How do taxes affect the economy in the short run? (2024)

Economic activity reflects a balance between what people, businesses, and governments want to buy and what they want to sell. In the short run—focusing on the next one or two years—economic policy affects the economy primarily through its impact on demand for goods and services by consumers and firms. When the economy is weak, for example, the Federal Reserve tries to boost consumer and business demand by cutting interest rates or purchasing financial securities. Congress, for its part, can boost demand by increasing spending and cutting taxes.

Tax cuts increase household demand by increasing workers’ take-home pay. Some tax cuts can boost business demand by reducing the cost of capital, thereby making investment spending more attractive. Business tax cuts also increase firms’ after-tax cash flow, which can be used to pay dividends and expand activity.

When demand from households and businesses rises, firms increase production and hiring to meet the demand, thereby expanding output and reducing unemployment. At times when the economy is already near its potential level of output, or when supply is constrained in other ways (as it was during the COVID-19 pandemic), policies that increase demand can boost inflation.

MULTIPLIERS

How do taxes affect the economy in the short run? (1)

How much tax cuts boost demand (or tax hikes restrain it) depends on the sensitivity of household and business behavior—for example, how households divide increased after-tax income between consumption and saving, and whether businesses choose to hire and invest more. Economists summarize these effects in a simple measure, the output multiplier, expressing how many dollars of increased economic activity result from a dollar reduction in taxes or a dollar increase in government spending. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has estimated such multipliers for a mix of tax and spending policies (table 1).

As these estimates suggest, the stimulus from tax cuts or spending increases depends on the strength of the economy. If it is operating close to potential and the Federal Reserve is not constrained by the zero lower bound on interest rates, fiscal policies will have a smaller short-run economic effect, largely because the Fed will offset fiscal stimulus with interest rate hikes. However, if the economy is far from potential and short-term interest rates are close to zero, fiscal stimulus can have significantly more impact because the Fed will not offset it. CBO estimates that fiscal multipliers are about three times larger when the economy is very weak than when it is strong.

CBO’s numbers illustrate substantial uncertainty in our understanding of how fiscal policies affect the economy. For the recovery tax rebates issued to individuals in response to the COVID pandemic, CBO’s low estimate of the multiplier (0.25) is just one-sixth the size of its high estimate (1.5).

But some things are clear. CBO’s estimates suggest that, dollar for dollar, tax cuts are often a less effective means of stimulus than are spending increases. If the federal government purchases goods and services itself (or helps state and local governments do so), most or all of the spending will boost demand. If the government cuts personal taxes, however, a substantial amount of the added spending power leaks into saving. That dampening effect can be moderated by targeting tax cuts to lower- and middle-income households, which are less likely to save.

Other short-run effects

Tax policies can also affect the supply of labor in the short run. A cut in payroll taxes could bring some workers into the labor market or encourage those already working to put in more hours. Such supply changes have little effect on output if the economy is operating well below potential. Under those conditions, people have difficulty finding more work even if they want it. If the economy is operating near potential, however, increased labor supply can translate to increased output.

The tax policy center model

The Tax Policy Center (TPC) model of short-run economic effects differs slightly in approach compared to CBO’s but is designed to produce similar estimates. The CBO model estimates direct effects on demand based on policy types, as in table 1. The TPC model instead derives effects on after-tax incomes from TPC’s distributional tables and calculates the resulting effect on demand using marginal propensities to consume that differ by income level. TPC used this model to estimate the short-run economic and revenue effects of Joe Biden’s 2020 Presidential campaign tax proposals and of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

Updated January 2024

Further Reading

Congressional Budget Office. 2020. “The Effects of Pandemic-Related Legislation on Output.” Washington, DC: Congressional Budget Office.

Joint Committee on Taxation. 2018. “Overview of Joint Committee Economic Modeling.” Report JCX-33-18. Washington, DC: Joint Committee on Taxation.

Page, Benjamin R., Jeffrey Rohaly, Thornton Matheson, Gordon Mermin, Jason DeBacker, and Richard Evans. 2021. “Macroeconomic Analysis of Former Vice President Biden’s Tax Proposals.” Washington, DC: Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

Page, Benjamin R., Joseph Rosenberg, James R. Nunns, Jeffrey Rohaly, and Daniel Berger. 2017. “Macroeconomic Analysis of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.” Washington DC: Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

Seliski, John, Aaron Betz, Yiqun Gloria Chen, U. Devrim Demirel, Junghoon Lee, and Jaeger Nelson. “Key Methods That CBO Used to Estimate the Effects of Pandemic-Related Legislation on Output.” Working Paper 2020-7. Washington, DC: Congressional Budget Office.

Werling, Jeffrey. 2019. “Macroeconomic Analysis at CBO.” Washington DC: Congressional Budget Office.

How do taxes affect the economy in the short run? (2024)
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