Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 1 of 36 19.5.

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Presentation transcript:

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 1 of Conclusion The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence 19.3 General Equilibrium Tax Incidence 19.2 Tax Incidence Extensions 19.1 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence Chapter The Incidence of Taxation in the United States tax incidence Assessing which party (consumers or producers) bears the true burden of a tax.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 2 of 36 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 3 of 36 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence The Statutory Burden of a Tax Does Not Describe Who Really Bears the Tax statutory incidence The burden of a tax borne by the party that sends the check to the government. economic incidence The burden of taxation measured by the change in the resources available to any economic agent as a result of taxation.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 4 of 36 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence The Statutory Burden of a Tax Does Not Describe Who Really Bears the Tax We can define the tax burden for consumers as For producers the tax burden is

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 5 of 36 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence The Statutory Burden of a Tax Does Not Describe Who Really Bears the Tax

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 6 of 36 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence The Statutory Burden of a Tax Does Not Describe Who Really Bears the Tax Burden of the Tax on Consumers and Producers tax wedge The difference between what consumers pay and what producers receive (net of tax) from a transaction.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 7 of 36 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence The Side of the Market on Which the Tax Is Imposed Is Irrelevant to the Distribution of the Tax Burdens

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 8 of 36 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence The Side of the Market on Which the Tax Is Imposed Is Irrelevant to the Distribution of the Tax Burdens Gross Versus After-Tax Prices gross price The price in the market. after-tax price The gross price minus the amount of the tax (if producers pay the tax) or plus the amount of the tax (if consumers pay the tax).

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 9 of 36 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence Parties with Inelastic Supply or Demand Bear Taxes; Parties with Elastic Supply or Demand Avoid Them The incidence of taxation on producers and consumers is ultimately determined by the elasticities of supply and demand on how responsive the quantity supplied or demanded is to price changes.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 10 of 36 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence Parties with Inelastic Supply or Demand Bear Taxes; Parties with Elastic Supply or Demand Avoid Them Perfectly Inelastic Demand

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 11 of 36 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence Parties with Inelastic Supply or Demand Bear Taxes; Parties with Elastic Supply or Demand Avoid Them Perfectly Inelastic Demand full shifting When one party in a transaction bears all of the tax burden.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 12 of 36 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence Parties with Inelastic Supply or Demand Bear Taxes; Parties with Elastic Supply or Demand Avoid Them Perfectly Elastic Demand

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 13 of 36 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence Parties with Inelastic Supply or Demand Bear Taxes; Parties with Elastic Supply or Demand Avoid Them General Case Parties with inelastic demand (or supply) bear taxes; parties with elastic demand (or supply) avoid them.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 14 of 36 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence Parties with Inelastic Supply or Demand Bear Taxes; Parties with Elastic Supply or Demand Avoid Them Supply Elasticities

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 15 of 36 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence Reminder: Tax Incidence Is About Prices, Not Quantities When the demand for gas is perfectly elastic, we claimed that consumers bore none of the burden of taxation, and yet the quantity of gas consumed fell dramatically. Doesn’t this decrease in consumption make consumers worse off? If so, shouldn’t that be taken into account when determining tax incidence? The answer to both questions is “no” because, at both the old and new equilibria, consumers in this case are indifferent between buying the gas and spending their money elsewhere.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 16 of 36 Tax Incidence Extensions To recap:  The statutory burden of a tax does not describe who really bears the tax.  The side of the market on which the tax is imposed is irrelevant to the distribution of tax burdens.  Parties with inelastic supply or demand bear taxes; parties with elastic supply or demand avoid them.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 17 of 36 Tax Incidence Extensions Tax Incidence in Factor Markets

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 18 of 36 Tax Incidence Extensions Tax Incidence in Factor Markets Impediments to Wage Adjustment minimum wage Legally mandated minimum amount that workers must be paid for each hour of work.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 19 of 36 Tax Incidence Extensions Tax Incidence in Factor Markets Impediments to Wage Adjustment

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 20 of 36 Tax Incidence Extensions Tax Incidence in Imperfectly Competitive Markets monopoly markets Markets in which there is only one supplier of a good.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 21 of 36 Tax Incidence Extensions Tax Incidence in Imperfectly Competitive Markets Background: Equilibrium in Monopoly Markets

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 22 of 36 Tax Incidence Extensions Tax Incidence in Imperfectly Competitive Markets Taxation in Monopoly Markets Even though the monopolist has market power, a tax on either side of the market results in the same sharing of the tax burden. Monopolists cannot “exploit their market power” to avoid the rules of tax incidence.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 23 of 36 Tax Incidence Extensions Balanced Budget Tax Incidence balanced budget incidence Tax incidence analysis that accounts for both the tax and the benefits it brings.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 24 of 36 General Equilibrium Tax Incidence partial equilibrium tax incidence Analysis that considers the impact of a tax on a market in isolation. general equilibrium tax incidence Analysis that considers the effects on related markets of a tax imposed on one market.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 25 of 36 General Equilibrium Tax Incidence Effects of a Restaurant Tax: A General Equilibrium Example

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 26 of 36 General Equilibrium Tax Incidence Effects of a Restaurant Tax: A General Equilibrium Example General Equilibrium Tax Incidence

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 27 of 36 General Equilibrium Tax Incidence Issues to Consider in General Equilibrium Incidence Analysis Effect of Time Period on Tax Incidence: Short Run Versus Long Run Factors that are always inelastically demanded or supplied in both the short and long run bear taxes in the long run. What does it mean for capital supply to be elastic? Think of capital investments already made as irretrievable; that is why capital supply is inelastic in the short run. In the long run, however, restaurants need new infusions of capital to stay afloat. The elasticity of capital supply in the long run arises from the ability of investors to choose whether to reinvest in a firm. If there is a tax on the good produced by the firm, and this tax is passed on to capital investors in the form of a lower return, then they are less likely to reinvest in the restaurant.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 28 of 36 General Equilibrium Tax Incidence Issues to Consider in General Equilibrium Incidence Analysis Effect of Tax Scope on Tax Incidence The scope of the tax matters to incidence analysis because it determines which elasticities are relevant to the analysis: taxes that are broader based are harder to avoid than taxes that are narrower, so the response of producers and consumers to the tax will be smaller and more inelastic.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 29 of 36 General Equilibrium Tax Incidence Issues to Consider in General Equilibrium Incidence Analysis Spillovers Between Product Markets Consider the tax on restaurant meals in the state of Massachusetts. A higher after-tax price has three effects on other goods as well: 1. Consumers have lower incomes and may therefore purchase fewer units of all goods (the income effect). 2. Consumers may increase their consumption of goods and services (such as movies) that are substitutes for restaurant meals because they are now relatively cheaper than the taxed meals (the substitution effect). 3. Consumers may reduce their consumption of goods or services (such as valet parking services) that are complements to restaurant meals because they are consuming fewer restaurant meals (the complementary effect).

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 30 of 36 The Incidence of Taxation in the United States The CBO analysis considers the incidence of the full set of taxes levied by the federal government. Their key assumptions follow: 1. Income taxes are borne fully by the households that pay them. 2. Payroll taxes are borne fully by workers, regardless of whether these taxes are paid by the workers or by the firm. 3. Excise taxes are fully shifted to prices and so are borne by individuals in proportion to their consumption of the taxed item. 4. Corporate taxes are fully shifted to the owners of capital and so are borne in proportion to each individual’s capital income. CBO Incidence Assumptions

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, Jonathan Gruber, 2e 31 of 36 THE INCIDENCE OF EXCISE TAXATION Analysts can compare the change in goods prices in the states raising their excise tax relative to states not changing their excise tax, to measure the effect of each 1¢ rise in excise taxes on goods prices. An excellent example is excise taxes on cigarettes. The excise tax on cigarettes varies widely across the U.S. states, from a low of 2.5¢ per pack in Virginia to a high of $1.51 per pack in Connecticut and Massachusetts. Since 1990, New Jersey has increased its tax rate nearly sixfold (from 27¢ per pack to $1.50), while Arizona has increased its tax nearly eightfold (from 15¢ to $1.18). A number of studies have examined the change in cigarette prices when there are excise tax increases on cigarettes, comparing states increasing their tax to other states that do not raise taxes. These studies uniformly conclude that the price of cigarettes rises by the full amount of the excise tax. E M P I R I C A L E V I D E N C E

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 32 of 36 The Incidence of Taxation in the United States Results of CBO Incidence Analysis

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 33 of 36 The Incidence of Taxation in the United States Results of CBO Incidence Analysis

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 34 of 36 The Incidence of Taxation in the United States Current Versus Lifetime Income Incidence current tax incidence The incidence of a tax in relation to an individual’s current resources. lifetime tax incidence The incidence of a tax in relation to an individual’s lifetime resources.

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 35 of 36 Conclusion The “fairness” of any tax reform is one of the primary considerations in policy makers’ positions on tax policy. Therefore, it is crucial for public finance economists to have a deep understanding of who really bears the burden of taxation so that we can best inform these distributional debates over the fairness of a proposed or existing tax. Vertical equity: the principle that groups with more resources should pay higher taxes than groups with fewer resources Progressive: tax system in which effective average tax rates rise with income Proportional: tax system in which effective average tax rates do not change with income Regressive: tax system in which effective average tax rates fall with income

Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 36 of 36 Example 1. Impact and incidence of a producer tax on apples Demand for apples: Qd = P Supply of Apples Qs = P A $2 per bushel tax is placed on producers a. who bears the statutory incidence of tax? b. who bears the economic incidence of the tax?