Revenue Forecasts, Revenue Estimates, and Tax Expenditure Budgets - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Revenue Forecasts, Revenue Estimates, and Tax Expenditure Budgets

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Title: Revenue Forecasts, Revenue Estimates, and Tax Expenditure Budgets


1
Revenue Forecasts,Revenue Estimates, andTax
Expenditure Budgets
  • Troy University
  • PA6650- Governmental Budgeting
  • Chapter 13

2
Three Revenue Prediction Tasks
  • Revenue Forecast (or baseline)
  • Revenue Estimates (or fiscal notes or scores)
  • Tax Expenditures

3
Revenue Forecast (baseline)
  • Forecast of what revenue will be collected in the
    budget period under the current las
  • Office of Tax Analysis in the Department of the
    Treasury (for OMB)
  • Congressional Budget Office (for Congress)
  • Forecasts can be very objective or very
    subjective depending on technique

4
Revenue Forecast (baseline)
  • Forecaster should understand the tax, how it is
    administered, and collection procedures
  • Should be plotted on a graph against time
  • Openness is a virtue
  • Approach depends on the task to be served
  • Individual revenue sources should be forecast
    separately
  • Revenues need to be monitored and checked against
    the forecast

5
Revenue Forecast (baseline)
  • Different Approaches
  • Extrapolation or projections
  • Simple, low cost, moving average
  • Deterministic modeling
  • Multiple Regression
  • dependent/independent multiple variables
  • Econometric Models
  • Set of interdependent equations
  • Microdata models
  • Small sample from taxpayer data files

6
Revenue Forecast (baseline)
  • UNIVARIATE PROJECTIONS AND EXTRAPOLATIONS
  • Simple plotting
  • Moving average
  • Other more sophisticated techniques

7
Revenue Forecast (baseline)
  • DETERMINISTIC MODELING
  • Pre-established formula (rule of thumb)
  • e.g., link between GDP and personal income tax or
    VAT to GDP
  • One variable may help predict the other

8
Revenue Forecast (baseline)
  • MULTIPLE REGRESSION
  • Y is the dependent variable
  • Y aX1 bX2 cX3 .
  • Sales tax, personal income tax, inflation rate,
    unemployment rate, etc
  • Least squares to find a regression line

9
Revenue Forecast (baseline)
  • ECONOMETRIC MODELS
  • Simultaneous system of interdependent equations
  • e.g., State income tax and sales tax deductions
  • Multiple equations
  • Sophisticated

10
Revenue Forecast (baseline)
  • MICRODATA MODELS
  • Taken from a sample of taxpayers
  • 10-year baseline of tax records
  • Must be careful of tax and policy changes

11
Choosing the Method
  • Resources available
  • Materiality of the forecast
  • Availability of historic revenue data
  • Availability and probable quality of causal data
  • Time period of the forecast
  • Explainability of the forecast
  • Format
  • A look back, the future environment, the
    approach, the forecast

12
Forecasts for the Long Term
  • Why?
  • To guide a city on a major infrastructure program
  • To show a credit rating agency long term health
  • To let planners know implications of a specific
    project
  • To inform the public when on the brink of a
    financial disaster
  • To educate the legislature on pending legislation
  • Medium term forecasts are 3-5 outyears
  • Wrong forecasts sometimes happen

13
Revenue Estimating
  • Aka scoring (US) and tax costing (UK)
  • Difference between receipts under current law and
    receipts under a proposed change in the law (what
    will the fiscal impact be?)
  • Static component
  • Taxpayers that will not behave differently
  • Dynamic component
  • Macro- and microeconomic analysis of behavioral
    change when tax law changes

14
Tax Expenditure Budgets
  • Revenue losses attributable to provisions of the
    federal tax laws which allow a special exclusion,
    exemption, or deduction from gross income or
    which provide a special credit, a preferential
    rate of tax, or a deferral of tax liability
  • Compares a normal state with no exclusions to how
    much you are losing from exclusions
  • Benchmark and deviations from the norm
  • Page 534 Table 13-2

15
Conclusion
  • Revenue prediction has 3 divisions
  • Forecasting collections in future years
  • Estimating the impact of proposed changes in tax
    laws
  • Calculating revenues currently sacrificed by
    existing tax law
  • Mixture of art and science
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