Title: Microsimulation Model of the U'S' Federal Individual Income Tax
1Microsimulation Model of the U.S. Federal
Individual Income Tax
- Ralph A. Rector, Ph.D.
- Tracy L. Foertsch, Ph.D.
- The Heritage Foundation
- August 22, 2007
The analysis and conclusions presented here are
strictly those of the authors. They should not be
interpreted as reflecting the views of The
Heritage Foundation.
2Overview
- ObjectiveAnalyze changes in Federal Income Tax
- Account for details of tax provisions
- Include economy-wide effects
- Target AudienceLegislative Decision-makers
- Method and PlatformFile Types and Languages
- Databases SPSS / SQL
- Parameter and Output Files Excel / VBA / AREMOS
- Microsimulation Model C / C
- Policy Environment
- Produce revenue estimates consistent with
official forecasts - Estimate dynamic revenue and economic effects
- Provide estimates of marginal tax rate effects
3Primary Components of the Microsimulation Tax
Model
- Statistically-matched public use base year
micro-level records - Tax return data Internal Revenue Service
(IRS)/Statistics of Income Division (SOI) Public
Use Tax File - Household survey data Census March Current
Population Survey (CPS)/Annual Income and
Demographic File - Federal individual income and payroll tax
calculator - Linear-programming data aging routines
- Age microsimulation data by adjusting sample
weights and dollar amounts to hit target values
4Aging the Microsimulation Tax Data
- Historical data (post-base year)
- Official biannual baseline economic and budgetary
projections - Assumes current law
5Aging the Microsimulation Tax Data
- Historical data (post-base year)
- Official biannual baseline economic and budgetary
projections - Assumes current law
- Serves as a common baseline for scoring proposed
changes in taxes and spending
6Aging the Microsimulation Tax Data
- Historical data (post-base year)
- Official biannual baseline economic and budgetary
projections - Assumes current law
- Serves as a common baseline for scoring proposed
changes in taxes and spending - Used to calibrate US macroeconomic model (Global
Insight forecasting model)
7Aging the Microsimulation Tax Data
- Historical data (post-base year)
- Official biannual baseline economic and budgetary
projections - Macroeconomic model projections
- Baseline forecast from macroeconomic model used
to calibrate microsimulation model
8Aging the Microsimulation Tax Data
- Historical data (post-base year)
- Official biannual baseline economic and budgetary
projections - Macroeconomic model projections
- Baseline forecast from macroeconomic model used
to calibrate microsimulation model - Policy simulation forecast from macroeconomic
model used to calibrate microsimulation model
9Inputs From the Macroeconomic Model
- Components of personal income
- Wages and salaries
- Investment income (interest and dividend income)
- Proprietor income (farm and non-farm)
- Other business income (rental income)
- Corporate profits
- Price levels
- CPI for urban consumers
- GDP deflator for consumer medical goods and
services - Other variables used to compute tax
10Outputs From the Microsimulation Model
- Revenue estimates
- Individual income tax
- Marginal Tax Rates
- Ordinary income
- Business income
- Capital income
11Calibrating the Microsimulation and Macroeconomic
Models for Policy Simulations
- Step 1. Use the microsimulation model to estimate
the change in individual income tax revenues
under conventional assumptions - Step 2. Use the macroeconomic model to estimate
first-round economic and dynamic revenue
effects - Step 3. Use the alternative macroeconomic
forecast to update incomes in the microsimulation
model
12Produced by Microsimulation and Macroeconomic
Models
Example of Iterative Differences Between
Individual Income Tax Revenue Estimates
13Ongoing Model Development
- Increase the number and quality of links between
the microsimulation and macroeconomic models - Use the microsimulation model to improve
estimates of behavioral effects - Improve distributional analysis
14END