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Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8
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Figure 1 The Effects of a Tax Copyright © 2004 South-Western Size of tax Quantity 0 Price Price buyers pay Price sellers receive Demand Supply Price without tax Quantity without tax Quantity with tax
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Tax Revenue If tax is $T per unit, tax revenue equals … TQ
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Figure 2 Tax Revenue Copyright © 2004 South-Western Tax revenue (T × Q) Size of tax (T ) Quantity sold (Q) Quantity 0 Price Demand Supply Quantity without tax Quantity with tax Price buyers pay Price sellers receive
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Recall … Consumer Surplus: Area under demand curve and above price line. Producer Surplus: Area above supply curve and below price line.
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Figure 3 How a Tax Effects Welfare Copyright © 2004 South-Western A F B D C E Quantity 0 Price Demand Supply = PBPB Q2Q2 = PSPS Price buyers pay Price sellers receive = P1P1 Q1Q1 Price without tax
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Deadweight Loss The fall in total surplus that results from a market distortion, such as a tax. Buyers have an incentive to consume less and sellers an incentive to produce less.
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Figure 4 The Deadweight Loss Copyright © 2004 South-Western Cost to sellers Value to buyers Size of tax Quantity 0 Price Demand Supply Lost gains from trade Reduction in quantity due to the tax Price without tax Q1Q1 PBPB Q2Q2 PSPS
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Figure 5 Tax Distortions and Elasticities Copyright © 2004 South-Western (a) Inelastic Supply Price 0Quantity Demand Supply Size of tax When supply is relatively inelastic, the deadweight loss of a tax is small.
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Figure 5 Tax Distortions and Elasticities Copyright © 2004 South-Western (b) Elastic Supply Price 0 Quantity Demand Supply Size of tax When supply is relatively elastic, the deadweight loss of a tax is large.
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Figure 5 Tax Distortions and Elasticities Copyright © 2004 South-Western Demand Supply (c) Inelastic Demand Price 0 Quantity Size of tax When demand is relatively inelastic, the deadweight loss of a tax is small.
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Figure 5 Tax Distortions and Elasticities Copyright © 2004 South-Western (d) Elastic Demand Price 0 Quantity Size of tax Demand Supply When demand is relatively elastic, the deadweight loss of a tax is large.
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The Land Tax "The chief weapon against the teaching of Henry George was that which is always used against irrefutable and self-evident truths. This method, which is still being applied in relation to George, was that of hushing up.... People do not argue with the teaching of George, they simply do not know it." --- Leo Tolstoy
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Figure 6 Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue from Three Taxes of Different Sizes Copyright © 2004 South-Western Tax revenue Demand Supply Quantity 0 Price Q1Q1 (a) Small Tax Deadweight loss PBPB Q2Q2 PSPS
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Figure 6 Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue from Three Taxes of Different Sizes Copyright © 2004 South-Western Tax revenue Quantity 0 Price (b) Medium Tax PBPB Q2Q2 PSPS Supply Demand Q1Q1 Deadweight loss
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Figure 6 Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue from Three Taxes of Different Sizes Copyright © 2004 South-Western Tax revenue Demand Supply Quantity 0 Price Q1Q1 (c) Large Tax PBPB Q2Q2 PSPS Deadweight loss
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Figure 7 How Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue Vary with the Size of a Tax Copyright © 2004 South-Western (a) Deadweight Loss Deadweight Loss 0 Tax Size
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Ronald Reagan’s Deadweight Loss I came into the Big Money making pictures during WWII. You could only make four pictures and then you were in the top bracket. So we all quit working after four pictures and went off to the country.
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Figure 7 How Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue Vary with the Size of a Tax Copyright © 2004 South-Western (b) Revenue (the Laffer curve) Tax Revenue 0 Tax Size
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8:11 Several years ago the British government imposed a “poll tax” that required each person to pay a flat amount to the government independent of his or her income. What is the effect of such a tax on economic efficiency? What is the effect on economic equity? Do you think this was a popular tax?
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