Tuesday, September 08, 2015

Two new articles (both short) posted on SSRN

I have just posted on SSRN that I wrote earlier this year.

The first is a short book review, which just appeared in the National Tax Journal, of Ed Kleinbard's recent book, We Are Better Than This."  My book review is available here.

Second, during the summer I wrote a short article entitled "The More It Changes, the More It Stays the Same? Automatic Indexing and Current Policy."  It's available here. Its abstract is as follows:

This projected chapter in Fagan and Levmore (eds.), THE TIMING OF LEGAL INTERVENTION (forthcoming, Edward Elgar Publishing) addresses issues associated with automatically indexing fiscal policies, such as those in the U.S. income tax and Social Security systems. Under indexing, a statistical measure - pertaining, for example, to inflation, wage levels, life expectancy, or income inequality - is used to determine changes to nominal legal rules that then take effect automatically. One possible reason for favoring automatic indexing is that it may keep the underlying policy, by some metric, "the same" as empirical circumstances change. While indexing often makes sense, from the standpoint of a policymaker whose long-term preferences it would keep in place barring further legislative action, identifying the set of "current policies" that one might want to perpetuate (or change) can be surprisingly difficult. The paper explores broader conceptual issues pertaining to policy continuity and competing objectives when legislation remains on the books indefinitely, with particular reference to examples drawn from the history of the U.S. income tax and Social Security.

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