Optimal tax enforcement with productive public inputs

C-Tier
Journal: Economic Modeling
Year: 2023
Volume: 126
Issue: C

Authors (3)

Dzhumashev, Ratbek (not in RePEc) Levaggi, Rosella (Università degli Studi di Bres...) Menoncin, Francesco (not in RePEc)

Score contribution per author:

0.335 = (α=2.01 / 3 authors) × 0.5x C-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

We study optimal public expenditure and tax enforcement in a simple one-sector, dynamic endogenous growth model where agents optimize consumption and evasion; evasion is costly, while public expenditure increases private capital productivity. We show that tax evasion costs and the efficiency of endogenous audits play a crucial role in determining the relationship between tax evasion, tax rates, public expenditure, and growth. The key elements to improve tax enforcement are efficiency in the audit process and increased productivity in public expenditure. Increasing tax evasion costs could reduce tax evasion, but when tax enforcement is inefficient, this might trigger a perverse effect in which a tax rate increase reduces tax revenue. This finding implies that government spending depends on the efficiency of the audit process: expanding government expenditure optimally or increasing private productivity is impossible without improvements in tax compliance.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:eee:ecmode:v:126:y:2023:i:c:s0264999323002560
Journal Field
General
Author Count
3
Added to Database
2026-01-25