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Macroeconomic and Redistributional Effects of Consumption Taxes in the USASagiri KitaoFederal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of New York February 23, 2011 Japanese Economic Review, Vol. 62, Issue 1, pp. 63-81, 2011 Abstract: This paper studies the effect of an increase in consumption taxes using a dynamic general equilibrium model of overlapping generations calibrated to the US economy. When the proceeds are used to reduce income taxes, the reform raises the aggregate capital and labour supply in the long run. Workers increase labour supply immediately in response to the reform, while consumption rises only gradually. The tax reform also transfers wealth from old consumers to young consumers. As a result, while future generations experience significant welfare gains, current generations, particularly old consumers, tend to experience sizable welfare losses. When the proceeds are used for a lump-sum transfer, the aggregate capital and labour both decrease in the long run. This reform is welfare-improving for the current low-income households.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 19 Keywords: E62, H24, H31 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: March 9, 2011Suggested CitationContact Information
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