Competition, not inspection by government agencies or compliance with myriad rules and regulations, is the surest guarantor of quality in...
Measuring the Optimal Tax Burden
George W. Bush, in his final Economic Report of the President (January 2009), estimates a federal tax burden of 17.9 percent of GDP for both fiscal year 2008 and 2009. Based on the econometric models used in this paper, a 17.9% tax burden (federal tax receipts as a percent of GDP) translates into a growth rate in real GDP of 2.8% annually. Thus, the current 2009 economic downturn is being caused by a financial shock to the American economy, not by any increase in tax burden. In fact, George Bush leaves office with a lower tax burden than in the fiscal year 2000, when the federal tax burden was 20.9% of GDP. But what if President Obama decides to raise taxes during his term in office? What do the models in this paper have to say about such a plan?
Using this updated information, if President Obama raises tax burdens, trend growth in real GDP
will fall further in the U.S. economy – to no more than 2.5% annually. This is less than the 3.2% trend
rate in GDP growth over the second half of the 21st century. To return to such a growth rate, President
Obama would have to actually LOWER current Bush tax burdens to 17.4% of GDP. This is unlikely to happen given Obama’s 2010-2014 spending plans of 22-27% of GDP and the ensuing federal deficits.
