Introduction to IIPF 2019 special issue in ITAX
International Tax and Public Finance
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10797-021-09665-2
POLICY WATCH
Introduction to IIPF 2019 special issue in ITAX
Bas Jacobs1 · Daniel Waldenström2
Accepted: 13 February 2021
© The Author(s) 2021
This special issue of International Tax and Public Finance consists of a number
of contributions from the 373 papers presented at the 75th Annual Congress of the
International Institute of Public Finance (IIPF), which was hosted by the University
of Glasgow on August 21–23, 2019, in Glasgow, Scotland.
The theme of the conference was Taxation and Mobility. Four excellent plenary
speakers discussed a variety of topics: Rachel Griffith (University of Manchester and
IFS, UK) on “The Distributional and Corrective Implications of Sin Taxes”, Nathaniel Hendren (Harvard University) on “Social Mobility and Investments in Children”,
Jonathan Portes (King’s College London) on “Brexit and the UK Economy” and
Stefanie Stantcheva (Harvard University) on “Taxation and Innovation”. In addition,
a plenary session on tax policy was organized, featuring three IIPF fellows and two
representatives of the Scottish Government.
Many papers presented at the conference dealt with general research areas in
public economics, and the two papers published in this special issue reflect this
diversity.
The article by Ana Cabral, Norman Gemmell and Nazila Alinaghi studies income
tax evasion among the self-employed by using a unique dataset in which household
surveys are matched with administrative and tax registers in New Zealand. Their analysis departs from the popular expenditure approach to estimating tax evasion of the selfemployed. A critical assumption underlying that approach is that survey respondents
report their income in the same way in the survey as they do to the tax authority. The
authors convincingly show that this is not true; taxpayers underreport more income in
* Bas Jacobs
https://personal.eur.nl/bjacobs/
Daniel Waldenström
https://sites.google.com/view/danielwaldenstrom
1
Erasmus School of Economics, Tinbergen Institute and CESifo, Erasmus University Rotterdam,
PO Box 1738, 3000 DR Rotterdam, The Netherlands
2
Research Institute of Industrial Economics Stockholm, CEPR, CESifo, and IZA, Grevgatan 34,
10215 Stockholm, Sweden
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B. Jacobs, D. Waldenström
administrative tax data than in surveys. They find that bias could be as large as one-half
of the estimated amount of underreported income, which is a policy-relevant result.
The article by Johannes Blum, Florian Dorn and Axel Heuer studies the question
of how political democracy in countries affects the level of health expenditures. This
study employs a large cross-country panel data set with 151 developing and developed countries over the years 2000–2015. They measure the main explanatory variable, democracy, in several ways. Their main finding is that democracies have substantially higher public health expenditures relative to autocratic regimes. Cross-sectional
regressions suggest 20–30% higher levels and regressions with instrumental variables
and panel fixed effects confirm this finding, though with a somewhat smaller positive
effect of 10–20% of democracy on health expenditures. The study’s contribution is
mainly methodological, by complementing previous studies’ cross-sectional evidence
with richer results obtained from employing panel data, using more precise measures
of democracy, and adopting more robust identification strategies based on instrumental
variables and panel fixed effects. The authors conclude that democracies care more for
their citizens and aim to reduce inequalities in the access to health care.
The 2019 congress also featured a number of prizes and awards. The 2019 Peggy
and Richard Musgrave Prize for the best paper contributed by authors under the age
of 40 was awarded to Jonas Löbbing (University of Cologne, Germany) for his paper
“Redistributive Income Taxation with Directed Technical Change”. The IIPF handed
out two Young Economists Awards at the 2019 congress; to Adrian Lerche (Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain) for his paper “Investment Tax Credits and the Response of
Firms”; and to Mathilde Muñoz (Paris School of Economics, France) for her paper “Do
European Top Earners React to Labor Taxation Through Migration?”. The 2019 ITAX
PhD Student Award, introduced in 2017 by International Tax and Public Finance,
has been awarded to Antoine Ferey (Ecole Polytechnique—CREST, France) for the
paper “Inattention and the Taxation Bias”, co-authored with Jeremy Boccanfuso (Paris
School of Economics—EHESS, France). 85 of the papers presented at the Congress
applied for the IIPF awards and 67 for the ITAX award.
The 2019 IIPF Congress was a great success and we are grateful to many authors
that decided to submit their papers to the IIPF special issue. The publication of the
articles in this special issue would not have been possible without the help of the members of the Scientific Committee who initially reviewed hundreds of submissions to
the 2019 IIPF Congress. We are grateful to several referees who contributed with their
scarce time and valuable advice. We are also thankful for the assistance we received
by the editors and staff of International Tax and Public Finance during the publication
process. Finally, we would like to express our gratitude to the keynote speakers, the
numerous presenters, the discussants of the 75th Annual Congress and, most importantly, the local organizers in Glasgow chaired by Céline Azemar (University of Glasgow). Together, we managed to make the IIPF Congress a memorable event!
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Introduction to IIPF 2019 special issue in ITAX
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