Fiscal Illusion: How Big Government Makes Tax Look Small

Sinclair DavidsonOctober 1, 2007PM81

Rather than focusing on any particular tax or level of government, Sinclair Davidson in this paper canvasses an issue that cuts across all taxes and all levels of government: fiscal illusion and how it contributes to the growth of the state. Fiscal illusion is the political art of crafting tax and expenditure policies ways that make taxpayers think government costs them less than it actually does relative to the benefits they receive from government spending. This illusion increases the politically sustainable size of the tax burden and, with it, the level of government spending. Davidson identifies many of the techniques that governments use to promote fiscal illusion, including opportunistic tax levies designed to take advantage of community sympathy for various causes. Another example is the imposition of taxes on business, which are not transparent to households even though they are passed on in higher prices or lower wages

Related Commentary

The mental health system may be making us sicker
Steven SchwartzApril 6, 2026CANBERRA TIMES

Australia has a mental health crisis, but not the one we think. Despite decades of...

Housing negative gearing tax
Reducing the discount would likely not have any lasting impact in lowering house prices
Robert Carling, Michael StutchburyMarch 21, 2026CANBERRA TIMES

Anyone watching the smoke signals from Canberra knows that moves are afoot to try and...

Alarm bells ringing on more interest rate pain
Michael StutchburyMarch 18, 2026DAILY TELEGRAPH
Australians were losing faith that the combination of Labor’s economic policies and the RBA monetary...

• Subscribe

Subscribe now and stay in the loop with our giving appeals, event alerts, newsletters and research updates.

We are always pleased to hear from you. If you have any questions or feedback, please contact us here: