•Press Release Economic Growth Government
September 13, 2011
For immediate release: September 13, 2011
Contact: Alan Barber, (202) 293-5380 x115
WASHINGTON DC- There is a serious debate over the impact of President Obama’s stimulus. Stanford Economics Professor John Taylor, who served as Under Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs under President Bush, recently released a draft paper that purports to show that the tax cuts that were part of this stimulus had no effect on consumption. The Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) is releasing a paper today that challenges Professor Taylor’s analysis.
The paper, “Do Tax Cuts Boost the Economy?,” by CEPR economist David Rosnick and co-director Dean Baker, tests the robustness of Taylor’s findings. It also explores the possibility that there was a structural break in the relationship between consumption and disposable income after 2007 as a result of the collapse of the housing bubble and the financial crisis.
The analysis finds:
The models estimated with structural breaks are ad hoc; there are undoubtedly better ways to incorporate the impact of the collapse of the housing bubble and the financial crisis. However, these models support the idea that there was a structural break resulting from these events. And, if there was a structural break, then the data indicate that the tax cuts in the stimulus likely were effective in increasing consumption.
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