Discussion paper

DP4042 The Dynamics of Government: A Positive Analysis

How does the size of the transfer system evolve in the short and in the long run? We model income redistribution as determined by voting among individuals of different types and income realizations. Taxation is distortionary because it discourages effort to accumulate human capital. Voters are fully rational, realizing that transfers have implications also for future economic decisions and taxation outcomes. In our economy, our politically-driven redistribution provides insurance, and we investigate to what extent the democratic process provides it appropriately. A general finding is that redistribution tends to be too persistent relative to what would have been chosen by a utilitarian planner under commitment. The difference is larger the lower the political influence of young agents, the lower the altruistic concern for future generations, and the lower the risk-aversion. Furthermore, there tends to be too much redistribution in the political equilibrium. Finally, we find that the political mechanism is important: settings with smooth preference aggregation ? we analyse probabilistic voting here ? produce less persistence and do not admit multiple expectational equilibria, which occur under majority-voting aggregation.

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Citation

Zilibotti, F, J Hassler and K Storesletten (2003), ‘DP4042 The Dynamics of Government: A Positive Analysis‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 4042. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp4042