We tested the tax smoothing hypothesis for Turkey using annual data for the period of 1949-2010. Although our preliminary estimation results imply the existence of the weak form of tax smoothing for Turkey, further tests indicate the violation of exogeneity of permanent government spending, which is a requirement for the tax smoothing hypothesis to hold. Our causality tests indicate that permanent government spending is not exogenous due to the causality running from lagged tax rates to permanent government spending. Therefore, we conclude that our results provide evidence against the tax smoothing hypothesis. Our results are important because the existence of random-walk behavior of the tax rates alone or some preliminary regressions do not guarantee the existence of tax smoothing.
CITATION STYLE
Turan, T., Karakas, M., & Yanikkaya, H. (2014). Tax smoothing hypothesis: A turkish case. Panoeconomicus, 61(4), 487–501. https://doi.org/10.2298/PAN1404487T
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.