Rethinking the division of tax room and revenue in fiscal federalism

IF 0.7 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW
Rory Gillis
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Abstract

The division of tax room for shared tax bases, such as income taxes in Canada, the United States, Australia, and Switzerland, is a frequent cause of political conflict between national and sub-national governments. Economists and legal scholars have developed a theory that sets out an optimal division of tax room, but federal nations often substantially depart from this prescription by allocating too much or too little tax room to national governments. This article argues that the divergence between theory and actual practice can be partially explained by a ‘credit assignment problem’ that affects the political economy of government decision making. To illustrate, the article develops a model to identify the incentives governments face when dividing tax room. The model’s central observations are that (a) the optimal division of tax room requires robust intergovernmental contracting, but (b) the necessary contracts are difficult or impossible to perform due to problems in allocating political credit – electoral rewards and punishments – between the two levels of government. The result is political conflict and, frequently, a sub-optimal division of tax room and the revenue that results. This article argues that law can perform two functions in responding to the credit assignment problem: (a) it can facilitate credit assignment, so that the necessary contracts over tax room and revenue are politically feasible, and (b), failing perfect credit assignment, it can mitigate the welfare effects of a sub-optimal division of tax room. The article shows how a credit assignment perspective should lead to reconsideration of constitutional law doctrines, such as the federal spending power and various doctrines that enable or limit concurrent expenditure jurisdiction. While these doctrines are the subject of long-running debates in legal scholarship, the credit assignment perspective offers new insights and new doctrinal prescriptions.
对财政联邦制下税室与收入划分的再思考
共享税基的税收空间划分,如加拿大、美国、澳大利亚和瑞士的所得税,是国家和地方政府之间政治冲突的一个常见原因。经济学家和法律学者已经发展出一种理论,该理论设定了最佳的税收空间划分,但联邦国家经常通过分配过多或过少的税收空间给国家政府而大大偏离这一处方。本文认为,理论与实际之间的分歧可以部分解释为影响政府决策的政治经济学的“信用分配问题”。为了说明这一点,本文建立了一个模型来确定政府在划分税收空间时面临的激励。该模型的核心观点是:(a)税室的最优划分需要强有力的政府间契约,但(b)由于在两级政府之间分配政治信用(选举奖惩)的问题,必要的契约很难或不可能履行。其结果是政治冲突,并经常导致税收空间和由此产生的收入的次优分配。本文认为,法律在应对信用分配问题上可以发挥两种功能:(a)它可以促进信用分配,使税收空间和税收的必要合同在政治上可行;(b)在信用分配不完美的情况下,它可以减轻次优税收空间分配的福利效应。本文展示了信用分配的观点如何导致对宪法理论的重新考虑,例如联邦支出权和各种允许或限制并行支出管辖权的理论。虽然这些理论是法律学术界长期争论的主题,但信用分配观点提供了新的见解和新的理论处方。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
16.70%
发文量
26
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