The Effects of Government Expenditures and Revenues on the Economy and Economic Well-Being: A Cross-National Analysis

CRS Report for Congress
The Effects of Government Expenditures and
Revenues on the Economy and Economic Well-
Being: A Cross-National Analysis
April 5, 2006
Thomas L. Hungerford
Specialist in Public Sector Economics
Government and Finance Division


Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

The Effects of Government Expenditures and
Revenues on the Economy and Economic Well-Being:
A Cross-National Analysis
Summary
The FY2006 budget resolution (H.Con.Res. 95) required that mandatory
spending be reduced by $35 billion and revenues be reduced by no more than $70
billion over the next five years. Congress passed and the President signed a
reconciliation bill (P.L. 109-171) to reduce mandatory spending by $39 billion
between FY2006 and FY2010. A revenue reduction reconciliation bill (H.R. 4297)
has not been enacted as of the date of this report. Many argue that tax and spending
reductions will stimulate economic growth, whereas many others argue that tax cuts
will lead to a larger deficit with adverse economic effects and that spending cuts will
reduce critical government services. This report examines the effects of government
spending and taxation on economic growth and economic well-being by comparing
the United States with 20 other industrial Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD) countries.
Among the 21 OECD countries, the United States has the fourth smallest public
sector, with total government (federal, state, and local) expenditures amounting to
37% of gross domestic product (GDP). Total government spending accounted for

34% of GDP (the smallest) in Ireland and 59% of GDP (the largest) in Sweden.


Countries with larger government spending relative to GDP tend to have higher
productivity growth rates and lower relative poverty rates. There appears, however,
to be no relation between government spending and GDP growth.
Public social welfare expenditures are the benefits paid by all levels of
government providing support to maintain welfare. The level of social welfare
spending varies from country to country — the market-oriented English-speaking
countries such as the United States tend to have social welfare expenditures equal to
about 15% of GDP, whereas the welfare-state Scandinavian countries spend much
more, typically about 25% of GDP. The evidence suggests that public social welfare
expenditures do not have an adverse effect on the economy. But these expenditures
can improve economic well-being — countries with higher public social welfare
expenditures relative to GDP have lower relative poverty rates.
The major source of funding for government expenditures is tax revenues.
Taxes have an effect on government budgets, and most people would agree that they
also have an effect on the economy. The evidence suggests, however, that countries
with high tax revenues relative to GDP do not generally experience lower economic
growth rates than countries with lower tax revenues. Some scholars argue that
countries with higher taxes to fund higher social welfare spending tend to choose the
types of taxes with the smallest economic distortions.
Many scholars argue that long-term budget deficits can have an adverse impact
on the economy. The evidence suggests that countries with larger budget surpluses
tend to have higher economic growth rates, and that sustained government budget
deficits are likely to reduce long-term economic growth. This report will not be
updated.



Contents
The Size of the Public Sector in the Economy............................2
Public Social Welfare Expenditures...................................7
Public and Private Health Expenditures...............................12
Tax Revenues....................................................16
Government Budget Deficits........................................22
Conclusion ......................................................23
Data Appendix...................................................24
List of Figures
Figure 1. Total Government Expenditures as a Percentage of GDP, 2003......3
Figure 2. Social Welfare Expenditures as a Percentage of GDP,
2001 ........................................................7
Figure 3. Relation Between Average Annual Real GDP Growth Rate and
Average Social Welfare Expenditures..............................9
Figure 4. Relation Between Average Productivity Growth Rate and Average
Social Welfare Expenditures....................................10
Figure 5. Relation Between Average Labor Force Participation Rate and
Average Social Welfare Expenditures.............................11
Figure 6. Relation Between Relative Poverty Rate and Average Social
Welfare Expenditures..........................................12
Figure 7. Public and Private Health Expenditures as a Percentage
of GDP, 2002................................................13
Figure 8. Total Tax Revenue as a Percentage of GDP, 2003...............16
Figure 9. Relation Between Average Annual Real GDP Growth Rate
and Average Total Tax Revenue.................................20
Figure 10. Relation Between Average Productivity Growth Rate and
Average Total Tax Revenue....................................21
Figure 11. Relation Between Average Annual Real GDP Growth Rate
and Average Primary Government Balance.........................23
List of Tables
Table 1. Correlations with 10-Year Average Total Government Spending
as a Percentage of GDP.........................................4
Table 2. Components of Total Government Spending, 2003................6
Table 3. Health Indicators, 2003.....................................15
Table 4. Sources of Tax Revenues, 2003..............................18



The Effects of Government Expenditures
and Revenues on the Economy and
Economic Well-Being: A Cross-National
Analysis
U.S. federal government expenditures in FY2003 were $2,159.9 billion. But the
federal government is not alone in spending: state and local governments also spent
$2,164.2 billion. The combined federal, state, and local government budget deficit
was equivalent to 4.6% of gross domestic product. Although it is recognized that
budget deficits (created through either spending increases or tax cuts) provide a
short-term stimulus to the economy, it is also generally agreed that persistent budget1
deficits can have harmful long-term economic effects. For the past few years, there
has been a vigorous debate at all levels of government on the best way to reduce and
eliminate budget deficits: raise taxes, reduce taxes, or reduce spending.
At the federal level, the FY2006 budget resolution (H.Con.Res. 95) required that
mandatory spending (that is, spending for entitlement programs) be reduced by $35
billion and revenues be reduced by no more than $70 billion over the next five years.
Congress eventually passed and the President signed a reconciliation bill (P.L. 109-

171) to reduce mandatory spending by $39 billion between FY2006 and FY2010.


The majority of the reductions are in Medicare, Medicaid, and student loans for
higher education. A revenue reduction reconciliation bill (H.R. 4297) has not been
enacted as of the date of this report.
The President’s FY2007 budget proposal calls for a further $65 billion reduction
in mandatory spending and making the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts permanent. The
President and the Republican congressional leadership argue that the FY2007
proposals will facilitate economic growth and job creation and otherwise ensure a
strong economy in the future. On the other side, the Democratic congressional
leadership argues that tax cuts will lead to a ballooning federal deficit with adverse
economic effects and that spending cuts will reduce critical government services.
Government spending and taxation can have significant effects on the economy,
and on the lives of individuals. This report examines the consequences of
government spending, especially public social welfare expenditures, and taxation on
the economy and the well-being of the citizens. This analysis summarizes the results


1 See, for example, the papers in Alice M. Rivlin and Isabel Sawhill, eds., Restoring Fiscal
Sanity 2005 (Washington: Brookings Institution, 2005); and in Federal Reserve Bank of
Boston, The Economics of Large Government Deficits, conference series no. 27, proceedings
of a conference held in October 1983.

from previous studies and uses data from 21 industrial countries to compare the U.S.
experience with that of other countries.2
The Size of the Public Sector in the Economy
Government carries out a number of important economic functions. One of
those functions is to correct inefficiencies or distortions in the allocation of goods
and services. This may take the form of levying taxes or providing subsidies to
correct externalities, providing public goods such as national defense and police
protection, or regulating monopolies.3 Another function of government is to
redistribute income and wealth through the use of taxes and transfers. Lastly,
government can have an economic stabilizing function to reduce unemployment or
inflation. In performing these functions, however, government may also introduce
inefficiencies or distortions in the market.
One issue that often generates vigorous debate is the proper size of government.4
Mostly, this debate is qualitative rather than quantitative, in that most argue over
whether the public sector is too large or too small. There is no standard for the
optimal size of the public sector, and there is no agreed upon way to measure public
sector size. In this report, the size of the public sector will be measured by the ratio
of government expenditures to gross domestic product (GDP). U.S. public sector
size will be judged by comparing this ratio to the same ratio for other industrial
countries.
Government plays a significant role in the nation’s economy. But the role varies
dramatically from country to country. Figure 1 shows total government spending as
a percentage of GDP in 2003.5 Total government spending accounted for 34% of
GDP in Ireland and 59% of GDP in Sweden. Among these 21 countries, the United
States has the fourth smallest public sector, with government expenditures amounting
to 37% of GDP. In general, the Scandinavian and continental European countries
have relatively large public sectors, which amount to 50% or more of GDP. The
English-speaking countries as well as Japan and Switzerland tend to have smaller
public sectors.


2 See the appendix for a description of the data used in the report.
3 A prime example of an externality is the generation of pollution during the production of
a good. A firm will typically base its pricing policy on the costs it incurs in the production
of the good and not on the total costs, which includes the cost placed on society from the
pollution.
4 See CRS Report RL32162, The Size and Role of Government: Economic Issues, by Marc
Labonte.
5 Total government spending includes spending at all levels of government such as state and
local as well as the federal or central government. On average, central government spending
accounts for 58% of total government expenditures for the 21 countries considered in the
report. The range is from a low of 30% to a high of 91%. Given this wide disparity in the
importance of the central government spending, total government expenditures and revenues
are examined in this report.

Figure 1. Total Government Expenditures as a Percentage of GDP,

2003


Sw ede n
Denmark
Fra n ce
Be lgium
Fi nl a nd
Au s t r i a
Italy
N et h er l ands
Ge rm a ny
No r w a y
Por tuga l
Lux embour g
United Kingdom
Ca nada
Spa i n
Japan
Sw itze rla nd
United States
New Zealand
Austr alia
Ir eland
0 102030405060 70
Per ce nt
Source: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
Economic theory does not predict an unambiguous effect of government policy
on economic growth. Traditional growth models suggest that long-term growth in
output and productivity are due to growth in population and exogenous technical
progress, which are unaffected by government policy. Newer growth models,
however, suggest that government policies that increase investment in physical and
human capital can raise long-term growth. Empirical research as well has found that
the size of government has ambiguous effects on economic growth — some studies
find positive effects and others find negative effects. One study found that
government consumption expenditures have a negative effect on economic growth.
But consumption expenditures are a fairly small part of total government spending.
The same study finds that other government functions such as investment spending
for physical and human capital as well as a high quality bureaucracy have a positive
effect on economic growth.6
Table 1 displays the simple correlation among the 21 industrial countries of the
10-year average of total government spending as a percentage of GDP with various
measures of economic growth and well-being.7 The first row of the table shows the
6 See Simon Commander, Hamid R. Davoodi, and Une J. Lee, “The Causes of Government
and the Consequences for Growth and Well-Being,” World Bank, Policy Research Working
Paper no. 1785, Jan. 1997.
7 The simple correlation between two variables can be between +1 and -1. A positive
(continued...)

correlation with the 10-year average annual real GDP growth rate.8 The estimated
correlation is fairly small and is not precisely estimated, thus a correlation of zero
cannot be ruled out and the correlation is said to be not statistically significant.9
Consequently, there is no apparent relation between these two variables. As an
example, both the United States and Finland have experienced average annual real
GDP growth rates of 3.3% over the past 10 years, yet Finland’s government
expenditures are equivalent to 54.3% of GDP compared to 35.9% for the United
States.
Table 1. Correlations with 10-Year Average Total Government
Spending as a Percentage of GDP
Correlation
10-year Average Annual Real GDP-0.15
Growth Rate
10-year Average Annual Productivity0.49
Growth Rate
Relative Poverty Rate in 2000-0.63
Source: CRS calculations of OECD data.
The correlation of government spending with productivity growth is shown in
the next row of the table. The estimated correlation is positive, of moderate size, and
is statistically significant. This suggests that countries with higher government
spending relative to GDP also have higher productivity growth rates. Lastly, the final
row of the table reports the correlation between government spending relative to
GDP and the relative poverty rate.10 The correlation is -0.63 (and statistically


7 (...continued)
(negative) correlation indicates that when one variable increases the other variable tends to
increase (decrease). A correlation of zero indicates there is no relation between the two
variables.
8 The 10-year averages are used so as to average out the effects of business cycle
fluctuations in these economic variables.
9 The standard error is also estimated along with the correlation. The standard error is used
to test the hypothesis that the estimated correlation coefficient is equal to zero (that is, no
correlation). Precisely estimated correlations have small standard errors and the hypothesis
of no correlation can usually be rejected. When the hypothesis of no correlation is rejected,
the correlation is said to be statistically significant.
10 The relative poverty rate is the percentage of the population with adjusted family income
below 50% of median family income. This poverty threshold is commonly used for
international comparisons of poverty because there is no internationally accepted official
poverty threshold. Using this poverty threshold produces a poverty rate for the United
States that is about 5 percentage points higher than the official poverty rate. The relative
poverty rate is available only for 2000 for these countries. For a discussion and comparison
of alternative poverty measures across countries see Timothy Smeeding, Poor People in
(continued...)

significant), suggesting that countries with higher government spending relative to
GDP have lower relative poverty rates.
Not only does the size of the public sector vary among these countries, but
spending priorities also vary considerably among countries. Table 2 shows the
percentage of government spending devoted to five government functions in 2003.11
The countries are organized into four blocks: the continental European countries, the
English-speaking countries, the Scandinavian countries, and Japan and Switzerland.12
The average size of the public sector in each block is about what would be expected
(see Figure 1). The Scandinavian countries, with their large welfare systems, have
the largest public sector, with government spending equivalent to about 53% of GDP.
The English-speaking countries, which are more market oriented, have smaller public
sectors that are equivalent to about 38% of GDP. The continental European countries
fall between these two extremes. The public sectors in Japan and Switzerland are
about the same size as the public sectors in the English-speaking countries surveyed.
Although the overall size of the U.S. public sector is not much different from
that of other English-speaking countries, U.S. spending priorities are very different.
First, the United States devotes a much greater share of government expenditures to
defense than any other country.13 Part of this is due to the role the United States
military plays in protecting Europe and Japan. Second, the U.S. allocates a larger
proportion of government expenditures for health and education than do most
countries. Lastly, the share of government spending in the United States devoted to
social protection is less than in other industrial countries.14


10 (...continued)
Rich Nations: The United States in Comparative Perspective, Luxembourg Income Study,
working paper no. 419, Oct. 2005.
11 Important government functions not listed include public order and safety, environmental
protection, and economic affairs, among others.
12 Data on government expenditures by function are not available for Australia, Canada, and
Switzerland.
13 Defense spending includes military spending, civil defense (including the National Guard
and armories), foreign military aid, and defense R&D spending.
14 Social protection includes social welfare expenditures such as old-age benefits and other
transfers. It also includes the administrative costs associated with these programs, grants
for research related to social protection, and benefits to victims of natural disasters.

Table 2. Components of Total Government Spending, 2003
As a percentage of total government spending
GeneralSocial
publ i c Def e nse H eal t h Educat i o n protection
services
Continental European Countries
Austria 14.7% 1.8% 13.0% 11.4% 42.2%
Belgium 18.8 2.4 13.8 12.3 35.5
France 13.2 4.4 15.7 11.2 39.3
Germany 13.0 2.4 13.3 8.5 46.6
It aly 18.6 2.8 13.3 10.7 37.5
Luxembourg 10.8 0.7 11.7 11.8 42.4
Netherlands 16.3 3.1 9.6 10.6 38.0
Portugal 15.7 2.8 14.9 14.7 33.0
Spain 15.7 3.7 12.1 12.8 41.0
Market-oriented English-speaking Countries
Australia-----
Canada-----
Ir eland 10.6 2.0 19.1 13.0 28.1
New Zealand12.83.316.119.729.2
United Kingdom11.16.215.612.337.8
United States13.111.020.017.119.9
Welfare-state Scandinavian Countries
Denmark 14.4 2.8 10.2 15.1 44.7
Finland 12.0 3.1 12.8 13.0 42.5
Norway 10.1 4.0 17.1 13.6 39.0
Sweden 14.0 3.5 12.4 12.6 42.5
Other Countries
Switzerland - - - - -
J a pan 7.5 2.9 20.0 11.9 34.5
Source: CRS calculations of OECD data.
Notes: Data for Spain and Ireland are for 2002.
- Data are not available.



Public Social Welfare Expenditures
Public social welfare expenditures are the benefits paid by all levels of
government to individuals, families, and households providing support to maintain
welfare, and are a major component of social protection expenditures. In the United
States, these expenditures are provided by such programs as Social Security,
Supplemental Security Income, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families,
unemployment insurance, Medicaid, Medicare, food stamps, and the earned income
tax credit. At the federal level, most mandatory spending would be included in
public social welfare expenditures.
Public social welfare expenditures vary from country to country almost as
dramatically as total government expenditures. Figure 2 shows public social welfare
expenditures as a percentage of GDP for the 21 countries in 2001 (the latest year for
which these data are available). The market-oriented English-speaking countries tend
to have social welfare expenditures equal to about 15% of GDP, whereas the welfare-
state Scandinavian countries spend much more — typically about 25% of GDP.
Figure 2. Social Welfare Expenditures as a Percentage of GDP,

2001


Denmark
Sw ede n
Fra n ce
Ge rm a ny
Be lgium
Sw itze rla nd
Au s t r i a
Fi nl a nd
Italy
No r w a y
United Kingdom
N et h er l ands
Por tuga l
Lux embour g
Spa i n
New Zealand
Austr alia
Ca nada
Japan
United States
Ir eland
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
Per ce nt
Source: CRS calculations of OECD data.
Social welfare expenditures can have a variety of effects on a nation’s economy
and its citizens. Many social programs, especially means-tested public assistance

programs, have disincentive effects, which can affect the economy.15 Providing
people with income if they don’t work could take productive people out of the
workforce, thus reducing output. There are two sources of disincentives in many
social programs. First, when income increases individuals tend to purchase more
goods and services, including leisure (that is, time not working). This is called the
income effect, and has a negative effect on work effort.
Second, many social programs reduce benefits as an individual’s earnings rise.
This acts as an implicit tax on earnings. For example, Social Security has a
retirement earnings test, which reduces Social Security benefits to beneficiaries who
are under the normal retirement age by $1 for every $2 in earnings above an annual
earnings limit.16 This benefit reduction is comparable to a 50% tax rate on earnings
above the limit. Combined with federal, state, and local taxes, the increase in total
income may be only a few cents for every $2 earned. The price an individual pays
for leisure is forgone wages. As the wage rate falls because of implicit and explicit
taxes, the price of leisure falls and the individual will typically work less (that is,
purchase more leisure). This effect is called the substitution effect.
In the case of most social programs, both the income and substitution effects act
to reduce the work effort of beneficiaries. For example, research has shown that
unemployed workers receiving unemployment insurance tend to remain unemployed
longer than other unemployed workers.17 In addition, Social Security beneficiaries
subject to the retirement earnings test have been found to limit work hours to keep
their annual earnings below the earnings limit.18
Removing workers from the workforce, however, could boost productivity in
two ways. First, the principle of diminishing marginal returns suggests that as the
workforce is reduced (holding the amount of other inputs constant), both marginal
and average productivity will increase.19 Second, some argue that the people
receiving these benefits tend to be less productive than current workers.
Consequently, economic growth and productivity may not be seriously affected by
the provision of social benefits.20 For example, evidence from OECD countries


15 For a discussion of disincentive effects see Robert Moffitt, “Incentive Effects of the U.S.
Welfare System: A Review,” Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 30, no. 1 (Mar. 1992),
pp. 1-61; and U.S. General Accounting Office, Self-Sufficiency: Opportunities and
Disincentives on the Road to Economic Independence, GAO/HRD-93-23, Aug. 1993.
16 The annual limit is $12,480 in 2006.
17 See Gary Solon, “Work Incentive Effects of Taxing Unemployment Insurance,”
Econometrica, vol. 53, no. 2 (Mar. 1985), pp. 295-306; and, Bruce Meyer, “Unemployment
Insurance and Unemployment Spells,” Econometrica, vol. 58, no. 4 (Jul. 1990), pp. 757-782.
18 Leora Friedberg, “The Labor Supply Effects of the Social Security Earnings Test,” Review
of Economics and Statistics, vol. 82, no. 1 (Feb. 2000), pp. 48-63.
19 The intuition behind this principle is quite simple. As more and more of one input into
the production process is used, holding the amount of all other inputs constant, the increases
in output become smaller and smaller, and average output per unit of input falls.
20 Xavier Sala-i-Martin, “A Positive Theory of Social Security,” Journal of Economic
(continued...)

shows that higher unemployment compensation is associated with higher
productivity.21 Even though productivity may rise, total output may fall as the
workforce is reduced.
Figure 3 shows the relation between public social welfare expenditures
expressed as a percentage of GDP and real GDP growth rates for OECD countries.
Each point represents the data for one of the 21 countries used in this analysis. The
straight line in the figure shows the fitted linear relationship between the two
variables. There is a slight negative relationship between these two variables
suggesting that countries with higher public social welfare expenditures tend to22
experience lower annual real GDP growth rates. This relationship, however, is not
very precise, in that the scattered data points are not very close to the fitted line.23
Figure 3. Relation Between Average Annual Real GDP Growth Rate
and Average Social Welfare Expenditures


6
5
4e
h Rat
w t
3o
DP Gr
2Real G
1
0
1 0 15 20 25 30 35
Social Welfare Expenditures as a Percentage of GDP
Source: CRS calculations of OECD data.
20 (...continued)
Growth, vol. 1, no. 2 (Jun. 1996), pp. 277-304, for example, suggests that “aggregate output
is higher if the elderly do not work.”
21 Peter Lindert, Growing Public, vol. 2 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004),
ch. 19.
22 The simple correlation is -0.19 and is not statistically significant.
23 In a multivariate analysis, Peter Lindert, Growing Public, vol. 2 (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2004), ch. 18 finds that social transfers have no statistically significant
effect on the growth rate of real per capita GDP.

The relation between the 10-year averages of public social welfare expenditures
and annual productivity growth rate, as well as the fitted linear relationship, is shown
in Figure 4. In contrast to real GDP growth, there appears to be a slight positive
relation between these two variables (the simple correlation is 0.22). This suggests
that countries with higher public social welfare expenditures also tend to have higher
productivity growth rates. This relationship, however, is far from precise and is not
statistically significant.
Figure 4. Relation Between Average Productivity Growth Rate and
Average Social Welfare Expenditures


3.0
2.5
e
2.0 Rat
h
owt
1.5ty Gr
i
tiv
1.0
Produc
0.5
0.0
10 15 2 0 25 3 0 35
Social Welfare Expenditures as a Percentage of GDP
Source: CRS calculations of OECD data.
To investigate the work disincentive effects of public social expenditures,
Figure 5 shows the relation between the 10-year averages of public social welfare
expenditures as a percentage of GDP and the 10-year average of the labor force
participation rate.24 There is a positive relationship between these two variables, but
it appears to be fairly small and not very precise (the simple correlation is 0.19 and
is not statistically significant).
24 The labor force participation rate is the percentage of the working-age population (15
years and older) who have a job or are looking for one.

Figure 5. Relation Between Average Labor Force Participation Rate
and Average Social Welfare Expenditures


100
90
80
te
70a
on R
60ipati
ic
50rt
Pa
40e
Forc
30
Labor
20
10
0
10 15 20 25 30 35
Social Welfare Expenditures as a Percentage of GDP
Source: CRS calculations of OECD data.
The evidence so far suggests that public social welfare expenditures do not have
a large effect on the economy. Many social programs are perceived as ineffective,
which prompted President Reagan to famously quip that “the federal government25
declared war on poverty, and poverty won.” But these expenditures can improve
economic well-being. Well-targeted social benefits can be effective in reducing26
poverty among vulnerable populations.
Figure 6 shows the relationship between the 10-year average of public social
welfare expenditures as a percentage of GDP and the relative poverty rate in 2000.
The figure shows a clear and fairly precise relationship between these two variables
— countries with higher public social welfare expenditures relative to GDP have
lower relative poverty rates.27 Social welfare expenditures can reduce poverty by (1)
increasing income to above the poverty threshold, and (2) subsidizing employment
and augmenting wages.
25 Ronald Reagan, State of the Union Address, Jan. 25, 1988.
26 See, for example, Thomas L. Hungerford, “The Distribution and Anti-Poverty
Effectiveness of U.S. Transfers, 1992,” Journal of Human Resources, vol. 31, no. 1 (Spr.

1996), pp. 255-273.


27 The simple correlation is -0.83 and is statistically significant.

Figure 6. Relation Between Relative Poverty Rate and Average
Social Welfare Expenditures


18
16
14
12ate
10verty R
o
8ive P
lat
6Re
4
2
0
10 15 20 25 30 35
Social Welfare Expenditures as a Percentage of GDP
Source: CRS calculations of OECD data.
Public and Private Health Expenditures
Social welfare expenditures have effects beyond those on the economy and
economic well-being. But the different components of social welfare expenditures
affect different outcomes. One large and important component of social welfare
expenditures is health care spending. Since average health outcomes of the
population will depend on total health care spending rather than just public health
spending, both public and private health expenditures will be the focus of attention.
Furthermore, although public health spending affects the budget, both public and
private health spending will affect the economy. Also, since different countries have
different ratios of public to private health spending, examining both public and
private health spending may provide insight into the effectiveness of public versus
private spending.
On average, the 21 countries devote the equivalent of about 6.5% of GDP for
government health spending (see Figure 7). The range is from a low of about 5% of
GDP in Luxembourg to over 8% in Germany. The United States is at the average of
about 6.5% of GDP. The relative rankings change, however, when private health
expenditures are also considered. The United States spends considerably more
relative to GDP than any other country (this is also true when per capita health
expenditures are considered). Total health spending in the United States was
equivalent to 14.6% of GDP in 2002 compared to 11.2% in Switzerland, 7.3% in
Finland, and 6.2% in Luxembourg. The 21-country average was 9.0% of GDP.

Figure 7. Public and Private Health Expenditures as a Percentage of
GDP, 2002


United States
Sw itz er l and
Ge rm a n y
Fr ance
Norw ay
C anada
Austr alia
Por t uga l
Sw e den
Be lgium
Ne th er l a n ds
Den m a r k
New Zealand
Italy
JapanPublic Health Expenditures
United KingdomPrivate Health Expenditures
Au s t r i a
Spa i n
Ireland
Fi nl and
Luxe m bour g
0246810121416
Pe r c e n t
Source: CRS calculations of OECD data.
In general, richer countries tend to spend more per person on health care. The
simple correlation between per capita health expenditures and per capita GDP is 0.61,
which is precisely estimated.28 Although richer countries spend more on health care,
health care spending does not appear to be related to either the real GDP growth rate
or the productivity growth rate. The simple correlations between total health29
spending and these two economic growth measures are fairly small.
Health care coverage in the other countries is either universal or nearly
universal. In the United States, however, about 82.2% of the population has health30
insurance coverage (through an employer-provided plan or a government program).
Although about 18% of the U.S. population is not covered by health insurance,
research suggests that the length of time most go without coverage is fairly short,
typically less than six months, and many may be eligible for coverage under the
28 Both health expenditures and GDP were converted to U.S. dollars using the purchasing
power parities (PPPs). The estimated correlation is statistically significant at conventional
confidence levels.
29 The correlation of total health spending with the real GDP growth rate is -0.19 and with
the productivity growth rate is 0.06. Neither of these estimates are statistically significant
at conventional confidence levels.
30 Paul Fronstin, “Sources of Health Insurance and Characteristics of the Uninsured:
Analysis of the March 2005 Current Population Survey,” Employee Benefit Research
Institute Issue Brief no. 287, Nov. 2005.

Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985 (COBRA, P.L. 99-272)
or other continuation-of-coverage laws.31 CBO, however, estimated that in 1998,

24.5% of non-elderly Americans were uninsured sometime during the year, and 9%


were uninsured the entire year.32
The important feature of health expenditures is not whether or not they affect
economic growth but rather whether or not increased expenditures improve health
outcomes. There is no single good measure of health outcomes. Consequently, three
measures of health outcomes will be reported. The first column of numbers in Table
3 presents life expectancy at birth (average for men and women) in each of the 21
countries. By this measure, the United States is tied for last (with Denmark and
Portugal) at 77.2 years. The simple correlation between total health expenditures as
a percentage of GDP and life expectancy, however, is small and not precisely
estimated — there appears to be no relationship between these two variables. But by
age 65, life expectancy for men and women in the United States is about at the
average for the 21 developed countries (see the next two columns of Table 3).
The United States also ranks at the bottom in infant mortality.33 The market-
oriented English-speaking countries tend to have higher infant mortality rates than
the welfare-state Scandinavian countries. The continental European countries, Japan,
and Switzerland fall between these two extremes. Lastly, the final column of Table
3 reports the proportion of low birth weight babies.34 Japan ranks at the bottom just
behind the United States.


31 Ibid.
32 Testimony of CBO Director Douglas Holtz-Eakin, House Committee on Ways and Means,
Subcommittee on Health, The Uninsured and Rising Health Premiums, 108th Cong., 2nd
sess., Mar. 9, 2004.
33 The infant mortality rate is the number of deaths of children under one year of age per
1,000 live births. The OECD notes that there are some differences between countries in the
registering practices of premature infants with relatively low odds of survival, which may
slightly increase recorded infant mortality. This would affect infant mortality rates for the
United States, Canada, and the Scandinavian countries.
34 This shows the number of live births weighing less than 2,500 grams (5.5 pounds) as a
percentage of total live births.

Table 3. Health Indicators, 2003
Life expectancy
Low
Infantbirth-At age 65At age 65
mortalityweightAt birthfemalesmales
Continental European Countries
Austria 78.8 19.7 16.3 4.1 6.6%
Belgium 78.1 19.7 15.8 4.4 -
France 79.4 21.3 16.9 4.1 6.5
Germany 78.3 19.6 16.0 4.2 6.7
It aly 79.9 20.7 16.7 4.5 6.5
Luxembourg 78.2 19.9 15.9 5.1 -
Netherlands 78.4 19.3 15.6 5.0 5.4
Portugal 77.2 19.0 15.6 5.0 7.4
Spain 79.7 20.4 16.5 4.1 -
Market-oriented English-speaking Countries
Australia 80.0 20.8 17.4 5.0 6.4
Canada 79.7 20.6 17.2 5.4 5.8
Ir eland 77.8 18.6 15.3 5.0 4.9
New Zealand78.720.016.7-6.5
United Kingdom78.219.116.15.27.6
United States77.219.516.67.07.8
Welfare-state Scandinavian Countries
Denmark 77.2 18.3 15.4 4.4 5.5
Finland 78.2 19.6 15.8 3.0 4.3
Norway 79.0 19.7 16.2 3.5 5.2
Sweden 79.9 20.0 16.9 3.3 4.3
Other Countries
Switzerland 80.4 21.0 17.4 4.5 6.5
J a pan 81.8 23.0 18.0 3.0 9.0
Source: OECD.
- Not available.
The evidence presented shows that the United States spends considerably more
for health care relative to GDP than any other industrial country, but this higher
spending does not necessarily translate into better health outcomes. Looking at the
United States over time, however, shows that increased spending on health care has



improved health outcomes.35 But many argue — and research suggests — that
private health spending in the United States is no more efficient than public health
spending because of poor incentives to control health costs and a medical malpractice
system that encourages physicians to practice “defensive medicine.”36
Tax Revenues
The major source of funding for government expenditures is tax revenues. In
general, the continental European countries appear to rely on tax revenues as opposed
to other revenue sources to a slightly greater extent than either the market-oriented
English-speaking countries or the welfare-state Scandinavian countries. The
differences, however, are not particularly large. Figure 8 shows tax revenues as a
percentage of GDP. There is, of course, a relationship between tax revenues and
government expenditures (compare Figure 8 with Figure 1) — countries that spend
more also raise more tax revenues.37 Tax revenues as a percentage of GDP in the
United States and Japan are about half of what they are in Sweden (25% compared
to 50%). The other industrialized countries fall between these two extremes.
Figure 8. Total Tax Revenue as a Percentage of GDP, 2003


Sw ede n
Denmark
Be lgium
Fi nl a nd
Fra n ce
No r w a y
Au s t r i a
Italy
Lux embour g
N et h er l ands
Por tuga l
Spa i n
Ge rm a ny
United Kingdom
New Zealand
Ca nada
Austr alia
Ir eland
Sw itze rla nd
United States
Japan
0 1020 304050 60
Per ce nt
Source: OECD
35 David M. Cutler, Your Money or Your Life (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005).
36 Ibid.; and Henry Aaron and Jack Meyer, “Health” in Alice M. Rivlin and Isabel Sawhill,
eds., Restoring Fiscal Sanity, 2005 (Washington: Brookings Institution, 2005).
37 The simple correlation is 0.90, which is statistically significant.

Table 4 reports the sources of tax revenues for the 21 industrialized countries.
The entries in the table show dramatic variation among the countries in tax policy.
Denmark, on one hand, relies on income and wealth tax revenues from individuals
for over half of its total tax revenues. Portugal, on the other hand, relies on taxes
from individuals for about 16% of total tax revenues. While not as dramatic, there
are also disparities between the countries in the proportion of tax revenues from taxes38
on corporations and from social security taxes. Taxes on goods and services
account for 18% to 38% of tax revenues in these countries.
Two relationships stand out. First, the market-oriented English-speaking
countries appear to rely more heavily on property taxes than the other industrialized
countries (see the last column of Table 4). Second, countries with a higher
proportion of tax revenues coming from income and wealth taxes tend to rely less on
social security taxes.39


38 Social security taxes can be paid by both the employer and the employee, and are
generally based on payroll. Social security tax revenues are earmarked for social programs
such as old-age pensions, disability benefits, and unemployment assistance.
39 The simple correlation is -0.79.

Table 4. Sources of Tax Revenues, 2003
As a percentage of tax revenue
SocialGoods and
Individual Corporate Security services P r operty
Continental European Countries
Austria 23.1% 5.1% 33.7% 28.2% a 1.3%
Belgium 31.4 7.4 31.8 24.6 3.3
France 17.0 6.3 37.1 25.6 7.3
Germany 23.9 3.5 40.5 29.4 2.4
It aly 25.1 6.6 29.5 25.7 8.0
Luxembourg 17.1 19.1 27.9 28.1 7.5
Netherlands 17.9 7.6 36.3 31.8 5.2
Portugal 15.8 8.7 31.7 36.7 4.1
Spain 18.6 9.0 35.3 28.2 7.5
Market-oriented English-speaking Countries
Australia 38.5 16.7 0.0 29.7 9.5
Canada 34.6 10.4 15.4 26.1 10.0
Ir eland 26.5 12.9 14.8 38.4 6.5
New Zealand41.913.60.035.25.2
United Kingdom28.77.818.532.711.9
United States35.38.126.418.212.1
Welfare-state Scandinavian Countries
Denmark 53.2 5.7 3.4 32.5 3.8
Finland 31.0 7.7 26.7 32.0 2.3
Norway 24.8 18.5 22.9 31.2 2.5
Sweden 31.3 5.0 29.1 26.3 3.1
Other countries
Switzerland 34.3 8.5 25.5 23.3 8.3
J a pan 17.5 13.0 38.5 20.3 10.3
Source: OECD.
Taxes have an effect on government budgets and most people would agree that
they also have an effect on the economy. How taxes affect the economy depends on
how they affect work effort, investment, and saving. The effects that taxes have on
individuals can be decomposed into the income and substitution effects. An increase
in the tax on most goods, for example, has a negative income and substitution effect,
and individuals will typically wish to purchase less of the good. An increase in taxes
on wages will have income and substitution effects that work in opposite directions.



The tax lowers the effective wage, which will typically cause people to want to work
less.40 But the tax also reduces income, which will typically cause people to want to
work more. The ultimate effect on work effort depends on the relative magnitudes
of these two effects. Similar income and substitution effects also apply to saving.
Consequently, people’s behavior may change due to tax changes. The
distortions introduced by taxes can lead to a misallocation of resources and lost
output. The misallocation of resources due to taxes can be measured by the excess
burden or deadweight loss of the tax. Most researchers find a deadweight loss from
taxes, but there is little agreement on the size of the deadweight loss.41 Yew-Kwang
Ng points out that the estimated deadweight loss may be considerably less if the
positive effects on the spending side are taken into account.42 He also argues that the
income taxes themselves may be correcting a distortion in the economy and could
lead to a more efficient allocation of resources. For example, most economic
measures ignore the social goal of environmental quality. If there is a positive
relation between per capita income and environmental degradation, then income
taxes may reduce this distortion.
Figure 9 shows the relationship between total tax revenues as a percentage of
GDP and the average real GDP growth rates in the industrialized countries (both are
10-year averages). The figure shows that there is no relation since the fitted linear
relationship (the straight line in the figure) is almost flat.43 This suggests that
countries with high tax revenues relative to GDP do not generally experience lower
economic growth rates than countries with lower tax revenues.


40 Leisure (not working) can be thought of as a normal good with a price equal to the wage.
If the price of leisure falls, workers will typically want to purchase more leisure and work
less.
41 The size of the deadweight loss depends on the extent to which behaviors change as a
result of the tax. See, for example, Robert Carroll, Do Taxpayers Really Respond to
Changes in Tax Rates? Evidence from the 1993 Tax Act, U.S. Treasury Department, Office
of Tax Analysis working paper no. 79, Nov. 1998; Jon Gruber and Emmanuel Saez, “The
Elasticity of Taxable Income: Evidence and Implications,” Journal of Public Economics,
vol. 84, no. 1 (Apr. 2002, pp. 1-33; and Ian W. H. Parry, Tax Deductions, Consumption
Distortions, and the Marginal Excess Burden of Taxation, Resources for the Future
Discussion paper no. 99-48, Aug. 1999.
42 Yew-Kwang Ng, “The Optimal Size of Public Spending and the Distortionary Cost of
Taxation,” National Tax Journal, vol. 53, no. 2 (Jun. 2000), pp. 253-272.
43 The simple correlation is 0.06 and is not statistically significant.

Figure 9. Relation Between Average Annual Real GDP Growth Rate
and Average Total Tax Revenue


6
5
4e
h Rat
w t
3o
DP Gr
2Real G
1
0
20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55
Total Tax Revenue as a Percentage of GDP
Source: CRS calculations of OECD data.
Figure 10 shows the relationship between tax revenues relative to GDP and
productivity growth rates (both are 10-year averages). The fitted linear relationship
is positive and the correlation is 0.43. These results suggest that the countries with
higher tax revenues relative to GDP also tend to have higher productivity growth
rates.
Tax policy can affect economic growth through several channels, which may,
to some extent, offset each other. But even with these various channels, some argue
that tax cuts will stimulate long-term economic growth.44 The bulk of the evidence,
however, suggests that tax policy, per se, has had at best a small effect on economic
growth. Martin Feldstein finds that the 1981 tax cut had very little impact on
economic growth.45 Using data from OECD countries, Charles Garrison and Feng-
Yao Lee can find no evidence that increasing tax rates adversely affects economic
growth.46 Fabio Padovano and Emma Galli, also using OECD data, reach the
opposite conclusion and state that “high marginal tax rates and tax progressivity are
44 See, for example, Charles W. Calomiris and Kevin A. Hassett, “Marginal Tax Rate Cuts
and the Public Tax Debate,” National Tax Journal, vol. 55, no. 1 (Mar. 2002), pp. 119-131.
45 Martin Feldstein, “Supply Side Economics: Old Truths and New Claims,” American
Economic Review, papers and proceedings, vol. 76, no. 2 (May 1986), pp. 26-30.
46 Charles Garrison and Feng-Yao Lee, “Taxation, Aggregate Activity and Economic
Growth: Further Cross-Country Evidence on Some Supply Side Hypotheses,” Economic
Inquiry, vol. 30, no. 1 (Jan. 1992), pp. 172-176.

negatively correlated with long-run economic growth.”47 Evidence from U.S. history,
however, suggests that rising marginal tax rates had no effect on economic growth
rates.48
Figure 10. Relation Between Average Productivity Growth Rate and
Average Total Tax Revenue


3
3
2th
row
G
2ivity
oduct
1Pr
1
0
20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55
Total Tax Revenue as a Percentage of GDP
Source: CRS calculations of OECD data.
The observation that taxes may have little effect on economic growth may be
partially due to government spending. Tax revenues are either spent or are used to
retire government debt, both of which may boost economic growth. Many studies
do not separate the effects of government spending on economic growth from the
effects of taxes.
In addition, some researchers argue that the welfare states tend to rely on
regressive taxes as a primary source of revenue and these taxes tend to have smaller
47 Fabio Padovano and Emma Galli, “Tax Rates and Economic Growth in the OECD
Countries (1950-1990),” Economic Inquiry, vol. 39, no. 1 (Jan. 2001), p. 50.
48 See William Gale, “Notes on Taxes, Growth, and Dynamic Analysis of New Legislation,”
Tax Notes, 30th Anniversary Issue, 2002; and Nancy L. Stokey and Sergio Rebelo, “Growth
Effects of Flat-Rate Taxes,” Journal of Political Economy, vol. 103, no. 3 (Jul. 1995), pp.
519-550. The authors find that growth rates in per capita real GDP were just as high after
a large increase in income taxes in the early 1940s as before the increase. In addition, Gale
finds that economic growth rates did not change after the introduction of the income tax in

1913.



adverse economic effects than other types of taxes.49 Peter Lindert shows that
industrialized countries with higher public social welfare expenditures relative to
GDP also tend to have higher average effective tax rates on income, higher taxes on
consumption, and lower taxes on capital. He further shows that the welfare states
tend to have heavier taxes on consumption goods that may be considered bad such
as tobacco products, alcoholic beverages, and gasoline.
Government Budget Deficits
The evidence presented so far, although not definitive, suggests that government
expenditures, social welfare expenditures, and taxes do not adversely affect economic
growth. Raising government spending and taxes does not appear to reduce economic
growth, and reducing government spending and taxes does not appear to enhance
economic growth. But much of the focus, recently and in the past, has been on
budget deficits, especially on how deficits affect long-term economic growth.
The measure of the budget deficit used is the primary government balance,
which is government revenues minus government expenditures, but excludes interest
payments paid to the public. The primary balance provides a more direct measure
of overall government spending and taxes in a given period, whereas interest
payments reflect fiscal actions taken in past years. The primary government balance
reported here is the 10-year average (1994-2003) expressed as a percentage of GDP.
The 10-year average is used because the primary balance fluctuates over the business
cycle, and different countries tend to be at different points of the business cycle at any
given time.
Many scholars argue that long-term budget deficits can have an adverse impact
on the economy.50 Figure 11 suggests that the scholars are correct. The figure shows
the relation between the primary balance and the average annual real GDP growth
rate. The fitted linear relationship (the straight line) is upward sloping and the simple
correlation between these two variables is 0.45, which is statistically significant.
This suggests that countries with a larger primary balance tend to have higher
economic growth rates.51 Recent research on budget deficits in the United States also
suggests that sustained budget deficits will “impose significant economic costs.”52
William Gale and Peter Orszag, for example, project that if the federal budget deficit


49 See Peter Lindert, Growing Public, vol. 1 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2005); and Junko Kato, Regressive Taxation and the Welfare State (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2003).
50 See, for example, the papers in Alice M. Rivlin and Isabel Sawhill, eds., Restoring Fiscal
Sanity 2005 (Washington: Brookings Institution, 2005); and in Federal Reserve Bank of
Boston, The Economics of Large Government Deficits, conference series no. 27, proceedings
of a conference held in Oct. 1983.
51 The same basic results are obtained when using the total government balance (which
includes net interest payments) rather than the primary government balance.
52 William G. Gale and Peter R. Orszag, “Budget Deficits, National Saving, and Interest
Rates,” Brookings Institution, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, no. 2, 2004, p. 184.

averages 3.5% of GDP for the next decade, then national income will be reduced by

1% to 2% per year after the end of the decade.


Figure 11. Relation Between Average Annual Real GDP Growth Rate
and Average Primary Government Balance


5
4
e
3th Rat
o w
P Gr
2D
al G
Re
1
0
-6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 8
Primary Government Balance as a Percentage of GDP
Source: CRS calculations of OECD data.
Conclusion
The evidence presented suggests that raising public social welfare expenditures
within reason would not harm economic growth and reducing these expenditures
would not increase economic growth; other research supports this conclusion. But
changing public social welfare expenditures can have profound effects on economic
well-being — reducing social welfare expenditures would likely increase poverty
rates. The evidence also suggests that, although tax reductions boost the economy
in the short term, they appear to have little effect on long-term economic growth.
Sustained government budget deficits, however, are viewed as likely to reduce long-
term economic growth.

Data Appendix
The data used in this report come from various OECD databases, which are
available online to subscribers. The OECD works to make the data comparable
across countries. Most of the data series are available for all the industrial countries
considered in the report up to 2003. The data on social welfare expenditures are
available only up to 2001, however.
Monetary values for expenditures and revenues are in the currency of the
country. Most of the tax and expenditures data are expressed as percentages of GDP.
This will provide a measure of the resources used or transferred by the government
relative to the amount of resources available in the economy.
Government spending and revenues vary over the course of the business cycle
and some of this variation may not reflect decisions made by the government. The
10-year averages are calculated for most of the economic series, and these averages
are used in the report to average out the effects of business cycle fluctuations.
In the few instances when monetary values need to be compared across
countries, the values are converted to U.S. dollars using purchasing power parities
(PPPs). PPPs convert currency by equalizing the purchasing power of various
currencies. PPPs capture price differences of a market basket of goods between
countries rather than differences in the value of the currencies (that is, exchange
rates). Exchange rates fluctuate based on the supply of and demand for a currency
and can change even when prices are stable in the two countries.