Skip to main content

Representative David Schweikert - Vice Chairman

Weekly Economic Update: October 2 – October 6, 2017

Weekly Economic Update: October 2 – October 6, 2017

CHART OF THE WEEK

 

Taxes Reduce Economic Growth 

The graph shows the inverse relationship between tax changes and economic output. An exogenous* tax increase equal to 1% of GDP lowers output to a maximum of just over 3% ten quarters later. The negative effect of the tax increase on economic growth is not only large but highly statistically significant. The graph is from a 2010 study by Christina Romer, former CEA Chair in the Obama Administration, and well-known economist, David Romer.1

 

Many studies on the subject have difficulty isolating the effect of tax changes on output because other determinants of output (such as the business cycle, government spending, monetary policy) can simultaneously change tax revenue. The Romers analyzed the origin of each tax change they included to circumvent this problem. Subsequent variants of the Romer study by other economists2 all confirm the negative effect of taxes on output, indicating that tax reductions indeed may accelerate economic growth.

 

On a related note, the JEC will hold a hearing on Tuesday to examine how pro-growth tax reform could help reverse the decline in job-creating business startups.

 

* A standalone change that is not affected by other determinants of output.

 

1 Romer, Christina D., and David H. Romer (2010). “The Macroeconomic Effects of Tax Changes: Estimates Based on a New Measure of Fiscal Shocks,” American Economic Review, 100 (3): 763-801

 

2 Subsequent studies:

Barro, Robert J., and Charles J. Redlick (2011). “Macroeconomic Effects from Government Purchases and Taxes,” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 126 (1): 51-102.

Favero, Carlo, and Francesco Giavazzi (2012). “Measuring Tax Multipliers: The Narrative Method in Fiscal VARs,” American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 4 (2): 69-94.

Perotti, Roberto (2012). “The Effects of Tax Shocks on Output: Not So Large, but Not Small Either,” American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 4 (2): 214-237.

Merten, Karel, and Morten O. Ravn (2013). “The Dynamic Effects of Personal and Corporate Income Tax Changes in the United States,” American Economic Review, 103 (4): 1212-1247.

 

 

LAST WEEK

News & Commentary Weekly Highlights

Columbus Dispatch: Portman, Tiberi praise Trump’s tax plan

Washington Examiner: The hidden cornerstone of tax reform could lead to huge economic growth

Economics21: Young People Need Greater Access to Practical Training

Wall Street Journal: The $15 Minimum Wage Crowd Tries a Bait and Switch

 

JEC Releases

Four Takeaways from CBO’s Health Insurance Subsidy Report

 

Noteworthy Releases

Unified Framework for Fixing Our Broken Tax Code

 

Top Economic Indicator Highlights

Chicago Fed National Activity Index (CFNAI) (August)

The CFNAI is an index generated as a weighted average from 85 different economic indicators measuring economic growth. Values above zero indicate above-trend economic growth.

 

Category

August

July

June

May

Most recent CFNAI (3-month moving average) estimates

-0.04

0.00

0.15

0.06

Previous CFNAI (3-month moving average) estimates

N/A

 -0.05

 0.09

 0.00

 

Chicago Fed National Activity Index

 

Noteworthy: Between February 2015 and November 2016 the 3-month moving average of CFNAI was negative, indicating below-trend economic growth. In seven of the last nine months it has been positive or zero. The negative number for August is likely attributable to Hurricane Harvey.

 

Gross Domestic Product (Final Estimate) (Q2-2017, seasonally adjusted at annualized rates)

           

Category

3rd estimate

2nd estimate

1st estimate

Second Quarter Real GDP growth

3.1%

 3.0%

 2.6%

 

Noteworthy: Second quarter real GDP growth was revised upward from 3.0% to 3.1% due to greater business inventory investment growth than was initially estimated.

 

Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Deflator (August 2017; percentage changes from same month last year)

 

Category

August

July

June

Overall PCE Deflator

1.43%

 1.41%

 1.42%

Core PCE Deflator (excludes food and energy)

1.29%

 1.42%

 1.50%

 

 

Noteworthy: After falling for five consecutive months, the Fed’s main inflation ticked up slightly this month to 1.43%. However, the “core” measure, which excludes volatile food and energy prices decreased to 1.29%. This tepid inflation reading makes the Fed less likely to raise the fed funds rate this year.

 

THIS WEEK

JEC Hearing

The Startup Slump: How Tax Reform Could Revive American Entrepreneurship (Tuesday October 2, Longworth 1100, 10:00am)

 

Upcoming Economic Data and Events

Monday

Construction (10:00am)

ISM Manufacturing (10:00am)

 

Tuesday

CoreLogic Home Price Index (10:00am)

Motor Vehicle Sales (4:00pm)

 

Wednesday

ADP National Employment Report (8:15am)

ISM Non-Manufacturing (10:00am)

 

Thursday

Jobless Claims (8:30am)

Trade Balance (8:30am)

Manufacturers’ Shipments, Inventories, & Orders (10:00am)

 

Friday

Employment Situation (8:30am)

Wholesale Trade (10:00am)

Consumer Credit (3:00pm)

Latest News