TY - JOUR AU - Leeper,Eric M. AU - Walker,Todd B. AU - Yang,Shu-Chun Susan TI - Fiscal Foresight: Analytics and Econometrics JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 14028 PY - 2008 Y2 - May 2008 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w14028 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w14028.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Eric M. Leeper Department of Economics 304 Wylie Hall Indiana University Bloomington, IN 47405 Tel: 812/855-9157 Fax: NA E-Mail: eleeper@indiana.edu Todd B. Walker Department of Economics 105 Wylie Hall Indiana University Bloomington, IN 47405 E-Mail: walkertb@indiana.edu Shu-Chun Susan Yang International Monetary Fund 700 19th Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20431 Tel: 202-226-2762 E-Mail: ssyang@econ.sinica.edu.tw AB - Fiscal foresight---the phenomenon that legislative and implementation lags ensure that private agents receive clear signals about the tax rates they face in the future---is intrinsic to the tax policy process. This paper develops an analytical framework to study the econometric implications of fiscal foresight. Simple theoretical examples show that foresight produces equilibrium time series with a non-invertible moving average component, which misaligns the agents' and the econometrician's information sets in estimated VARs. Economically meaningful shocks to taxes, therefore, cannot be extracted from statistical innovations in conventional ways. Econometric analyses that fail to align agents' and the econometrician's information sets can produce distorted inferences about the effects of tax policies. Because non-invertibility arises as a natural outgrowth of the fact that agents' optimal decisions discount future tax obligations, it is likely to be endemic to the study of fiscal policy. In light of the implications of the analytical framework, we evaluate two existing empirical approaches to quantifying the impacts of fiscal foresight. The paper also offers a formal interpretation of the narrative approach to identifying fiscal policy. ER -