This paper shows that an economic slump can induce a government to invest in fiscal capacity. Large negative income shocks stress the revenue raising capability of narrow tax bases, making an increase in tax base breadth desirable relative to its fixed implementation cost. A broader tax base enables revenue to be raised at lower tax rates, which reduces the efficiency cost of taxation. The behavior of U.S. state governments during the Great Depression supports the model: states experiencing larger than average negative income shocks were more likely to adopt a retail sales tax than were states experiencing smaller than average income shocks.  
YesThis paper builds a framework to jointly examine the possibility of both `expansionary fiscal co...
This paper investigates the short-term effects of fiscal consolidation on economic activity in OECD ...
This paper considers the case for and against 'the treasury view' - the idea that in a downturn, gov...
© 2015 The Authors. This paper estimates the magnitudes of government spending and tax multipliers w...
The paper discusses a model in which growth is a negative function of fiscal burden. Moreover, growt...
The recession of 2008-2009 - one of the longest and deepest since the Great Depression - has made th...
Fiscal multipliers depend on several structural characteristics of each economy. In this work projec...
The Great Recession had the most severe impact on state tax revenues of any downturn since the Great...
This paper examines the effects of fiscal shocks on output growth in the United States with specific...
This paper presents evidence that property tax limits have detrimental effects on state and local re...
The Great Depression is known as one of the biggest crises in economic history which caused serious ...
This paper explores the dynamic behavior of a Romer-style endogenous growth model, analyzing how cha...
Thorndike explores the Keynesian conversion of Treasury Department tax-policy experts during the 193...
This paper studies optimal fiscal policy in a standard business cycle model with two departures: (i)...
Following the Great Recession, U.S. government debt levels exceeded 100% of output. We develop a mac...
YesThis paper builds a framework to jointly examine the possibility of both `expansionary fiscal co...
This paper investigates the short-term effects of fiscal consolidation on economic activity in OECD ...
This paper considers the case for and against 'the treasury view' - the idea that in a downturn, gov...
© 2015 The Authors. This paper estimates the magnitudes of government spending and tax multipliers w...
The paper discusses a model in which growth is a negative function of fiscal burden. Moreover, growt...
The recession of 2008-2009 - one of the longest and deepest since the Great Depression - has made th...
Fiscal multipliers depend on several structural characteristics of each economy. In this work projec...
The Great Recession had the most severe impact on state tax revenues of any downturn since the Great...
This paper examines the effects of fiscal shocks on output growth in the United States with specific...
This paper presents evidence that property tax limits have detrimental effects on state and local re...
The Great Depression is known as one of the biggest crises in economic history which caused serious ...
This paper explores the dynamic behavior of a Romer-style endogenous growth model, analyzing how cha...
Thorndike explores the Keynesian conversion of Treasury Department tax-policy experts during the 193...
This paper studies optimal fiscal policy in a standard business cycle model with two departures: (i)...
Following the Great Recession, U.S. government debt levels exceeded 100% of output. We develop a mac...
YesThis paper builds a framework to jointly examine the possibility of both `expansionary fiscal co...
This paper investigates the short-term effects of fiscal consolidation on economic activity in OECD ...
This paper considers the case for and against 'the treasury view' - the idea that in a downturn, gov...