Title: Subnational Redistribution and Economic Growth
1- Subnational Redistribution and Economic Growth
- Sept. 06 Version
- Howard Chernick and Paul Sturm
- Hunter College and the Graduate Center, CUNY
- NYC Dept. of Finance
-
2Questions?
- IS Sub-National Redistribution Inefficient
- Does a relatively progressive tax structure
and/or a relatively pro-poor expenditure pattern
affect State Economic Growth?
3HYPOTHESES
- Standard HYP. Redistribution as a Negative
Fiscal Amenity - In more redistributive states Negative
fiscal residual for high-income individuals - B(yhi) T(yhi) lt 0 Negative Migration
Incentive, Negative Labor Supply Effect - Positive fiscal residual for low-skilled
individuals B(ylo) T(ylo) gt 0 Positive
migration incentive, Negative Labor Supply
Effect.
4Alternative Hypotheses
- Preferences for Redistribution Vary Sorting by
Preferences. Variation in Redistribution is
therefore welfare enhancing. Hence no effect on
Growth. - Redistribution as Investment in Human Capital
Education, Health, Housing. Positive Return
positive effect on growth
5Factors Affecting Sub-National Growth
- 1) National Economic Growth. Elast. Of Growth
w.r.t. nat. growth 1 (Blanchard and Katz) - 2) Long-run Convergence in productivity, per
capita income. (Barro and Sala-Martin) but
convergence is slow. - 3) Density Effect. Differential rates of
productivity growth in large cities. (Hall and
Ciconne, 1996) Influence on statewide economic
growth.
6Factors Affecting Sub-Nat. Growth (cont)
- Â 4) Importance of State or Region specific
shocks, mainly on the Demand Side differences in
industrial structures. - Â Shocks lead to wide swings in unemployment,
migration among the unemployed. Long-run
persistence of shocks to jobs,population, and
aggregate income
7ANNUAL PER CAPITA INCOME GROWTHAverage of 5 Year
Range 1977 to 1982
8ANNUAL PER CAPITA INCOME GROWTHAverage of 5 Year
Range 1985 to 1990
9ANNUAL PER CAPITA INCOME GROWTHAverage of 5 Year
Range 1991 to 1996
10ANNUAL PER CAPITA INCOME GROWTHAverage of 5 Year
Range 1995 to 2000
11ANNUAL PER CAPITA INCOME GROWTHAverage of 20
Year Range 1977 to 1997
12What do the Maps Tell Us
- Differences across 5 yr periods in regional
patterns of growth. - Long-run growth. Convergence in the south.
Northeast grows rapidly as well. - Long-run range much smaller than SR range
- Long-run aggreg. Growth persistent differences.
13Growth Effect Labor Supply depends on p, the
fiscal residual delta is an agglomeration
effect.
14Comp. Diffs. And PO Redistribution
- Indirect Utility Fctn of high and low skilled
worker in rents, gross wages, taxes, and
altruistic component - VH VvH(rH,wH,tH),VL V0,H (2a)
- VL(rL,wL,tLTR) V0,L (2b)
- Relative Tax Rates Determined by State Budget
- Constraint
- tH tH (G,TR,tL) (4a)
- tL tL (G,TR,tH) (4b)
15Comp. Statics
- MVH/MwH -MVH/MtH
- MVH/MTR)(MTR/MtH) (7)
- MVL/MwL -MVL/MtL MVL/MTR/ (1
MwL/MTR) (9) - Hence the compensating effect on gross wages of
a tax shift or a change in transfers depends on
marginal utility to the donor, and the marginal
productivity to the recipients, from additional
transfers.
16Empirical Evidence
- Labor Supply Effect.
- Â a)Â Â Capitalization of taxes in gross wages.
Negative effect on growth, through increase in
costs, decrease in productivity. Note conflict
if demand inelastic - Wallace (1993), - 25 of cases. Not more in
high-skilled occupations. (where supply is more
elastic) - F-V (1998) full capitalization of changes in tax
incidence. Â - Chernick (2004) no evidence of tax
capitalization in aggregate data.
17Migration, Labor Supply, Income Effects
- Taxes Pema (2005) small negative effect of
income and sales taxes increases with education.
Similar to wage differential effect - Welfare
- Some Migration Effect (Gelbach, 2004), McKinnish
(2005) migration low among those at risk, hence
overall flows are small
18Labor Supply, Income Effects
- Labor supply effects of redistribution. In-state
effects bigger than migration effects. Neumark
and Powers (2005), Meyer (2000) - Effect of Welfare Spending on Personal Income
Negative Effect Helms (1985) Welfare as Excluded
Category
19Expenditure Categories
- 1) Public goods (1/3 of spending police, fire,
sanitation, transportation, gen. Admin., interest
on debt - 2) Redistributive (1/4 of spending) Pub.
Assistance, Medicaid, child welfare services - 3) Education (over 1/3 of spending) primary and
secondary, higher ed
20Measure of Expend. Progressivity
- 1) Welfare Spending per cap., Maximum welfare
benefit - 2) State Govt Share of public school spending
(correlation with Inequality of Spending -.26) - Higher Education Spending from Public Revenues
(non-tuition sources)
21Growth Model
- Growtht1 a0 a1(BURDENt0) a2(NEIGHBURDENt0)
a3(EXPDISTR) a4(NEIGHEXPDISTR) a5(RELATIVE
INCOMEt0) a6(DEMOGRt0) a7(BIGCITY)
a8(REGION/YEAR) error term - 5 and 10 year average growth in per capita income
as function of Distributional Characteristics - Estimate Tax Effect, controlling for Expend.
Incidence
22Hyp. For Fiscal Vbles.Variable
Expected EffectTax Progressivity
Negative Neighbor Progr.
PositiveSelf. Spend/Max Ben NegativeState Ed
Share ?Higher Ed Spend
Positive
23Are Fiscal Vbles. Endogenous
- Welfare If growth reduces need lowers
expenditures, negative welfare coefficient might
be mistakenly interpreted as causing a reduction
in the rate of economic growth. - If growth increases redistribution (altruism as
normal good) positive welf coeff. Would not imply
a causal effect. - Tests a) regressed growth on lagged growth no
effect b) regressed fiscal vbles on lagged
growth. Results All Insign, except neg. effect
on welfare spending of aggreg. 10 year growth. - Therefore use OLS. (IV estimates not different)
24Data and Variables.
- Model Estimated with Pooled Cross Section of
Continental U.S. States years are 77, 85, 91,
and 95. - Tax Data from Phares (1977), and Citizens for
Tax Justice. (See Chernick, 2005 for
description. - BURD1, BURD3, BURD5 state quintile specific
tax burden, for repres. Family, at that quintile,
net of federal deductibility. - Neighbor pop. weighted avg.of geogr. Neighbor
tax progressivity - Progressivity BURD5/BURD1
- Expenditure Variables. U.S. Census of Govts,
various years.
25Estimation Results
- Table 5. Basic Specification. (All specs.
Include region, year, and year by region
indicator variables.) - Tax Effects
- Own Tax Progressivity Coeff. Positive, sign. in
aggreg. Growth regressions. Controlling for
Expend. Redistribution, no effect on per capita
income, positive effect on growth in aggregate
Income - Positive Neighbor Effect. (New Jersey, or Conn
benefit from NYs progressivity)
26Expenditure Redistribution Effects
- Negative relation between welfare spending and
aggreg. Growth. - Endogeneity? - Negative state ed share effect on p.c. income
growth, over 5 years. - Higher Ed negative but insign.
27Alternative Specifications
- 1) Table 6. Actual Quintile Tax Burdens. Agents
more likely to respond to actual burden, than
relative burden. Results no effect on p.c.
income growth for any quintile negative effect
on growth in top income. (high income response?)
- Weak Evidence of High Income Neighbor Effect
28Robustness Checks
- Table 7.
- 1) National Income Quintiles. Tax Progr.
Insignificant - 2) Non-overlapping long-period growth sample No
change - 3) Density/Agglom. Effects only PCTURB sign.
Localization of Agglom. Economies?
29Additional Tax Specifications
- Table 8.
- 1) controlling for total taxes, no progr.
Effect. - 2) Income tax alone top quintile burden insign
neg. effect on aggreg. Growth of low-income inc.
tax burden - Table 9 Education Share
- Robust to inclusion of total ed. Spending.
- Sensitive to tax specification.
- State ed share positively correlated with state
taxes. Reduction in Tiebout Choice? - Effect much weaker over ten years. Human K
investment effect over longer period
30Neighbor Redistribution
- (Table 9) No Effect on growth in per capita
income. - Positive Effect of Neighbor Higher Ed Spending on
Aggreg. Growth. Positive Spatial Externality.
31Summary of Results
- There is considerable variation in fiscal
incidence across states and over time - Tax progressivity does not adversely affect
growth. States benefit from progressive taxation
in neighbor states (NJ vs NY, Rhode Island vs.
Mass) - Expend. Progr
- State Ed Share some negative effect, short run.
Less so long run (Tiebout choice vs. invest. In
human capital) - Welfare Spending greater in slower growing
states. Causality question? Doesnt support
Helms. (86) - Higher Ed no growth effect some neighbor growth
effect.
32Conclusions
- Why so little effect consistent with
capitalization and migration studies. - Federal Cost Sharing Reduces net burden of
redistribution. Deductibility of taxes, federal
grants for PA, Medicaid, child care, etc. - Human capital investment payoff?
- Pareto Optimal variation? Subnational Fiscal
System is in distributional equilibrium.