Nonlinear tax elasticities and their implications for the structural balance
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University of Pretoria, Department of Economics
Abstract
Research on tax elasticities in South Africa mainly employs linear models and shows that taxes evolve symmetrically irrespective of the economic cycle. This study extends this research to show that taxes behave asymmetrically and nonlinearly during expansions and contractions. Estimated linear elasticities imply that a one percent expansion in the cycle increases personal income tax, corporate income tax and value added tax by 1.43, 2.52 and 0.99 percent, respectively. However, estimated nonlinear elasticities are significantly different. During an expansion, the above elasticities increase by 1.89, 2.76 and 2.17 percent, respectively while during a contraction phase these elasticities increase by 0.89, 0.88 and 0.82 respectively. This finding of low tax collection during economic contractions has important implications for fiscal sustainability and overall fiscal prudence in South Africa. The findings of high tax elasticities during expansions might explain the underestimation of revenue by the government.
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Structural budget balance, Tax elasticities, Nonlinearity, Smooth transition regression, Autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL)
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Jooste, C & Naraidoo, R 2010, 'Nonlinear tax elasticities and their implications for the structural balance', University of Pretoria, Department of Economics, Working paper series, no. 2010-22. [http://web.up.ac.za/default.asp?ipkCategoryID=736&sub=1&parentid=677&subid=729&ipklookid=3]