed countries

Annual data 1970-1995 five-year avarages to remove the

effects of business cycle

Page 18: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

KBG regression results

Page 19: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

KBG regression results

Non distorting taxation (rndis) and non productive spending (enprd): hypothesis of same coefficient not rejected

Productive expenditure (eprd): positive and significant coefficient

Distorting taxation (rdis) : negative and significant coefficient

Budget surplus (sur): positive and significant coefficient

Page 20: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

Mis-specifying the Budget Constraints

A correct specification of the Government budget constraint is important for interpreting fiscal parameters

• Including tax rates without budget deficit biases estimated coefficient toward zero if tax cuts financed in deficit

Page 21: Government and Growth Francesco Daveri. Outline Some facts Theory Empirics Digging deeper: Kneller, Bleaney and Gemmell (1999) Conclusions.

Conclusion Impact of fiscal policy on growth depends on the

structure of taxation and expenditure

Non productive expenditure and non-distorting taxation have a zero impact on growth

Productive expenditure has a positive effect on growth if financed by non distortionary taxation

Distorting taxation has a negative effect on growth