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Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 10 Taxation
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Midterm 9:30-10:45, be here at 9:25
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Taxing “Idle Rich”? http://www.thebigquestions.com/2011/ 04/18/the-man-who-cant-be-taxed/ http://www.thebigquestions.com/2011/ 04/18/the-man-who-cant-be-taxed/
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4) The Effect on GDP Christina Romer/ David Romer Classify all tax changes into Endogenous tax changes: Spending driven tax changes Recession driven tax changes Exogenous tax changes Belief motivated tax cuts Deficit driven tax increases Only exogenous tax changes will identify the effect on GDP
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A timeline of tax changes
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Exogenous tax changes
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Endogenous tax changes
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A response to a tax increase of 1% of GDP
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Where are we? Introduction: A model with no Government The Effects of Government Spending Government Taxation and Government Debt Labor Taxation Taxation and Redistribution
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Fiscal policy may aim to change income or consumption inequality Will have an example when It is optimal to reduce income inequality even if A (distorting) flat tax is used There are costs in terms of production
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An example: 2 productivity levels Two types of people: Low productivity: wages w L High productivity: wages w H >w L ½ of population is of low productivity, ½ is of high productivity Utility:
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Taxes High productivity people are taxed at rate t Low productivity people get a transfer v
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Low productivity people Subject to Solution
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High productivity people Subject to Solution
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Government Budget constraint: Express utility as a function of t only: where k=w H /w L >1
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Welfare and Production Assume that the society’s welfare is given by Big and controversial assumption! We have
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Welfare and Production Welfare is maximized at Production is decreasing in t:
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Conclusions There is a trade-off between efficiency and redistribution What matters: How the government weights the utility of different individuals Distribution of skills in the population
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