Date: 2007
Type: Working Paper
Prudent Budgetary Policy Political Economy of Precautionary Taxation
Working Paper, EUI ECO, 2007/39
VAN DER PLOEG, Frederick, Prudent Budgetary Policy Political Economy of Precautionary Taxation, EUI ECO, 2007/39 - https://hdl.handle.net/1814/7340
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
The theory of tax smoothing and determination of public debt with uncertain future national
income is extended for prudence. A prudent government deliberately underestimates future
national income and the tax base, especially if the variance and persistence of shocks hitting the
tax base are large and the tax rate and the unemployment benefit are large. As a precaution the tax
rate is set higher and the level of public spending lower. As a result, as income and the tax base
turn out to be bigger than budgeted, the minister of finance enjoys windfall revenues and is able
to gradually reduce debt and debt service over time. This permits, depending on political
preferences, either gradual cuts in the tax rate, gradual increases in government spending or a
combination of both. It is easy to allow for government assets as well. Finally, political economy
justifications are offered of why it is desirable to appoint a strong and pessimistic minister of
finance. In particular, we show that prudence is able to offset the intertemporal spending, tax and
debt biases resulting from the common-pool distortions. If the minister of finance and the prime
minister are given as many voting rights as the spending ministers combined, the intratemporal
common-pool distortions of an excessively large public sector are eliminated as well. A strong
and pessimistic minister of finance can thus control the impatient profligacy of squabbling
spending ministers. However, if voters care about outcomes on election eve, prudence may be
abused for short-run electoral gains. Opportunistic manipulation of election results, however, also
dampens the intertemporal common-pool distortions.
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/7340
ISSN: 1725-6704
Series/Number: EUI ECO; 2007/39
Publisher: European University Institute