Essays on Value-Added Taxation

This dissertation evaluates the empirical relation between the value-added tax (VAT) and the level of aggregate consumption. Furthermore, it develops a theoretical framework and an empirical analysis to study the impact of the VAT, as a form of taxing consumption, on capital accumulation, productivi...

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Main Author: El-Ganainy, Asmaa Adel
Format: Others
Published: Digital Archive @ GSU 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/econ_diss/12
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1011&context=econ_diss
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spelling ndltd-GEORGIA-oai-digitalarchive.gsu.edu-econ_diss-10112013-04-23T03:19:40Z Essays on Value-Added Taxation El-Ganainy, Asmaa Adel This dissertation evaluates the empirical relation between the value-added tax (VAT) and the level of aggregate consumption. Furthermore, it develops a theoretical framework and an empirical analysis to study the impact of the VAT, as a form of taxing consumption, on capital accumulation, productivity growth, and overall economic growth. While recent theoretical work shows that the VAT may boost capital accumulation and growth by encouraging more savings, we find that the net impact of consumption taxes on growth and its sources is theoretically ambiguous, and depends on the interaction between utility parameters, the interest rate, and the tax structure. Moreover, we develop a theoretical model to study the tax design problem in order to rationalize the observed variation in effective VAT rates over time in our sample. This framework considers both equity and efficiency as important factors determining optimal tax structure, and we identify conditions under which taxes could be evolving or constant over time. Empirically, we use a panel of 15 European Union countries and employ the recently developed GMM dynamic panel techniques. After controlling for the potential biases associated with persistence, endogeneity, simultaneity, measurement error, omitted variables, and unobserved country-specific effects, we find that (i) the VAT exerts a negative impact on the level of aggregate consumption, (ii) the VAT affects physical capital accumulation positively, which feeds through to overall GDP growth, and (iii) productivity growth seems to be a less relevant channel for the VAT to influence economic growth. 2006-08-08 text application/pdf http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/econ_diss/12 http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1011&context=econ_diss Economics Dissertations Digital Archive @ GSU productivity growth GMM dynamic panel sources of growth economic growth capital accumulation value-added tax Economics
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic productivity growth
GMM dynamic panel
sources of growth
economic growth
capital accumulation
value-added tax
Economics
spellingShingle productivity growth
GMM dynamic panel
sources of growth
economic growth
capital accumulation
value-added tax
Economics
El-Ganainy, Asmaa Adel
Essays on Value-Added Taxation
description This dissertation evaluates the empirical relation between the value-added tax (VAT) and the level of aggregate consumption. Furthermore, it develops a theoretical framework and an empirical analysis to study the impact of the VAT, as a form of taxing consumption, on capital accumulation, productivity growth, and overall economic growth. While recent theoretical work shows that the VAT may boost capital accumulation and growth by encouraging more savings, we find that the net impact of consumption taxes on growth and its sources is theoretically ambiguous, and depends on the interaction between utility parameters, the interest rate, and the tax structure. Moreover, we develop a theoretical model to study the tax design problem in order to rationalize the observed variation in effective VAT rates over time in our sample. This framework considers both equity and efficiency as important factors determining optimal tax structure, and we identify conditions under which taxes could be evolving or constant over time. Empirically, we use a panel of 15 European Union countries and employ the recently developed GMM dynamic panel techniques. After controlling for the potential biases associated with persistence, endogeneity, simultaneity, measurement error, omitted variables, and unobserved country-specific effects, we find that (i) the VAT exerts a negative impact on the level of aggregate consumption, (ii) the VAT affects physical capital accumulation positively, which feeds through to overall GDP growth, and (iii) productivity growth seems to be a less relevant channel for the VAT to influence economic growth.
author El-Ganainy, Asmaa Adel
author_facet El-Ganainy, Asmaa Adel
author_sort El-Ganainy, Asmaa Adel
title Essays on Value-Added Taxation
title_short Essays on Value-Added Taxation
title_full Essays on Value-Added Taxation
title_fullStr Essays on Value-Added Taxation
title_full_unstemmed Essays on Value-Added Taxation
title_sort essays on value-added taxation
publisher Digital Archive @ GSU
publishDate 2006
url http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/econ_diss/12
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1011&context=econ_diss
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