Journal article

The political economy of tax projections


Authors listBischoff, Ivo; Gohout, Wolfgang

Publication year2010

Pages133-150

JournalInternational Tax and Public Finance

Volume number17

Issue number2

ISSN0927-5940

eISSN1573-6970

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s10797-008-9103-y

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
This paper addresses the political economy of tax projections. It argues that governments face incentives to present upward biased tax projections. In election years, this may help them to increase the chance of reelection. If this chance is low, biased tax projections help governments to bring forward favorable expenditures and to burden their successors. These hypotheses are tested using West German states between 1992 and 2002. While there is only weak support for a general upward bias in tax projection and the importance of elections and partisanship, the degree of overestimation is found to be significantly higher, the less popular the incumbent party is and the poorer the state-specific economic performance.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleBischoff, I. and Gohout, W. (2010) The political economy of tax projections, International Tax and Public Finance, 17(2), pp. 133-150. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10797-008-9103-y

APA Citation styleBischoff, I., & Gohout, W. (2010). The political economy of tax projections. International Tax and Public Finance. 17(2), 133-150. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10797-008-9103-y



Keywords


BUDGET DEFICITSBudget processCOUNTRIESCYCLESFiscal disciplineFISCAL-POLICYFiscal transparencyPARTIESpolitical partiesPublic deficitsSTRATEGIC USETax projections

Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 03:05