Taxes and Growth: New Narrative Evidence from Interwar Britain

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP12962

Authors: Natacha Postel-Vinay; James Cloyne; Nicholas Dimsdale

Abstract: The impact of fiscal policy on economic activity is still a matter of great debate. And, ever since Keynes first commented on it, interwar Britain, 1918-1939, has remained a particularly contentious case --- not least because of its high debt environment and turbulent business cycle. This debate has often focused on the effects of government spending, but little is known about the effects of tax changes. In fact, a number of tax reforms in the period focused on long-term and social objectives, often reflecting the personality of British Chancellors. Based on extensive historiographical research, we apply a narrative approach to the interwar period in Britain and isolate a new series of exogenous tax changes. We find that tax changes have a sizable effect on GDP, with multipliers around 0.5 on impact and exceeding 2 within two years. Our estimates contribute to the historical debate about fiscal policy in the interwar period and are remarkably similar to the sizeable tax multipliers found after WWII.

Keywords: macroeconomic policy; fiscal policy; taxation; public finance; fiscal history; multiplier; narrative approach

JEL Codes: E23; E32; E62; H2; H30; N1; N44


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
tax changes (H26)GDP (E20)
tax cuts (H29)GDP (E20)
tax cuts (H29)unemployment (J64)
tax cuts (H29)interest rates (E43)

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