We estimate short- and long-run tax elasticities that capture the relationship between changes in national income and tax revenue. We show that the short-run tax elasticity changes according to the business cycle. We estimate a two state Markov-switching regression on a novel dataset of tax policy reforms in 15 European countries from 1980 to 2013, showing that the elasticities during booms and recessions are statistically (and often economically) different. The elasticities of (i) indirect taxes, (ii) social contributions, and (iii) corporate income taxes, tend to be larger during recessions. Tax elasticities for personal income tend to be more stable across the regimes. Estimates of long-run elasticities are in line with existing literature.
The Stability of Tax Elasticities over the Business Cycle in European Countries
Melisso Boschi,Stefano d’Addona
Published 2019 in Fiscal studies
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- Publication year
2019
- Venue
Fiscal studies
- Publication date
2019-05-24
- Fields of study
Economics
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Semantic Scholar
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