Capital Income Taxes and the Benefit of Price Stability
Martin Feldstein
No 6200, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc
Abstract:
Going from low inflation to price stability involves a short term loss (associated with the" higher unemployment rate required to reduce the inflation) and results in a series of welfare gains" in all future years. The primary source of these gains is the reduction in the distortions that result" from the interaction of tax rules and inflation. The paper quantifies the gains associated with" reducing the distortion in favor of current consumption rather than future consumption and in" favor of the consumption of owner occupied housing. These tax effects are much larger than the" effect on the demand for money that is generally emphasized in studies of the distorting effect of" inflation. The seignorage gains are also small in comparison to other effects of the tax-inflation" interaction. The estimates imply that the annual value of the net benefits of going from two" percent inflation to price stability are about one percent of GDP. Discounting this growing" stream of benefits at a real discount rate of five percent implies a net present value of about more" than 30 percent of GDP. All estimates of the short-run cost of going from low inflation to price" stability are less than this.
JEL-codes: E3 E5 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1997-09
Note: EFG ME PE
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (17)
Published as The Costs and Benefits of Price Stability. Felstein, Martin, ed., Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1999, pp. 9-40.
Published as Capital Income Taxes and the Benefit of Price Stability , Martin S. Feldstein. in The Costs and Benefits of Price Stability , Feldstein. 1999
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Chapter: Capital Income Taxes and the Benefit of Price Stability (1999) 
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