Working
Paper 97-8
by Robert Tannenwald
Even though the momentum of the "devolution"
movement has slowed, federal intergovernmental grants
will probably be cut substantially during the next five
to ten years. Federal tax reform could further erode
federal assistance by eliminating the deduction for
state and local personal income and property taxes.
This deduction subsidizes the net cost to taxpayers
of financing an additional dollar of state and local
spending. In the language of economics, deductibility
reduces the marginal "tax price" of state
and local public goods. This paper clarifies methodological
issues in the estimation of this tax price, updates
estimates of tax price by state, and evaluates the impact
of state and local taxes on the level and dispersion
of state-specific tax prices. The paper argues that
previous estimates of tax reflect assumptions, often
implicit, concerning the distribution of influence among
consumers over the level of public goods provided by
a given jurisdiction. These assumptions, often implicit,
do not always square with the estimators' preferred
theory concerning how the level of public goods is determined.
Even when they do, they fail to take into account the
deductibility of state and local business taxes from
federal taxable profits. The estimates provided in this
paper attempt to address these two problems. An earlier
version of this paper was presented at the Allied Social
Science Annual Meetings, New Orleans, January 6, 1997.
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