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UNPREDICTABLE TAX POLICIES INCREASE INVESTMENT
Unpredictable changes in tax laws towards investment can boost overall
investment. That is the conclusion of Professors Kevin Hassett of
the American Enterprise Institute and Gilbert Metcalf of Tufts University,
writing in the latest issue of the Economic Journal. They argue
that random changes in tax policy provide opportunities for firms
to wait out high tax regimes and invest more heavily in low tax
regimes. Because firms can choose when to invest, the uncertain
tax environment can be used to their advantage by loading
up investment in times of low taxation.
The random nature of taxes is not simply an academic issue. The
UK has changed tax regimes repeatedly over the years, shifting from
a two-tiered corporate tax system, to a classical corporate income
tax similar to the one used in the United States, to a corporate
tax system integrated with personal income taxes. The United States
has changed the tax credit that can be applied to capital investment
in machinery once every three years on average.
With policy-makers repeatedly changing depreciation schedules,
tax rates and investment tax credits, managers who make investment
decisions take a gamble every time they make a long-lived investment
- a gamble that taxes won't change in ways disadvantageous to the
firm's investment project.
Hassett and Metcalf develop this idea using an innovative means
of analysis that incorporates reasonable responses on the part of
policy-makers. For example, while specific tax code changes may
be unpredictable, the Hassett-Metcalf analysis allows for the likelihood
of a change being related to the underlying profitability of businesses.
If businesses are highly profitable, the odds of a tax increase
naturally increase; such a measure of political reality is unusual
in models of government tax policy.
Are Hassett and Metcalf trying to say that capital intensive industries
should lobby their politicians to increase the unpredictability
of tax policy? No, says Professor Metcalf. Our
model makes no claims about the welfare benefits of unpredictable
tax policy. We argue that overall investment will go up. Whether
shareholders are better off or not is something that our model cannot
answer. But our model shows that claims that an unpredictable tax
policy contributes to a low level of investment are simply wrong.
Note for Editors: Investment with Uncertain Tax Policy: Does
Random Tax Policy Discourage Investment? by Kevin Hassett
and Gilbert Metcalf is published in the July 1999 issue of the Economic
Journal. Hassett is at the American Enterprise Institute, Washington
DC; Metcalf is at Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts.
For Further information: contact RES Media Consultant Romesh Vaitilingam
on 0117-983-9770 or mobile 0468-661095 (email: romesh@compuserve.com);
RES Media Assistant Niall Flynn on 0171-878-2919 (email: nflynn@cepr.org);
Kevin Hassett on 001-202-862-7157(home: 001-703-242-1596; fax: 001-202-862-7177;
email: khasset@aei.org); or Gilbert Metcalf on 001-617-627-3685
(home: 001-978-264-4018; fax: 001-617-627-3917; email: gmetcalf@tufts.edu).
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