|
Third Quarter 1998
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
| Economic Review
was published until 1999. |
|
Income Taxes as Reciprocal
Tariffs
W. Michael Cox, David M. Gould,
and Roy J. Ruffin
This article shows the equivalence
between tariffs on international trade and income taxation.
Traditionally, income taxes have been seen as lowering societys
output through the households labor–leisure trade-off.
Income taxes also reduce the degree to which individuals specialize
in market activity, which is similar to the way countries
respond to tariffs in international trade. Income taxes discourage
individuals from specializing in activities that reflect their
comparative advantage. In so doing, income taxes may have
their most distorting effects, not by encouraging individuals
to work less but by causing them to spend more time working
at endeavors for which their talent is limited.
Using a general model of interpersonal
exchange, the authors demonstrate parallels between income
taxes and tariffs. Over a range of income taxes, raising taxes
can benefit large groups of similarly skilled individuals
and hurt small groups. As in tariff theory, the costs of income
taxes are small only if they succeed in raising revenue. Thus,
it is very costly for an economy to be on the downward portion
of its tax revenue (Laffer) curve. The more heterogeneous
the society, the higher the income tax rate that will maximize
tax revenues. By overlooking the effects of heterogeneity
in the workforce and the potential for workers to flee to
home production, policymakers may under- or overestimate the
effects of income taxes on various sectors of the economy
and tax with unintended consequences. ![Read more about "Income Taxes as Reciprocal Tariffs" [PDF]](../../../images/more.gif)
Seigniorage Revenue
and Monetary Policy: Some Preliminary Evidence
Joseph H. Haslag
Producing new money is inexpensive,
making seigniorage—the revenues earned from creating
new money—attractive. However, the social costs of faster
money creation most likely are greater than the production
costs. These marginal social costs may put limits on how much
real seigniorage revenue the government can earn. In this
article, Joseph Haslag looks across countries to assess the
typical reliance on seigniorage revenue. In addition, Haslag
determines whether countries with combinations of high rates
of money growth and high reserve requirements tend to rely
especially heavily on seigniorage revenue. ![Read more about "Seigniorage Revenue and Monetary Policy: Some Preliminary Evidence"[PDF].](../../../images/more.gif)
The Economics of the
Private Equity Market
Stephen D. Prowse
The private equity market is an
important source of funds for start-ups, private middle-market
companies, firms in financial distress, and public firms seeking
buyout financing. Over the past fifteen years, it has been
the fastest growing corporate finance market, far surpassing
the public equity and public and private bond markets. In
this article, Stephen Prowse examines the economic foundations
of the private equity market and describes its institutional
structure. He also explores reasons for the markets
explosive growth and highlights the main characteristics of
that growth, including data on returns to private equity investors.
He describes the important investors, intermediaries, and
issuers in the market and their interactions with each other.
In particular, he investigates how the major intermediary
in the market—the limited partnership—addresses
the severe information problems associated with investing
in small private firms.![Read more about "The Economics of the Private Equity Market"[PDF].](../../../images/more.gif)
|