US

Laffer Curve

Question A:

A cut in federal income tax rates in the US right now would lead to higher GDP within five years than without the tax cut.

Responses weighted by each expert's confidence

Question B:

A cut in federal income tax rates in the US right now would raise taxable income enough so that the annual total tax revenue would be higher within five years than without the tax cut.

Responses weighted by each expert's confidence

Question A Participant Responses

Participant University Vote Confidence Bio/Vote History
Acemoglu
Daron Acemoglu
MIT
Uncertain
6
Bio/Vote History
Alesina
Alberto Alesina
Harvard Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Altonji
Joseph Altonji
Yale
Uncertain
3
Bio/Vote History
Auerbach
Alan Auerbach
Berkeley
Agree
6
Bio/Vote History
Autor
David Autor
MIT
Disagree
5
Bio/Vote History
Baicker
Katherine Baicker
University of Chicago
Uncertain
4
Bio/Vote History
Bertrand
Marianne Bertrand
Chicago
Uncertain
3
Bio/Vote History
Chetty
Raj Chetty
Harvard
Uncertain
9
Bio/Vote History
Chevalier
Judith Chevalier
Yale Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Currie
Janet Currie
Princeton
Disagree
6
Bio/Vote History
Cutler
David Cutler
Harvard
Agree
4
Bio/Vote History
Deaton
Angus Deaton
Princeton
Strongly Disagree
4
Bio/Vote History
Duffie
Darrell Duffie
Stanford
Agree
3
Bio/Vote History
Edlin
Aaron Edlin
Berkeley Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Eichengreen
Barry Eichengreen
Berkeley
Uncertain
5
Bio/Vote History
Fair
Ray Fair
Yale Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Goldberg
Pinelopi Goldberg
Yale Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Goldin
Claudia Goldin
Harvard
Uncertain
3
Bio/Vote History
Goolsbee
Austan Goolsbee
Chicago
Uncertain
8
Bio/Vote History
Probably, but the evidence is not as strong as you would think
Greenstone
Michael Greenstone
University of Chicago
No Opinion
Bio/Vote History
would lead to higher GDP in short term at 5 yrs, less clear & depends on whether tax cuts are budget neutral. see fact 10 in below link.
-see background information here
Hall
Robert Hall
Stanford
Uncertain
5
Bio/Vote History
The government has to satisfy its budget constraint, so one can't say anything about a tax cut without knowing what else happens.
Holmström
Bengt Holmström
MIT
Agree
6
Bio/Vote History
Results highly dependent on which rates are cut.
Hoxby
Caroline Hoxby
Stanford Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Judd
Kenneth Judd
Stanford
Uncertain
6
Bio/Vote History
Everything depends on which taxes are cut.
Kashyap
Anil Kashyap
Chicago Booth
Agree
5
Bio/Vote History
Lots of distorting effects of taxes. Costs of higher deficits probably modest at the 5 year horizon; eventually can't just keep borrowing.
Klenow
Pete Klenow
Stanford
Agree
5
Bio/Vote History
Depends on things such as the Fed's response, how permanent it is, how it is financed, and the change in marginal vs. average tax rates.
Lazear
Edward Lazear
Stanford
Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Academic evidence supports this. See Romer and Romer AER 2010; Bergh and Henriksen survey and book. Ed Prescott Eli Lecture 2002.
Levin
Jonathan Levin
Stanford
No Opinion
Bio/Vote History
Maskin
Eric Maskin
Harvard
Agree
7
Bio/Vote History
Nordhaus
William Nordhaus
Yale
Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Obstfeld
Maurice Obstfeld
Berkeley
Uncertain
8
Bio/Vote History
To be effective the cut should benefit lower-income consumers. Absent measures to reduce the long-tem deficit, crisis risk could be higher.
Saez
Emmanuel Saez
Berkeley
Agree
6
Bio/Vote History
Scheinkman
José Scheinkman
Columbia University
Uncertain
7
Bio/Vote History
Schmalensee
Richard Schmalensee
MIT
Agree
5
Bio/Vote History
Shin
Hyun Song Shin
Princeton
Uncertain
6
Bio/Vote History
Stock
James Stock
Harvard Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Stokey
Nancy Stokey
University of Chicago
Uncertain
8
Bio/Vote History
Vague question. Whose taxes? (The median "taxpayer" right now pays zero.) And where does the revenue come from?
Thaler
Richard Thaler
Chicago Booth
Agree
4
Bio/Vote History
I assume you mean relative to "current law".
Udry
Christopher Udry
Northwestern
Agree
2
Bio/Vote History
Zingales
Luigi Zingales
Chicago Booth
Agree
4
Bio/Vote History
If the cut is permanent

Question B Participant Responses

Participant University Vote Confidence Bio/Vote History
Acemoglu
Daron Acemoglu
MIT
Strongly Disagree
6
Bio/Vote History
Alesina
Alberto Alesina
Harvard Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Altonji
Joseph Altonji
Yale
Strongly Disagree
9
Bio/Vote History
Auerbach
Alan Auerbach
Berkeley
Disagree
7
Bio/Vote History
Autor
David Autor
MIT
Strongly Disagree
8
Bio/Vote History
Not aware of any evidence in recent history where tax cuts actually raise revenue. Sorry, Laffer.
Baicker
Katherine Baicker
University of Chicago
Strongly Disagree
6
Bio/Vote History
Bertrand
Marianne Bertrand
Chicago
Uncertain
3
Bio/Vote History
Chetty
Raj Chetty
Harvard
Strongly Disagree
10
Bio/Vote History
Chevalier
Judith Chevalier
Yale Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Currie
Janet Currie
Princeton
Disagree
7
Bio/Vote History
Cutler
David Cutler
Harvard
Disagree
1
Bio/Vote History
Deaton
Angus Deaton
Princeton
Strongly Disagree
7
Bio/Vote History
Duffie
Darrell Duffie
Stanford
Uncertain
3
Bio/Vote History
This calls for a model. A lower tax rate applied to higher earnings could raise or lower tax revenue, depending on the extent of growth.
Edlin
Aaron Edlin
Berkeley Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Eichengreen
Barry Eichengreen
Berkeley
Disagree
6
Bio/Vote History
Fair
Ray Fair
Yale Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Goldberg
Pinelopi Goldberg
Yale Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Goldin
Claudia Goldin
Harvard
Uncertain
3
Bio/Vote History
Goolsbee
Austan Goolsbee
Chicago
Strongly Disagree
10
Bio/Vote History
Moon landing was real. Evolution exists. Tax cuts lose revenue. The reasearch has shown this a thousand times. Enough already.
Greenstone
Michael Greenstone
University of Chicago
Strongly Disagree
7
Bio/Vote History
All evidence that I'm aware of suggest that cutting tax rates "marginally" from their current levels would DECREASE revenues, even 5 yrs out
Hall
Robert Hall
Stanford
Disagree
5
Bio/Vote History
See previous question. In addition, few studies suggest we are already at the max of the Laffer curve, though we may be close.
Holmström
Bengt Holmström
MIT
Disagree
5
Bio/Vote History
Seems implausible, but not impossible.
Hoxby
Caroline Hoxby
Stanford Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Judd
Kenneth Judd
Stanford
Strongly Disagree
8
Bio/Vote History
That did not happen in the past. No reason to think it would happen now.
Kashyap
Anil Kashyap
Chicago Booth
Disagree
7
Bio/Vote History
May look plausible on a cocktail napkin (or at a cocktail party), but not true empirically in the US.
Klenow
Pete Klenow
Stanford
Strongly Disagree
10
Bio/Vote History
Not enough time for capital to respond much (physical, human, technology), so it would require implausibly large labor supply elasticities.
-see background information here
Lazear
Edward Lazear
Stanford
Strongly Disagree
8
Bio/Vote History
This is the Laffer curve issue. There is little (if any) evidence that rates exceed revenue-maximizing levels. See Mankiw, Feldstein.
Levin
Jonathan Levin
Stanford
No Opinion
Bio/Vote History
Maskin
Eric Maskin
Harvard
No Opinion
Bio/Vote History
Nordhaus
William Nordhaus
Yale
Strongly Disagree
8
Bio/Vote History
Obstfeld
Maurice Obstfeld
Berkeley
Disagree
8
Bio/Vote History
Saez
Emmanuel Saez
Berkeley
Disagree
7
Bio/Vote History
Scheinkman
José Scheinkman
Columbia University
Strongly Disagree
7
Bio/Vote History
Schmalensee
Richard Schmalensee
MIT
Disagree
5
Bio/Vote History
Shin
Hyun Song Shin
Princeton
Disagree
8
Bio/Vote History
Stock
James Stock
Harvard Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Stokey
Nancy Stokey
University of Chicago
Disagree
7
Bio/Vote History
Are we thinking of Japan as a model for this kind of "fiscal stimulus"?
Thaler
Richard Thaler
Chicago Booth
Strongly Disagree
8
Bio/Vote History
That's a Laffer!
Udry
Christopher Udry
Northwestern
Strongly Disagree
5
Bio/Vote History
Zingales
Luigi Zingales
Chicago Booth
Disagree
6
Bio/Vote History