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Tax Assignments Jorge Martinez-Vazquez Georgia State University

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Title: Tax Assignments Jorge Martinez-Vazquez Georgia State University Author: Paul Benson Last modified by: wb228436 Created Date: 12/17/2001 4:54:48 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tax Assignments Jorge Martinez-Vazquez Georgia State University


1
Tax AssignmentsJorge Martinez-VazquezGeorgia
State University
  • Intergovernmental Fiscal Relations

2
DEFINITION OF REVENUE ASSIGNMENT
  • What taxes should be assigned to different levels
    of government?
  • How should these arrangements be implemented?

3
Purposes of Tax Assignment
  • Provide subnational governments with revenues
    they can control to implement their expenditure
    responsibilities (improved resource allocation)
  • Own taxes and levies
  • Shared taxes

4
Purposes of Tax Assignment(cont.)
  • Increase the accountability and responsibility of
    subnational government officials to their
    constituencies
  • Subnational governments can significantly affect
    their total revenues at the margin through their
    choices of taxes, bases, or more preferably tax
    rates
  • Subnational governments should operate with a
    hard budget constraint. Revenue sharing and
    grants should be infra-marginal funding. The
    expansion (or contraction) of the budget should
    remain a subnational government responsibility

5
Purposes of Tax Assignment(cont.)
  • Macroeconomic stabilization and redistribution of
    income should be generally left as
    responsibilities of the central government

6
DESIRABLE FEATURES OF SUBNATIONAL TAXES
  • Linkage between taxes and benefits derived from
    local government services (using the benefit
    principle)
  • Employ user charges and fees whenever possible
    for excludable and individual benefits. (User
    charges act as quasi-prices by rationing and
    signaling demand and they tend to be fair)
  • For public services with generalized benefits use
    consumption and residence-based taxes if
    benefits are provided to individuals and
    production and origin-based taxes if benefits
    are provided to businesses

7
DESIRABLE FEATURES OF SUBNATIONAL TAXES(Cont.)
  • Administrative feasibility
  • Administration costs and compliance costs (time
    and money employed to file taxes) and political
    acceptability are taken into account

8
DESIRABLE FEATURES OF SUBNATIONAL TAXES(Cont.)
  • Revenue stability and revenue elasticity
  • Subnational governments typically cannot run
    deficits and have more limited ability to borrow.
    More unstable sources should be assigned to the
    central government
  • Subnational revenues should increase with income
    as much as the demand for services

9
DESIRABLE FEATURES OF SUBNATIONAL TAXES(Cont.)
  • Minimizing excess burdens and distortions in the
    location of economic activity
  • Unlike revenue burdens, excess burdens are
    avoidable losses, which arise from people trying
    to avoid taxes by working less, changing the
    level and composition of consumption and
    investment, etc.
  • Taxes levied at the origin of production or
    source of income tend to distort location more
    than taxes on consumption or place of residence

10
DESIRABLE FEATURES OF SUBNATIONAL TAXES(Cont.)
  • Controlling tax exporting (taxes are paid by
    non-residents who derive no benefit)
  • Tax exporting can lead to over spending
  • It is unfair and undermines accountability

11
DESIRABLE FEATURES OF SUBNATIONAL TAXES(Cont.)
  • Preventing predatory tax competition
  • By jurisdictions that provide a haven to
    smugglers, those that misstate residence, or
    practice profit shifting through transfer pricing
  • However, there is also healthy tax competition,
    as when taxpayers relocate to enjoy a preferable
    package of taxes and public services

12
THE CHOICE OF SUBNATIONAL TAXES
  • There are hardly any taxes that comply with all
    the desirable features for subnational taxation
  • But clearly, there are better and worse tax
    assignments

13
THE CHOICE OF SUBNATIONAL TAXES(cont.)
  • At minimum tax assignments should provide
  • Autonomy at the margin
  • Stable assignments over time
  • Sufficient revenues for the wealthiest
    subnational governments to be fiscally autonomous

14
COMMON PROBLEMS WITH REVENUE ASSIGNMENTS
  • Vertical imbalance (inadequate correspondence
    between expenditure responsibilities of
    subnational governments and their assigned
    sources of revenue)
  • Tax autonomy and increased use of subsidiarity in
    taxation (taxes should be assigned to the lowest
    level of government that can implement them) are
    preferable to transfers

15
COMMON PROBLEMS WITH REVENUE ASSIGNMENTS(cont.)
  • Lack of meaningful tax autonomy
  • Predominance of shared taxes and transfers
  • Unstable Assignments
  • Assignments are decided in the annual budget
    rather than stated in the laws and fixed for a
    number of years

16
COMMON PROBLEMS WITH REVENUE ASSIGNMENTS(cont.)
  • Wrong incentives and lack of uniformity the
    regulation of taxes
  • Tax assignments are customized for each local
    government to fit a minimum budget
  • Confused system resulting in the misallocation of
    resources and significant administration and
    compliance costs

17
COMMON PROBLEMS WITH REVENUE ASSIGNMENTS(cont.)
  • Unfair apportionment of tax revenues among
    subnational jurisdictions
  • The exclusive sharing of taxes on a derivation
    basis (usually paid at the headquarters of the
    firm) leads to the unfair allocations of VAT and
    CIT revenues

18
COMMON PROBLEMS WITH REVENUE ASSIGNMENTS(cont.)
  • Large horizontal disparities
  • The uneven distribution of tax bases requires the
    introduction of equalization grants
  • The problem is more acute with the sharing of
    natural resource taxes

19
CHOICES IN PROVIDING TAX AUTONOMY
  • Which taxes should subnational governments be
    allowed to levy?
  • Closed lists are preferable to freedom to
    legislate new taxes (less complexity, fewer
    inequities and distortions)

20
CHOICES IN PROVIDING TAX AUTONOMY(Cont.)
  • Discretion or not to modify tax bases
  • Discretion also leads to complexity and
    inequities
  • Surcharges or taxes piggybacked on a central
    government tax base are easier to administer

21
CHOICES IN PROVIDING TAX AUTONOMY(Cont.)
  • Discretion to set the tax rate is the simplest
    and most effective form of tax autonomy
  • National legislation can set, when desirable,
    maximum and/or minimum rates

22
CHOICES IN PROVIDING TAX AUTONOMY(Cont.)
  • Separate tax administrations for subnational
    governments may be desirable but are not always
    necessary if incentive compatible arrangements
    between levels of government are set in place
  • Tax sharing does not contribute to subnational
    revenue autonomy

23
CHOOSING AMONG DIFFERENT TAXES AT THE SUBNATIONAL
LEVELS
  • Good choices for local (municipal) governments
  • Fees and user charges
  • Real estate property tax
  • Betterment and improvement levies
  • Vehicle and transportation taxes
  • Piggyback flat rate personal income tax

24
CHOOSING AMONG DIFFERENT TAXES AT THE SUBNATIONAL
LEVELS (Cont.)
  • Good choices for regional governments
  • Piggyback flat rate personal income tax
  • Piggyback for selected excises
  • Business value tax (BVT) falling on wages and
    profits
  • A regional VAT, if tax administration is
    adequate, is superior to a retail sales tax.
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