The Optimal Mix of Inflationary Finance and Commodity Taxation with Collection Lags

The Optimal Mix of Inflationary Finance and Commodity Taxation with Collection Lags
Title The Optimal Mix of Inflationary Finance and Commodity Taxation with Collection Lags PDF eBook
Author Mr.Avinash K. Dixit
Publisher International Monetary Fund
Pages 16
Release 1990-09-01
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 145195316X

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When there are collection lags in the tax system, inflation reduces the real revenues. This is often offered as an argument for less reliance on the inflation tax. But the optimal rates of other taxes should also be reconsidered in the light of collection lags. When this is done, the focus shifts from the revenues (which can be recouped by changing the rates of these taxes), to the associated costs of collection. In a benchmark case where the average costs of collection are constant, the optimal inflation tax is independent of the collection lag.

The Optimal Mix of Inflationary Finance and Commodity Taxation with Collection Lags

The Optimal Mix of Inflationary Finance and Commodity Taxation with Collection Lags
Title The Optimal Mix of Inflationary Finance and Commodity Taxation with Collection Lags PDF eBook
Author Avinash Dixit
Publisher
Pages 16
Release 2006
Genre
ISBN

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When there are collection lags in the tax system, inflation reduces the real revenues. This is often offered as an argument for less reliance on the inflation tax. But the optimal rates of other taxes should also be reconsidered in the light of collection lags. When this is done, the focus shifts from the revenues (which can be recouped by changing the rates of these taxes), to the associated costs of collection. In a benchmark case where the average costs of collection are constant, the optimal inflation tax is independent of the collection lag.

Collection Lags and the Optimal Inflation Tax

Collection Lags and the Optimal Inflation Tax
Title Collection Lags and the Optimal Inflation Tax PDF eBook
Author Mr.Alex Mourmouras
Publisher International Monetary Fund
Pages 34
Release 1993-07-01
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1451965346

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The observation that collection lags combine with inflation to erode fiscal revenues has long been a strong argument against seigniorage (Tanzi (1978)). However, with the exception of Dixit (1991), who used a general equilibrium model to reject this argument, the optimal tax literature has not analyzed how collection lags affect desired tax structures. In this paper, this issue is re-examined using an overlapping generations version of Dixit’s model. It is shown that depending on the specification of the collection cost function and the size of government spending in GDP, collection lags may increase, leave unchanged, or reduce the desired rate of inflation.

Fiscal Revenue, Inflationary Finance and Growth

Fiscal Revenue, Inflationary Finance and Growth
Title Fiscal Revenue, Inflationary Finance and Growth PDF eBook
Author Mr.Nurun N. Choudhry
Publisher International Monetary Fund
Pages 30
Release 1992-03-01
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1451921063

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This paper analyzes the optimal rate of monetary expansion when government resorts to inflationary finance to generate additional investment for enhancing growth. If there are lags in tax collection, an increase in inflation erodes real fiscal revenue, thereby worsening the current balance while reducing government investment. This impedes capital accumulation as well as increases the welfare cost of inflation. As such, the optimal rate of monetary expansion, equilibrium capital-labor ratio and output are lower while the marginal cost of inflationary finance is higher than they would be without collection lags. Simulations are performed to highlight empirical implications.

IMF Staff papers

IMF Staff papers
Title IMF Staff papers PDF eBook
Author International Monetary Fund. Research Dept.
Publisher International Monetary Fund
Pages 236
Release 1991-01-01
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1451973136

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Trade liberalization in developing countries is frequently opposed on the grounds that, because it is likely to cause a deterioration in the external balance, it may not be a viable policy option for countries facing foreign exchange constraints. Recent literature suggests, however, an ambiguous relationship between tariff changes and the current account. This paper shows that if liberalization involves reducing tariffs on imported intermediate inputs (a reform that has figured prominently in developing countries), then the current account may improve or deteriorate, depending on the level of initial trade distortions and the structure of the economy.[JEL F13, F32, F41]

IMF Working Paper

IMF Working Paper
Title IMF Working Paper PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 602
Release 1995
Genre Finance
ISBN

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IMF Staff papers

IMF Staff papers
Title IMF Staff papers PDF eBook
Author International Monetary Fund. Research Dept.
Publisher International Monetary Fund
Pages 259
Release 1977-01-01
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1451956444

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The purpose of the present study is to review these concepts and to estimate consistent series of potential output in manufacturing for Canada, the United States, Japan, France, the Federal Republic of Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, and Sweden for the period 1955–1975. Potential output series are also projected for the medium term (1976–1978) based on forecasts of available resources. The production function method is selected as the best approach to derive potential output series. The function used in the paper is a modified Cobb–Douglas function that allows for economies of scale and cyclical variations in the intensity of use of employed labor and of the capital stock. The study concludes that the rate of growth of potential output in manufacturing is now lower in most industrial countries than it was in the late 1960s. However, the fall is not as large as is often claimed, so that the output gaps early in 1976 were extremely high in all the major industrial countries. The principal reasons for the slowdown in the rate of growth of potential output are the lower rate of capital accumulation and the reduction of the normal workweek, rather than the direct effect of the increase in the price of energy.