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on Public Economics |
By: | Chung Tran; Nabeeh Zakariyya |
Abstract: | We examine the extent to which progressivity in the income tax and public pension systems could complement one another. We demonstrate that there is a negative relationship between optimal tax progressivity and pension progressivity. Shifting the social insurance and redistribution roles embedded in the progressive income tax code to a progressive pension system with stricter means-testing rules can yield better overall welfare outcomes. Flattening the income tax code (less tax progressivity) while tightening means-testing rules for pension payments (more pension progressivity) indeed results in larger welfare gains. The optimal design consists of a flat income tax rate and a strict means-tested pension scheme. Overall, redistributive concerns should be addressed directly through more progressive transfers; meanwhile, reducing tax progressivity is important for improving aggregate efficiency. |
Keywords: | Taxation; age pension; tax progressivity; income dynamics; inequality; Suits index; heterogeneity; dynamic general equilibrium |
JEL: | E62 H24 H31 |
Date: | 2023–04 |
URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:acb:cbeeco:2023-691&r=pbe |
By: | Domenico Buccella; Luciano Fanti; Luca Gori |
Abstract: | In a Cournot duopoly with indirect taxes evasion, this paper counter-intuitively shows that, in the presence of unions, a higher indirect taxation may increase profits because taxes reduce wage claims. This result is likely to occur if the market size is adequately large and the detection probability is not too high. Moreover, unionisation 1) leaves unaltered the absolute while reduces the relative tax evasion; and 2) increases tax revenue. As consumer and social welfare are unaffected by taxation, the policy implication is that higher taxes (which are always revenue-enhancing) ultimately lead to a redistribution from wages to profits. |
Keywords: | Tax Evasion, Sales Tax, Cournot duopoly, Unions |
JEL: | H20 H25 H26 J5 |
Date: | 2023–04–01 |
URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pie:dsedps:2023/293&r=pbe |
By: | Marko Köthenbürger; Costanza Naguib; Christian Stettler; Michael Stimmelmayr |
Abstract: | We provide quasi-experimental evidence on the income tax-induced migration of foreign high-income households living in Switzerland by exploiting the differential tax treatment of UK and US households. While the two groups are similar in terms of non-tax sorting preferences, US households are effectively insulated from Swiss income taxation due to the US world-wide income tax system. Comparing the location choices of UK households (our treatment group) with those of US households (our control group) within a one-hour commuting zone of Zurich, we find a migration elasticity with respect to the net-of-tax rate of around eight. This estimate mirrors the possibility of unrestricted migration between small Swiss municipalities with significantly different income tax rates. |
Keywords: | high-income households, location choice, income taxes, sorting |
JEL: | H24 H71 J44 R32 |
Date: | 2023 |
URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_10376&r=pbe |
By: | Marko Köthenbürger; Gabriel Loumeau |
Abstract: | The transfer elasticity of income tax rates is an important parameter in public finance. Given the significant fiscal autonomy of Swiss municipalities, Switzerland is an ideal setting for examining behavioral responses to tax policy. Using a regression kink design, we find robust causal evidence that transfers have a positive local average treatment effect on municipal expenditures while leaving the income tax rate (and other tax rates) unchanged. Thus, ‘money sticks where it hits’, providing comprehensive support for the flypaper effect, including with regard to income tax responses. |
Keywords: | public finance, regression kink design, flypaper effect, transfers |
JEL: | C21 H72 H77 |
Date: | 2023 |
URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_10354&r=pbe |
By: | Katherine Baer; Ruud A. De Mooij; Shafik Hebous; Michael Keen |
Abstract: | Policymakers are struggling to accommodate cryptocurrencies within tax systems not designed to handle them; this paper reviews the issues that arise. The greatest challenges are for implementation: crypto’s quasi-anonymity is an inherent obstacle to third-party reporting. Design problems arise from crytocurrencies’ dual nature as investment assets and means of payment: more straightforward is a compelling case for corrective taxation of carbon-intensive mining. Ownership is highly concentrated at the top, but many crypto investors have only moderate incomes. The capital gains tax revenue at stake worldwide may be in the tens of billions of dollars, but the more profound risks may ultimately be for VAT/sales taxes. |
Keywords: | cryptocurrency, virtual assets, tax evasion, tax compliance, Bitcoin |
JEL: | E62 H25 H32 |
Date: | 2023 |
URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_10372&r=pbe |
By: | Sergio Beraldo (Università di Napoli Federico II, IREF and CSEF); Enrico Colombatto (University of Turin and IREF) |
Abstract: | We designed a Survey Experiment (SE) to study the attitudes of the Italians towards wealth, income and consumptions taxes. In particular, we interviewed a sample of 2, 400 subjects drawn from a larger representative pool of 120, 000 individuals. Beside collecting information about individuals’ values and beliefs, the survey also gathered information about (i) the preferred tax base, (ii) the attitudes towards replacing all the taxes with a unique tax, possibly on wealth, (iii) the views in regard to proposals to increase public expenditure by resorting to taxes of various kind and in different scenarios. We find that wealth taxes are definitely preferred to consumption taxes and that this preference is at par with income taxation. Wealth taxes are justified by the fact that they reflect one’s ability to pay. Opposition emerges when it is feared that wealth taxes end up increasing tax pressure and when the value of the main residence is included in the tax base. Political inclinations play a minor role. |
Keywords: | Wealth taxes; Survey Experiment. |
JEL: | D31 H24 |
Date: | 2023–04–06 |
URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:sef:csefwp:671&r=pbe |
By: | Lucie Gadenne (QMUL); Tushar K. Nandi (Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER); CREST and CEPR) |
Abstract: | Do tax systems distort firm-to-firm trade? This paper considers the effect of tax policy on supply chains in a large developing economy, the state of West Bengal in India. Using administrative panel data on firms, including transaction data for 4.8 million supplier clientpairs, we first document substantial segmentation of supply chains between firms paying Value-Added Taxes (VAT) and non-VAT-paying firms. We then develop a model of firms’ sourcing and tax decisions within supply chains to understand the mechanisms through which tax policy interacts with supply networks. The model predicts partial segmentation in equilibrium because of both supply-chain distortions (taxes affect how much firms trade with each other) and strategic complementarities in firms’ decision to pay VAT. Finally, we test the model’s predictions using variations over time within firm and within supplier-client pairs. We find that the tax system distorts firms’ sourcing decisions, and evidence of strategic complementarities in firms’ tax choices within supplier networks. A hypothetical reform exempting all firm-to-firm transactions from the VAT would lead to growth of small- and medium-sized firms at the cost of a smalldecrease in tax revenues. |
JEL: | O23 H25 L14 |
Date: | 2023–03–01 |
URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:qmw:qmwecw:947&r=pbe |
By: | Osaid Alshamleh (Department of Accounting and Finance, Cyprus International University, Hespolat, Mersin 10, Turkey); Glenn Jenkins (Queen's University); Tufan Ekici (Department of Economics, Ramapo College of New Jersey, Mahwah, N.J. USA) |
Abstract: | The estimation and analysis of the distribution of the negative health impacts of certain commodities subject to excise taxes in Belize and the distribution of the burdens of the excise taxes across households of different income levels are the focus of this article. Particular attention is given to the taxation of soft drinks and cosmetics. We examine the income distribution and tax revenue impacts using the commodity data from the household expenditure survey by and the effective tax rates expressed as a percentage of the value of the final consumption of each item. As in many developing countries, taxes on alcoholic beverages and tobacco products are found to be regressive. The most regressive excise taxes are on soft drinks and cosmetics. Households across the economy pay more in excise taxes on cosmetics than they do on either alcoholic beverages or tobacco products. Relative to the level of household expenditures, the burden of the excise taxes on cosmetics is highest for households in the lowest quintile of total expenditures. The impact of soft drinks in creating obesity is likely to be much greater for high income households whose total consumption per household is twice that of low-income households. |
Keywords: | excise tax, tax incidence, cosmetics, soft drinks, obesity, regressivity, Belize |
JEL: | H22 L66 |
Date: | 2023–04 |
URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:qed:wpaper:1502&r=pbe |
By: | Moustapha Sarr |
Abstract: | This paper examines whether a tax on unhealthy food and a nudge are suitable to promote families healthy eating. We consider, in a theoretical model, an economy composed of two types of family that differ in their income and their nutritional knowledge, which reflects their degree of misperception of the future health effects of diet, and choose their consumption according to their perceived utility. We find that the decentralized solution of taxation on unhealthy good achieves the first-best optimum if and only if it is possible for the central planner to implement a targeted tax policy. Investigating the case of a mixed policy, we find that taxation of unhealthy food and nudge are probably complementary public policy instruments to promote family healthy eating. The mixed policy reduces both the perception and income gaps between the two family types. |
Keywords: | tax, healthy eating, nudge, perception, family environment, nutritional knowledge |
JEL: | D83 H21 I18 |
Date: | 2023 |
URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:drm:wpaper:2023-13&r=pbe |
By: | Mr. Juan S Corrales; Antoine Cornevin; Juan Pablo Angel |
Abstract: | This paper provides new empirical evidence on tax buoyancy (tax revenues responsiveness to changes in economic activity) over the period 1990-2020 using a large panel of 185 countries. This study compares short-term and long-term buoyancy coefficients for total tax revenues and different individual taxes by reviewing and contrasting a range of estimators. Our results broadly confirm the main body of the literature on long-term buoyancy hovering around one. We find evidence of lower estimates for short-term buoyancy relative to previous literature, suggesting a limited automatic stabilization power of taxes. As a robustness exercise, in addition to changes in tax rates, we introduce novel control variables for tax exemptions and bases to disentangle discretionary from automatic tax revenue changes. The marginal changes in the results when controlling for policy actions suggest that, on average, the economic cycle does not necessarily influence tax reforms. |
Keywords: | Tax buoyancy; tax elasticity; cross-sectional dependence; common correlated effect; fiscal sustainability; automatic stabilization; buoyancy coefficient; comparing estimation technique; MG estimator; buoyancy estimate; DFE estimator; Personal income tax; Value-added tax; Corporate income tax; Income tax systems; Global |
Date: | 2023–03–17 |
URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:imf:imfwpa:2023/071&r=pbe |
By: | Stéphane Gauthier (Institute for Fiscal Studies); Guy Laroque (Institute for Fiscal Studies) |
Date: | 2022–09–07 |
URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ifs:ifsewp:22/35&r=pbe |
By: | Cipriani, Giam Pietro (University of Verona); Fioroni, Tamara (University of Verona) |
Abstract: | We study an OLG model with child policies and a PAYG pension with endogenous retirement and fertility. The result of the planned economy is compared to the decentralized competitive equilibrium deriving optimal policies. We show that in the presence of a PAYG pension system, the optimal policy mix includes an education subsidy and a subsidy for the supply of labor in old age. Fertility should be taxed or incentivized depending on whether there is full or partial retirement, and on the parameters. We focus on the parameter reflecting the deterioration of human capital and show that a child tax may be required. |
Keywords: | PAYG pensions, endogenous fertility, endogenous retirement, social security, education subsidies, human capital |
JEL: | J13 H2 H8 H55 |
Date: | 2023–03 |
URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp16029&r=pbe |