Bargaining over Taxes and Entitlements in the Era of Unequal Growth

20.500.12592/rgdb3v

Bargaining over Taxes and Entitlements in the Era of Unequal Growth

13 May 2022

Entitlement programs have become an increasing component of total government spending in the US over the last six decades. To some observers, this growth of the welfare state is excessive and unwarranted. To others, it is a welcome counter-acting force to the rapid increase in income inequality. Using a political-economy model where parties bargain over taxes and entitlements, we argue that such dynamics can be explained by two factors. The first one is that institutional features of policy determination, in particular budget rules, make the status quo levels of taxes and entitlements difficult to change. The second one is that the country experienced a process of “unequal growth,” where top earners became richer while the income levels of the bottom 50 percent remained stagnant. Richer agents would like the government to provide more public goods as the economy grows. Low-income earners are willing to support such policies only in exchange for an expansion of entitlement programs. Sustained bargaining power by a party that represents the latter, amid budget rules, results in a rising share of entitlements. We explain how parties can take advantage of budget rules to tilt the evolution of policy in their favor in a simple two-period model. We then calibrate an infinite horizon version of the model to the US, and show that it delivers dynamics consistent with the data. Through counter-factual experiments, we find that while entitlements programs are sub-optimally large, welfare outcomes are better than those under alternative budget rules and in scenarios without rules, making it explicit that the type of budget rule matters for both welfare and equity.
taxation fiscal policy political economy game theory macroeconomics public goods microeconomics public economics economic fluctuations and growth welfare and collective choice national fiscal issues technical working papers

Authors

Marina Azzimonti, Laura Karpuska, Gabriel Mihalache

Acknowledgements & Disclosure
We would like to thank Renee Bowen, Sandro Brusco, Juan Carlos Conesa, Ying Chen, Wiola Dziuda, Hulya Eraslan, Marcos Fernandes, Tasos Kalandrakis, Narayana Kocherlakota, Facundo Piguillem, and Jan Zapal for useful comments, as well as participants of the 2020 Political Economy meeting at the Stanford Institute for Theoretical Economics, the 83rd Midwest Economic Association Annual Meeting (St. Louis, Missouri), the 45th Eastern Economic Association, the 2020 RIDGE/LACEA-PEGWorkshop on Political Economy, INSPER, and the Wallis Institute. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3386/w30044
Published in
United States of America

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