PolicyArchive.org | About | All Collections
PolicyArchive is a comprehensive digital library of public policy research containing over 30,000 documents.
Publication Date: January 2008
Publisher: Tax Policy Center
Author(s): Jason Furman
Research Area:
Keywords: Taxes, the Budget, and the Economy; Economic Stimulus; Taxation of Households; Distribution of Taxes and Income
Type: Report
Abstract:
The key to well-designed stimulus is to ensure that it is timely, temporary and targeted ? the "three T" principles enunciated by economists as diverse as Harvard Professors Lawrence Summers and Martin Feldstein, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Congressional Budget Office Director Peter Orszag. Three of the options that best meet this test are (1) a refundable tax rebate that is adjusted for family size and phased out for high-income households; (2) a temporary extension and possibly expansion in unemployment insurance benefits; and (3) a temporary increase in food stamps. Furman's testimony discusses the underlying economic logic that motivates the three principles of fiscal stimulus, applies these principles to analyze a range of stimulus options, and describes in detail the design of an individual rebate.