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Tax complexity and fiscal illusion: An empirical evaluation on of the Heyndels and Smolders approach

Dollery, Brian E. and Worthington, Andrew C. (1999) Tax complexity and fiscal illusion: An empirical evaluation on of the Heyndels and Smolders approach . Public Finance/Finances Publiques 51(4):pp. 522-533.

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Abstract

In a pioneering paper on the revenue-complexity hypothesis, Heyndels and Smolders (1995) demonstrate that the conventional employment of the Hirschman-Herfindal index (HHC) in the empirical analysis of fiscal illusion introduces an arbitrary restriction without theoretical foundation. They propose instead the more general Hannah and Kay index (HK). In this paper we extend this approach to 1991 data drawn from forty six local government areas in Tasmania, Australia. Our results are in broad agreement with those produced by Heyndels and Smolders using local government data from Flanders, Belgium. We find that the HHC may involve sizeable misspecification bias and our results provide further support for the use of HK instead of HHC.

Item Type:Journal Article
Status:Published
Keywords:Fiscal illusion; revenue complexity hypothesis; local government; intergovernmental grants
Subjects:360000 Policy and Political Science > 360100 Political Science > 360103 Federalism and Intergovernmental Relations
340000 Economics > 340200 Applied Economics > 340209 Public Sector Economics
360000 Policy and Political Science > 360200 Policy and Administration > 360201 Public Policy
ID Code:2679
Deposited By:Worthington, Andrew
Deposited On:23 November 2005
Copyright Owner:Copyright 1999 H.J. Paris