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Behavioral Simulation Methods in Tax Policy Analysis.
Title:
Behavioral Simulation Methods in Tax Policy Analysis.
Author:
Feldstein, Martin.
ISBN:
9780226241753
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (523 pages)
Series:
National Bureau of Economic Research Project Report
Contents:
Behavioral Simulation Methods in Tax Policy Analysis -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- 1. Alternative Tax Treatments of the Family: Simulation Methodology and Results -- 2. Stochastic Problems in the Simulation of Labor Supply -- 3. Alternatives to the Current Maximum Tax on Earned Income -- 4. The Distribution of Gains and Losses from Changes in the Tax Treatment of Housing -- 5. Simulating Nonlinear Tax Rules and Nonstandard Behavior: An Application to the Tax Treatment of Charitable Contributions -- 6. Alternative Tax Rules and Personal Saving Incentives: Microeconomic Data and Behavioral Simulations -- 7. Modeling Alternative Solutions to the Long-Run Social Security Funding Problem -- 8. Tax Reform and Corporate Investment: A Microeconometric Simulation Study -- 9. Issues in the Taxation of Foreign Source Income -- 10. Domestic Tax Policy and the Foreign Sector: The Importance of Alternative Foreign Sector Formulations to Results from a General Equilibrium Tax Analysis Model -- 11. A Reexamination of Tax Distortions in General Equilibrium Models -- 12. A General Equilibrium Model of Taxation with Endogenous Financial Behavior -- 13. National Savings, Economic Welfare, and the Structure of Taxation -- List of Contributors -- Author Index -- Subject Index.
Abstract:
These thirteen papers and accompanying commentaries are the first fruits of an ongoing research project that has concentrated on developing simulation models that incorporate the behavioral responses of individuals and businesses to alternative tax rules and rates and on expanding computational general equilibrium models that analyze the long-run effects of changes on the economy as a whole. The principal focus of the project has been on the microsimulation of individual behavior. Thus, this volume includes studies of individual responses to an over reduction in tax rates and to changes in the highest tax rates; a study of alternative tax treatments of the family; and studies of such specific aspects of household behavior as tax treatment of home ownership, charitable contributions, and individual saving behavior. Microsimulation techniques are also used to estimate the effects of alternative policies on the long-run financial status of the social security program and to examine the effects of alternative tax rules on corporate investment and of foreign-source income on overseas investment. The papers devoted to the development of general equilibrium simulation models to include an examination of the implications of international trade and capital flows, a study of the effects of capital taxation that uses a closed economy equilibrium model, and an examination of the effect of switching to an inflation-indexed tax system. In the volume's final paper, a life-cycle model in which individuals maximize lifetime utility subject to a lifetime budget constraint is used to simulate the effects of tax rules on personal savings.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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