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Taxation, income distribution, and efficiency
Today: Some basic tax theory
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Begin Unit 4 Today Chapters 14 and 15
An introduction to some basic theories related to taxation
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Taxation Taxes are typically used to finance public projects
Deadweight loss comes with most forms of taxation
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Taxation and income distribution
The US federal tax system has been set up so that people with high incomes have higher average tax rates Do people consume more leisure with high marginal tax rates? To be answered later Public project financing People with high tax rates probably have high willingness to pay for many public projects See Table 14.3, p. 327
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Some terminology Statutory incidence Economic incidence
Who legally has to pay for the tax Economic incidence How much does real income change to all parties due to a tax?
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Some terminology Lump sum tax Proportional tax Progressive tax
A tax that has to be paid no matter how a person behaves Proportional tax Average tax rate is independent of income Progressive tax Average tax rate increases with income Regressive tax Average tax rate decreases with income
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Some terminology Unit tax Ad valorem tax
A tax that is paid per unit of a good Ad valorem tax A tax that is a percentage of the purchase price
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Partial equilibrium models
With partial equilibrium models, only one market is examined at any one time Ignores possible spillover effects Usually easier to analyze than general equilibrium models Two types of taxes analyzed Unit tax Ad valorem tax
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Unit tax You have likely seen unit taxes before
Econ 1 (or equivalent) Econ 100A/B (or equivalent) Either the buyer or seller pays a given dollar amount for each unit sold or purchased
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Partial Equilibrium Models
$ Before Tax After Tax Consumers Pay Suppliers Receive Partial Equilibrium Models $1.20 $1.40 $1.00 $1.20 S1 S0 Unit Tax on Commodities Consumer Pays $1.20 Producer receives $1.20 Tax on Consumers of $.40 per gallon D curve shifts down – D curve perceived by supplier-amount of money the supplier will receive Tax wedge – tax induced spread between price paid by consumer and price received by producer Tax on Producers of $.40/gal Draw new supply curve Consumer Pays $1.40 Producer receives $1.40 Economic incidence independent of statutory incidence D1 D0 Quantity
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Ad valorem taxes Assume that the consumer pays an ad valorem tax
Example: 6% sales tax The ad valorem tax shifts the demand curve by the same percentage (relative to the horizontal axis) See Figure 14.7, p. 315
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Other types of taxes Taxes from working Capital taxes Taxes on profits
Income tax Social Security tax Hospital insurance tax (Medicare) Capital taxes Taxes on profits Accounting profits Economic profits
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Tax incidence and capitalization
Suppose that we value land as the net present value of the yearly income from the land Assume that the land has value for T years T could be infinity Then the value of the land will be PR = $R0 + $R1/(1 + r) + $R2/(1 + r)2 + … + $RT/(1 + r)T
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Tax incidence and capitalization
Suppose that a new tax is implemented on each piece of land Yearly income falls by the amount of the tax New value of the land PR’ = $(R0 – u0) + $(R1 – u1)/(1 + r) + $(R2 – u2)/(1 + r)2 + … + $(RT – uT)/(1 + r)T Value of the land drops by u0 + u1/(1 + r) + u2/(1 + r)2 + … + uT/(1 + r)T
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Tax incidence and capitalization
Capitalization process When a new tax is implemented, the new price falls by the net present value of the total taxes that will have to be paid
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General equilibrium models
When a tax affects a large portion of the economy, partial equilibrium models may not accurately predict the overall effects to the economy General equilibrium models are needed to analyze situations that affect more than one market
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Changes in consumption due to taxes
Recall that people typically consume less of a good or service once it is taxed Example: Yacht tax in the early 1990s Tax on yachts over $100,000 purchased in the US People bought yachts in other countries Net economic impact $16.6 million in taxes collected (less than the $31 million predicted) Less income tax paid by workers (7,600 jobs lost in the US)
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Study of taxation graphically
Individual behavior See Figure 15.2, p. 333 Excess burden in a market with horizontal supply See Figure 15.5, p. 340 Taxes on labor See Figure 15.7, p. 343, and Figure 15.9, p. 347 Subsidies See Figure 15.6, p. 342 Pigouvian taxes See Figure 5.4, p. 83
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Recall double dividend hypothesis
Industry with negative externality Pigouvian tax Reduces excess burden If tax proceeds are used to reduce other taxes, excess burden from these taxes are lowered Criticism: An environmental tax could lead to an increase in the excess burden in the labor market
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An economist’s analysis
Given an amount of revenue that is generated, taxes should be imposed such that one of the following goals is achieved Excess burden is minimized Social welfare is maximized
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The real world Taxes are often imposed that have the lowest amount of political resistance Excess burden seems less important than revenue generation Sometimes efficiency is completely ignored
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How does personal income get taxed?
The personal tax system used by the federal government requires many steps to understand Chapter 17 Highlight the basic structure, marginal tax rates, and other aspects of the federal tax structure For next lecture: Read p
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Today vs. tomorrow With a tax system currently in place, we should ask how changes in tax policy affect current and future behavior Chapter 16 has more on this Marginal excess burden Tax avoidance versus tax evasion Focus reading on p and for next lecture
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Summary Taxation of efficient markets typically leads to excess burden
Unit tax Ad valorem tax Taxes on land lower the income potential for the land, lowering its value Subsidies usually lead to excess burden also
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