Tax Expenditures, Principal Agent Problems, and Redundancy
40 Pages Posted: 30 Jun 2006
Date Written: June 2006
Abstract
This paper considers tax expenditures from two related perspectives. First, it analyzes how the incentives on Congress to use a tax expenditure change when principal agent problems are considered. For example, it considers whether tax expenditures can reduce moral hazard or adverse selection problems created by delegations to expert agencies. Second, it considers the condition under which tax expenditures should be expected to be redundant with direct expenditures, as many are. The two, principal agent problems and redundancy, are related because redundancy is often seen as a solution to the principal agent problem. The paper concludes that both principal agent concerns and redundancy might lead to an increase in the use of tax expenditures, although the circumstances in which we should expect this are relatively narrow. The paper then examines the example of the low income housing tax credit, concluding that the credit should be replaced with a direct expenditure in the form of increased tenant vouchers.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
The Integration of Tax and Spending Programs
By David A. Weisbach and Jacob Nussim
-
Efficiency and Tax Incentives: The Case for Refundable Tax Credits
By Lily L. Batchelder, Fred T. Goldberg, ...
-
Energy Tax Incentives and the Alternative Minimum Tax
By Curtis Carlson and Gilbert E. Metcalf
-
Investable Tax Credits: The Case of the Low Income Housing Tax Credit
By Mihir A. Desai, Dhammika Dharmapala, ...
-
Tax Incentives for Affordable Housing: The Low Income Housing Tax Credit
By Mihir A. Desai, Dhammika Dharmapala, ...
-
The UBIT: Leveling an Uneven Playing Field or Tilting a Level One?
-
Obtaining Information by Diversifying Projects or Why Specialization is Inefficient
By Amihai Glazer and Stef Proost
-
U.S. Defense Contracts During the Tax Expenditure Battles of the 1980s
By Susan Guthrie and James R. Hines Jr.