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Effects of Adopting a Value-Added Tax - Congressional Budget Office PDF

100 Pages·2009·3.27 MB·English
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Preview Effects of Adopting a Value-Added Tax - Congressional Budget Office

CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE CBO EFFECTS OF ADOPTING A VALUE-ADDED TAX The Congress of the United States Congressional Budget Office PREFACE The United States has continued to rely heavily on the income tax for federal revenue as other nations have turned increasingly to a value- added tax (VAT) for revenue. The United States is now one of the few Western industrialized countries without a VAT and the only one without either a VAT or a national sales tax. This study, prepared at the request of the House Committee on the Budget, analyzes the effects of using a VAT instead of the current in- come tax to raise revenue. The study attempts to measure the size of many of the VAT's effects that interest policymakers, including the po- tential economic costs and benefits. Jon Hakken and Rosemarie Nielsen conducted the study and wrote the report under the supervision of Rosemary Marcuss, Joseph Cordes, and Eric Toder. Frank Sammartino was responsible for simu- lating and analyzing the distribution of the VAT's tax burden among taxpayers. Jane Gravelle provided simulations of the VAT's effects on saving and economic efficiency. Milka Casanegra de Jantscher, Albert Davis, Jane Gravelle, Joyce Manchester, and Frederick Ribe reviewed parts of the study and offered many helpful comments. Sherry Snyder edited the manuscript. Chris Spoor provided edito- rial assistance. Martina Wojak prepared the study for publication with the assistance of Kathryn Quattrone. Robert D. Reischauer Director February 1992 CONTENTS SUMMARY ix I INTRODUCTION 1 Issues Surrounding the Adoption ofaVAT 1 Analytic Approach and Findings 4 HOW A VAT WORKS The European-Style VAT 6 Alternative VAT Structures 14 Conclusions 19 THE BASE OF A VALUE-ADDED TAX 21 Defining the Tax Base 21 Taxing Hard-to-Tax Goods and Services 26 WHO BEARS THE BURDEN OF A VAT? 31 Annual Tax Burdens 32 Lifetime Tax Burdens 40 Transitional Burdens 45 ECONOMIC EFFECTS OF A VAT 49 National Saving and Domestic Investment 51 The Composition of Domestic Production and International Trade 55 Economic Efficiency 56 Tax Exportation 60 Other Economic Effects 62 Summary 65 vi EFFECTS OF ADOPTING A VALUE-ADDED TAX February 1992 VI COSTS OF ADMINISTERING AND COMPLYING WITH A VAT 67 Administrative Costs 67 Implementation Costs 70 Compliance Costs 70 Controlling Administrative and Compliance Costs 72 VII DIRECT CONSUMPTION TAX AS AN ALTERNATIVE TO A VAT Direct Consumption Taxes 75 Advantages over a VAT 77 Some Potential Problems 79 CONTENTS vii -- TABLES 1. Taxing Consumer Purchases Under a Credit-Method Value-Added Tax and a Retail Sales Tax Collecting a Value-Added Tax When a Wholesaler Is Exempt Collecting a Value-Added Tax When a Retailer Is Exempt Collecting a Value-Added Tax for a Zero-Rated Good Collecting a Value-Added Tax for a Traded Good Taxing Consumer Purchases Under a Subtraction-Method Value-Added Tax Collecting a Value-Added Tax for a Zero-Rated Good Under Alternative Versions of the Subtraction Method Examples of Bases for a Value-Added Tax at 1988 Levels of Consumption Distribution of the Burden of a Value-Added Tax and an Income Surtax Distribution of the Burden of a Value-Added Tax Under Alternative Redistribution Schemes Annual and Lifetime Tax Burdens of Canadian Households viii EFFECTS OF ADOPTING A VALUE-ADDED TAX February 1992 12. Annual Administrative Costs of Value-Added Taxes in Selected European Countries, 1985 and 1986 13. Costs to Businesses of Complying with a Value-Added Tax in the United Kingdom, 1986and1987 FIGURE 1. How the Burden of a Value-Added Tax and an Income Surtax Varies Over a Lifetime for a Typical Two-Earner Family

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PREFACE. The United States has continued to rely heavily on the income tax for federal revenue as other nations have turned increasingly to a value- added tax
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