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Mr. Barnett University High AP Economics.  Why does the government tax goods & services like cigarettes, alcohol and gambling?  “Sin taxes” ▪ Health.

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Presentation on theme: "Mr. Barnett University High AP Economics.  Why does the government tax goods & services like cigarettes, alcohol and gambling?  “Sin taxes” ▪ Health."— Presentation transcript:

1 Mr. Barnett University High AP Economics

2  Why does the government tax goods & services like cigarettes, alcohol and gambling?  “Sin taxes” ▪ Health drawbacks from alcohol and cigarettes are paid for by all members of society (users and non-users) ▪ Thus, seems fair to tax individuals using products  Addictive – so demand is inelastic and a tax would raise a lot of money

3  Tax incidence – the manner in which the burden of a tax is shared among participants in a market  How taxes affect market outcomes  Unit taxes (Government requires buyers or sellers to pay a certain dollar amount for each unit of a good sold) ▪ Will ______ supply, Will ______demand ▪ The supply/demand curve will decrease (shift left) by the amount of the tax

4  How taxes affect market outcomes cont.  The quantity of the good sold will decline  Buyers and sellers share the burden of the tax ▪ Do buyers and sellers like taxes? Why not? ▪ Buyers pay more for the good (b/c of added tax) ▪ Sellers receive less for the good  Taxes discourage market activity  Tax can be on buyers or sellers (thus, can affect supply or demand curve) ▪ Supply curve shifted by taxes on suppliers ▪ Demand curve shifted by taxes on consumers

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7  Partner 1: You are “Big Brother”  Choose a good you want, who you are taxing & why you are taxing that good  Tell your partner what the original price was and the amount of the tax  Partner 2: You are the supplier or consumer  Show the shift in the supply or demand curve  Show Prices ▪ Price without tax ▪ Price that buyers will now pay ▪ Price that sellers will now receive  Partner 1: Show the resulting graph and prices if you switch who (buyer or supplier) got taxed

8 When a tax is imposed on good with inelastic demand (like cigarettes) producers are able to pass along most of it to consumers

9 If the supply is more inelastic than demand, then the producer will bear a greater burden of the tax

10  What is the tax burden on consumers and producers if the government passed an excise tax on new fuel-inefficient cars that did not get 35 miles per gallon?  A new Aston Martin DB9 costs around $200,000  Averages 13 MPG  The elasticity of demand for a new Aston Martin DB9 is 4.0 and the elasticity of supply is 0.5  Aston Martin Lagonda Limited is taxed by the government $3,000 per unit (car).  Will consumers or producers bear more of the burden from the tax?  The shift in the _______curve to the _____is equal to $_______  The consumers’ share of the tax burden is $_____  Producers share of the tax burden is $______  The new price consumers pay is $_______  The new price suppliers receive is $_________  Graph it!

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12  Three criteria for all taxes  Is it equitable/fair ▪ Taxes should be impartial and fair ▪ Need to avoid possible loopholes that create inequality  Is it objective? ▪ Need to avoid possible loopholes that create inequality ▪ Is it easy to understand? ▪ Individual income tax – difficult to understand and do on your own ▪ Sales tax – easier to understand and straightforward  Is it efficient? ▪ Easy to administer ▪ Reasonably successful at generating revenue – worthwhile

13  Resource Allocation: factors of production affected when taxes are levied  May raise costs of production, product price  Behavior Adjustment: some taxes encourage/discourage behavior  Ex: Sin Tax = relatively high tax designed to raise revenue, discourage consumption of socially undesirable product  Ex: Homeowners use interest paid on mortgage as tax deduction … encourages people to buy a home

14  Productivity & Growth -  Taxes can change incentives to save, invest, and work  Why work more if you’ll be taxed more?

15  Incidence of Tax, or final burden of the tax = who actually “pays” it?  Ex: City wants to tax local utility co… utility co. raises rates = consumer bears burden of the tax  Is the tax fair/equitable?

16 1.FICA (Social Security) taxes 2.How elastic are these curves? 3.Designed so workers and firms share burden of the tax 4.How does the tax affect labor suppliers & labor demanders

17  Let’s recap  A tax burden falls more heavily on the side of the market (suppliers or consumers) that is _______ elastic  A small elasticity of demand means that buyers do not have good alternatives ▪ No good substitute (opportunity cost)  A small elasticity of supply means that sellers do not have a good alternative to produce ▪ No good plan B (opportunity cost)

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23  Go through your notes for this week and come up with 2 quiz questions  Write down your quiz questions on scrap paper  Exchange questions with a partner and answer each other’s questions  Discuss answers!

24  An ideal tax has what characteristics?  Do consumers or producers benefit from a government tax?


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