Rebalancing and the Chinese VAT: Some Numerical Simulation Results

Working Paper: NBER ID: w16686

Authors: Chunding Li; John Whalley

Abstract: This paper presents numerical simulation results that suggest that China can both reduce its trade imbalance and receive welfare benefits by switching the value added tax (VAT) regime from the current destination principle to an origin principle. With the tax on exports exceeding that no longer collected on imports, revenues rise and exports fall. VAT regime switching is thus a possibility for China to receive a double benefit, rebalancing trade with a welfare gain. This has implications for present G20 discussions on finding ways to adjust global trade imbalances. Under a destination principle, imports are taxed but input taxes are rebated on exports (as currently). Under an origin basis imports are not taxed, but no export rebates are given. Previous VAT literature stresses the neutrality of tax basis switches, which simply reflect moving between consumption and production taxes, but neutrality only holds when trade is balanced. In the unbalanced trade case for countries with a trade surplus, such as China, an origin basis offers a lower tax rate on an equal yield basis and reduced exports. We use a two country endogenous trade imbalance general equilibrium global trade model with endogenous factor supply, a fixed exchange rate and a non-accommodative monetary policy structure which supports the Chinese trade imbalance. We calibrate model parameters to 2008 data and simulate counterfactual equilibria for VAT tax basis switches in which the trade imbalance changes. Our results suggest that given China's trade surplus VAT regime switching to an origin can decrease China's trade surplus by over 50%, and additionally increase Chinese and world welfare. The rest of the world's production and welfare improves simultaneously.

Keywords: Value Added Tax; Destination Basis; Origin Basis; Numerical Simulation

JEL Codes: F1; F10; F13; F17; F4; F47


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
switching China's VAT regime from a destination basis to an origin basis (H25)decrease China's trade surplus by over 50% (F69)
switching China's VAT regime from a destination basis to an origin basis (H25)increase welfare for both China and the rest of the world (D69)
VAT regime switch (H25)decrease in exports (F14)
VAT regime switch (H25)increase in imports (F69)
decrease in exports (F14)decrease China's trade surplus (F19)
increase in imports (F69)decrease China's trade surplus (F19)
decrease China's trade surplus (F19)increase welfare for both China and the rest of the world (D69)

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