This paper analyzes the effects of a land rent tax on capital formation and foreign investment in a life-cycle small open economy with endogenous labor-leisure choices. The consequences of land taxation critically depend on how the tax proceeds are used by the government. A land tax depresses capital formation, crowds out foreign investment and increases national wealth and consumption when the land tax revenues are distributed as lump-sum payments. If the proceeds from land taxation are used to finance unproductive government expenditure, the land tax will be neutral in its effects on the capital * This paper was written while I was visiting the Economics Department of Stanford University. I am grateful to Ned Phelps for stimulating discussions, Giancarlo Marini and Alberto Pozzolo for comments, and one Editor of the Journal, Robin Boadway, for his encouragement. Special thanks go to an anonymous referee for valuable comments.Financial support from CNR is gratefully acknowledged.† Università del Molise and LUISS G. Carli.1 stock, nonhuman wealth and labor. When the tax revenues are used to reduce labor taxes, the land rent tax spurs nonhuman wealth accumulation and ambiguously affects the capital stock and labor.JEL classification: E21, E62, H22.
This article studies the implications of consumption taxation on capital accumulation in a one-sector endogenous growth model with …nite horizons. A tax on consumption, when tax revenues are lump-sum rebated to consumers, redistributes income between living generations and future, still unborn, generations, and therefore depresses aggregate consumption and raises saving, stimulating capital accumulation and economic growth. If however the resources from taxation are used for …nancing unproductive public spending, the e¤ect of the consumption tax on the endogenous growth rate disappears as no intergenerational redistribution of income occurs. Finally, a consumption tax hike accompanied by a compensatory reduction of public debt increases long-run economic growth and reduces the consumption-output ratio. Our results on consumption taxation di¤er substantially from those obtained within the endogenous growth literature.
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