Title of article :
Why hasn’t tax competition triggered a race
to the bottom? Some quantitative lessons
from the EU$
Author/Authors :
Enrique G. Mendoza، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
The integration of European financial markets in the early 1980s created an environment of
near-perfect capital mobility across countries that had harmonized indirect taxes but
maintained large differences in factor taxes. The years that followed witnessed several rounds
of competition in capital taxes with puzzling results. Instead of the dreaded ‘‘race to the
bottom’’ in capital taxes, the UK lowered its capital tax to a rate closer to those of France,
Germany and Italy, while capital taxes changed slightly in these countries. The UK increased
its labor tax marginally, but the other countries increased theirs sharply. This paper shows that
these results are consistent with the quantitative predictions of a dynamic, Neoclassical general
equilibrium model of tax competition that incorporates the key international externalities oftax policy operating via relative prices, wealth distribution and fiscal solvency. Tax
competition is modeled as a one-shot game over time-invariant capital taxes with dynamic
payoffs relative to a status quo calibrated to European data. The calibration is preceded by an
empirical analysis that shows that the relationship linking taxes to labor supply and the
investment rate in the model are in line with empirical evidence and that domestic taxes seem
to respond to foreign taxes. The solutions of the games show that when countries compete
over capital taxes adjusting labor taxes to maintain fiscal solvency, there is no race to the
bottom and the Nash equilibrium is close to observed taxes. In contrast, if consumption taxes
adjust to maintain fiscal solvency, competition over capital taxes triggers a ‘‘race to the
bottom,’’ but this outcome entails large welfare gains. Surprisingly, the gains from
coordination are small in all of these experiments.
r 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords :
Tax competition , Tax harmonization , Race to the bottom , Nash equilibrium
Journal title :
Journal of Monetary Economics
Journal title :
Journal of Monetary Economics