The Looming Fiscal Reckoning: Tax Distortions, Top Earners, and Revenues

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP17795

Authors: Nezih Guner; Martin Lopez-Daneri; Gustavo Ventura

Abstract: How should the U.S. confront the growing revenue needs driven by higher spending requirements? We investigate the mix of potential tax increases that can generate a given revenue need at the minimum welfare cost and evaluate its macroeconomic impact. We do so in the context of a life-cycle growth model that captures key aspects of the earnings and wealth distributions and the non-linear shape of taxes and transfers in place. We evaluate changes in income taxes, the introduction of an economy-wide linear consumption tax, and a wealth tax for top wealth holders that match different revenue targets. Our findings show that a proportional consumption tax combined with a lump-sum transfer to all households and a reduction in income tax progressivity consistently emerges as the best alternative to minimize welfare costs associated with a given increase in revenue. A 30% long-run increase in Federal tax revenue requires a consumption tax rate of 27.8%, a transfer of about 12% of mean household income to all households, and a reduction of top marginal income tax rates of more than 5 percentage points. Output declines by 7.9% in the long run. While transfers are substantial, smaller transfers can accomplish most of the reduction in welfare costs. We find no role for wealth taxes in either increasing revenues or minimizing welfare costs.

Keywords: taxation; progressivity; tax revenue

JEL Codes: E6; H2


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
proportional consumption tax + lumpsum transfer to all households + reduction in income tax progressivity (H23)minimizes welfare costs associated with revenue increases (D69)
30% long-run increase in federal tax revenue necessitates a consumption tax rate of 27.8% + transfer of about 12% of mean household income + reduction of more than 5 percentage points in top marginal income tax rates (H31)output declines by 7.9% (E20)
wealth tax (H24)no significant role in increasing revenues or minimizing welfare costs (D69)
wealth tax leads to sharp initial increase in revenue followed by a decline (H26)worse welfare outcomes compared to baseline findings (I38)

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