Optimal fiscal policy in the neoclassical growth model revisited
Optimal fiscal policy in the neoclassical growth model revisited
This paper studies optimal taxation in a version of the neoclassical growth model in which investment becomes productive within the period, thereby making the supply of capital elastic in the short run. Because taxing capital is distortionary in the short run, the government's ability/desire to raise revenues through capital income taxation in the initial period or when the economy is hit with a bad shock is greatly curtailed. Our timing assumption also leads to a tractable Ramsey problem without state-contingent debt, which can give rise to debt-financed budget deficits during recessions.
University of Southampton
Mennuni, Alessandro
0599b55d-aa0c-404d-922e-eb60435431c6
Gervais, Martin
c03b188f-08e2-42a6-abca-b64b362a4065
February 2014
Mennuni, Alessandro
0599b55d-aa0c-404d-922e-eb60435431c6
Gervais, Martin
c03b188f-08e2-42a6-abca-b64b362a4065
Mennuni, Alessandro and Gervais, Martin
(2014)
Optimal fiscal policy in the neoclassical growth model revisited
(Discussion Papers in Economics and Econometrics, 1406)
Southampton, GB.
University of Southampton
35pp.
Record type:
Monograph
(Discussion Paper)
Abstract
This paper studies optimal taxation in a version of the neoclassical growth model in which investment becomes productive within the period, thereby making the supply of capital elastic in the short run. Because taxing capital is distortionary in the short run, the government's ability/desire to raise revenues through capital income taxation in the initial period or when the economy is hit with a bad shock is greatly curtailed. Our timing assumption also leads to a tractable Ramsey problem without state-contingent debt, which can give rise to debt-financed budget deficits during recessions.
Text
__soton.ac.uk_ude_PersonalFiles_Users_alexmen_mydocuments_1406 combined.pdf
- Other
More information
Published date: February 2014
Organisations:
Economics
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 364764
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/364764
ISSN: 0966-4246
PURE UUID: f1ad835f-e110-4016-874c-939dbf182757
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 13 May 2014 16:57
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 16:41
Export record
Contributors
Author:
Alessandro Mennuni
Author:
Martin Gervais
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics