The Power of Economists within the State by Johan Christensen
Author:Johan Christensen [Christensen, Johan]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Social Science, Sociology, General
ISBN: 9781503601857
Google: vUUkDwAAQBAJ
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Published: 2017-04-11T05:26:57+00:00
Chapter 5
Norway
Economic Experts in the Social-Democratic State
I pushed for the introduction of modern economic thinking in the ministry. Not everything could be solved with demand, as the Oslo School economists thought. It was necessary to deal with the structural problems of the economy. All the markets needed to be changed: product markets, the labor market, financial markets. It was necessary to make the markets work, to decentralize decisions to the market; the planned economy was no longer an option. All this was mainstream neoclassical economics; it was Solow, Arrow, Stiglitz, Shultz on the labor market, Romer. It wasnât shocking for regular economists, but it was new to the older generation of economists and to politicians.
âFormer official, Norwegian Ministry of Finance, interview, January 2011
CONVENTIONAL notions of what tax policy looks like in a social-democratic country were put to a severe test by the Norwegian tax reform of 1992. In a blockbuster deal, the Labour government and the conservative opposition agreed on a tax overhaul that put an end to the postwar social-democratic regime of high rates on high incomes and deep deductions for priority investments. The reform not only drastically reduced the top statutory tax rate on labor income but also introduced a flat tax on capital income at a rate far below the rates on labor, thereby explicitly privileging the return on capital over income from âhonest work.â In fact, the reform left Norway with the lowest statutory tax rate on dividends in the OECD (van den Noord 2000: 15). To be sure, this market-conforming tax reform was neither fully comprehensive nor perfectly durable: Areas such as the taxation of housing were not touched by the reform, and certain reform measures were reversed over the following decade. But a new reform in 2006 reaffirmed the commitment of policy makers to low rates and broad bases. Though less extreme than in New Zealand, the changes in Norwegian tax policy from 1990 onwards adhered closely to the principles of efficiency and neutrality in taxation. âIn few countries,â observed one tax expert, âhave modern income tax reforms been governed by overall economic principles to the same extent as in Norwayâ (Christiansen 2004: 9; see also van den Noord 2000; Sørensen 2005).
Why did a social-democratic country like Norway adopt this kind of market-conforming tax policies? Many would instinctively attribute the lowering of tax rates in Norway to the abundance of oil revenues. The extraction of petroleum and natural gas in the North Sea has since the 1980s generated enormous incomes for the Norwegian state, some of which are used over the budget every year. As a result, Norway needs to raise less revenue through the tax system than countries with similar spending levels, such as Denmark or Sweden. Other things being equal, we would expect this to increase the political pressure for lowering tax rates while making it more difficult to broaden tax bases. To some extent these predictions fit the empirical picture: Norway went far in lowering rates on both labor and capital.
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