nep-pub New Economics Papers
on Public Finance
Issue of 2025–02–10
fifteen papers chosen by
Kwang Soo Cheong, Johns Hopkins University


  1. On the political economy of nonlinear income taxation By Berliant, Marcus; Gouveia, Miguel
  2. Equilibrium effects of payroll tax reductions and optimal policy design By Thomas Breda; Luke Haywood; Haomin Wang
  3. May Tax Evasion Help Control Public Debt? By Rosella Levaggi; Francesco Menoncin; Andrea Modena
  4. Withheld from Working More? Withholding Taxes and the Labor Supply of Married Women By Tim Bayer; Lenard Simon; Jakob Wegmann
  5. Reconciling Tax Buoyancy and Tax Capacity By Andrey Timofeev
  6. Unintended Effects of Transparency: The Consequences of Income Disclosure by Politicians By Carina Neisser; Nils Wehrhöfer
  7. E-Cigarette Taxation and Queer Youth By Chuo, Anthony; Cotti, Chad D.; Courtemanche, Charles J.; Maclean, Johanna Catherine; Nesson, Erik T.; Sabia, Joseph J.
  8. Soda Taxes, BMI and Obesity: Evidence from Seattle By Flynn, James; Gruber, Anja
  9. Public goods, trust, and tax policy: shaping economic formalization By Asto, Richard; Ortiz Sosa, Marco Antonio; Ruelas-Huanca, Walter
  10. How effective are R&D tax incentives? Reconciling micro and macro evidence By Silvia Appelt; Matej Bajgar; Chiara Criscuolo; Fernando Galindo-Rueda
  11. Fiscal Progressivity of the U.S. Federal and State Governments By Johannes Fleck; Jonathan Heathcote; Kjetil Storesletten; Giovanni L. Violante
  12. The Behavioral Effects of Inheritance, Estate and Gift Taxes By Ropponen, Olli
  13. Fiscal Exchange and Tax Compliance: Strengthening the Social Contract Under Low State Capacity By Laura Montenbruck
  14. Effects of Tax Shocks on Inequality: Empirical Evidence from the United Kingdom By Gkolfinopoulou, Michalitsa; Theophilopoulou, Angeliki
  15. Payroll Tax Reductions on Low Wages and Minimum Wage in France By Julien Albertini; Arthur Poirier; Anthony Terriau

  1. By: Berliant, Marcus; Gouveia, Miguel
    Abstract: The literatures dealing with voting, optimal income taxation, implementation, and pure public goods are drawn on here to address the problem of voting over income taxes to finance a public good. In contrast with previous articles, general nonlinear income taxes that affect the labor-leisure decisions of consumers who work and vote are allowed. Uncertainty plays an important role in that the government does not know the true realizations of the abilities of consumers drawn from a known distribution, but must meet the realization-dependent budget; the tax system must be robust. Even though the space of alternatives is infinite dimensional, conditions on primitives are found to assure existence of a majority rule equilibrium.
    Keywords: Voting; Income taxation; Public good; Robustness
    JEL: D72 D82 H21 H41
    Date: 2025–01–16
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:123368
  2. By: Thomas Breda (PSE - Paris School of Economics - UP1 - Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne - ENS-PSL - École normale supérieure - Paris - PSL - Université Paris Sciences et Lettres - EHESS - École des hautes études en sciences sociales - ENPC - École nationale des ponts et chaussées - CNRS - Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique - INRAE - Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement, Ecole Normale Supérieure - UMNG - Université Marien-Ngouabi [Université de Brazzaville] = Marien Ngouabi University [University of Brazzaville], PJSE - Paris Jourdan Sciences Economiques - UP1 - Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne - ENS-PSL - École normale supérieure - Paris - PSL - Université Paris Sciences et Lettres - EHESS - École des hautes études en sciences sociales - ENPC - École nationale des ponts et chaussées - CNRS - Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique - INRAE - Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement); Luke Haywood; Haomin Wang (Cardiff Business School - Cardiff University)
    Abstract: We quantify the unintended effects of a low-wage payroll tax reduction using an equilibrium search model featuring bargaining, worker and firm productivity heterogeneity, labor taxes, and a minimum wage. The decentralized economy is inefficient due to search externalities and labor market policies. We estimate the model using French data and find that a significant reduction in low-wage payroll taxes in 1995 leads to an overall improvement in economic efficiency by increasing employment and correcting existing policy distortions that disincentivize labor force participation. However, the tax reduction, by increasing labor force participation among low-productivity workers and vacancy postings by low-productivity firms, results in negative but minor spillover and reallocation effects due to congestion. We find that the optimal policy mix is a lower minimum wage and lower payroll taxes compared to the policies in place in the early 1990s.
    Keywords: Payroll tax, Minimum wage, Equilibrium job search, Worker and firm heterogeneity
    Date: 2024–12
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hal:journl:hal-04873024
  3. By: Rosella Levaggi; Francesco Menoncin; Andrea Modena
    Abstract: Tolerating tax evasion may increase debt less than an equivalent tax cut. In our model, utility-maximizing entrepreneurs earn income from risky production technologies and risk-free bonds. The government uses income taxes and bonds to finance its expenses. Entrepreneurs can evade taxes at the risk of being audited and fined. Aggregate tax evasion and debt-to-GDP are positively related in equilibrium. Nevertheless, reducing effective tax rates by tolerating evasion may generate a lower debt-to-GDP ratio (but also lower growth) than equivalent debt-financed nominal tax cuts. Policies are equivalent with log utility.
    Keywords: Dynamic tax evasion; general equilibrium; public debt.
    JEL: D5 E6 H2
    Date: 2025–01
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bon:boncrc:crctr224_2025_623
  4. By: Tim Bayer; Lenard Simon; Jakob Wegmann
    Abstract: To collect income taxes, almost all countries require employers to withhold monthly tax prepayments which are then fully credited against the őnal income tax liabilities of their employees. Despite being a fundamental component of income taxation systems worldwide, the impact of these withholding taxes on labor supply is poorly understood. We investigate their importance in the context of married couples in Germany where the withholding tax liability can be redistributed between spouses. We exploit a reform that reduced the withholding tax for some marriedwomen more than for others, while inducing no differences in income taxes. Using administrative data for the full population of German taxpayers, we estimate an elasticity of labor income with respect to the withholding tax eight years after the reform of 0.14. Additional evidence from a self-conducted survey suggests imperfect understanding of the tax system and limited pooling of resources within the household as the main mechanisms. As the majority of couples shift parts of the withholding tax liability from the husband to the wife, our results suggest that the increased withholding tax liability of married women contributes to their low labor supply. This highlights the need for governments to be aware of the distortion of labor supply incentives when the design of withholding taxes does not match actual income tax incentives.
    Keywords: Withholding Taxes, Income Taxation, Gender, Labor Supply
    JEL: H21 H31 J16 J20 K34
    Date: 2025–01
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bon:boncrc:crctr224_2025_631
  5. By: Andrey Timofeev (International Center for Public Policy, Georgia State University)
    Abstract: I attempt to reconcile two vast strands of literature that essentially estimate the same empirical relationship. Tax effort studies aim to benchmark a countryÕs tax-to-GDP ratio to tax outcomes observed in other countries under comparable conditions, in particular under similar levels of economic development, proxied with the real GDP per capita. A completely separate strand of literature deals with estimating tax buoyancy, which is measured as the percentage change in tax revenue associated with a 1-percent change in GDP. While dealing with some of the same data (tax revenues and GDP) as in the tax effort studies, the tax buoyancy literature has developed econometric methods that are more robust to the empirical challenges presented by these data. In this paper, I establish correspondence between the statistical parameters estimated in these two separate strands of literature. Thus, I show that an estimate of long-run buoyancy can be translated into the magnitude of the impact of economic development on the tax-to-GDP ratio by making adjustments for how the population size and real exchange rate interact with economic growth.
    Date: 2024–12
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ays:ispwps:paper2417
  6. By: Carina Neisser (University of Cologne & IZA); Nils Wehrhöfer (Deutsche Bundesbank)
    Abstract: Public disclosure laws on politicians’ outside income aim to enhance electoral accountability, but their effects remain unclear and may backfire. Using a German disclosure reform, administrative tax data, and a difference-in-difference design, we show that MPs increased their outside income after public disclosure. We find suggestive evidence that the effect is driven by right-leaning MPs. A survey among voters shows that perceptions of outside income differ by party alignment: right-leaning voters view it as a sign of competence, while left-leaning voters associate it with weaker voter representation. These findings highlight the complex interplay between transparency, voter perception, and political behavior.
    Keywords: Tax data, outside income, politicians, income disclosure
    JEL: D72 D83 J45
    Date: 2025–01
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ajk:ajkdps:354
  7. By: Chuo, Anthony (San Diego University); Cotti, Chad D. (Michigan State University and Center for Demography of Health and Aging University of Wisconsin-Madison); Courtemanche, Charles J. (Gatton College of Business and Economics University of Kentucky); Maclean, Johanna Catherine (Schar School of Policy and Government George Mason University); Nesson, Erik T. (Wake Forest University, Economics Department); Sabia, Joseph J. (Department of Economics Center for Health Economics & Policy Studies San Diego State University)
    Abstract: Electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) use among lesbian, gay, bisexual, and questioning (LGBQ) teenagers is over 30 percent higher than among their heterosexual counterparts. Yet little is known about how recent efforts to curb nicotine vaping through ENDS taxes impact sexual minorities. This study explores this question using data from the 2015-2021 State Youth Behavior Surveys. We find that a one-dollar (in 2021$) per mL of e-liquid increase in ENDS taxes reduces the likelihood of any prior-month ENDS use among heterosexual teens by about four percentage points and the likelihood of habitual vaping (as measured by frequent and everyday use) by about two percentage points. In sharp contrast, we find no evidence that ENDS taxes reduce any of the vaping measures for queer youths. The coefficient estimates are consistently less strongly negative for LGBQ than heterosexual youths, and the differences in effects on frequent and everyday vaping are statistically significant. Therefore, taxes widen disparities in vaping between queer and straight teens. The estimated effect of ENDS taxes on LGBQ teens who do not report being depressed, suicidal, or bullied is similar to the effect among heterosexuals, suggesting that LGBQ youths’ tax insensitivity may be explained by their dependence on e-cigarettes to cope with unique stress-related psychological challenges.
    Keywords: ENDS taxes; youth e-cigarette use; LGBQ teens; sexual minorities
    JEL: I10 I12 I18
    Date: 2025–01–27
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ris:wfuewp:0122
  8. By: Flynn, James (Miami University); Gruber, Anja (University of Colorado, Boulder)
    Abstract: This paper uses restricted-access data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System Survey to assess whether the sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) tax levied in Seattle in 2018 led to declines in body mass index (BMI) and the rate of obesity. We implement an event-study design which compares these outcomes in the treated region to those of untaxed areas. We find no evidence of divergence in trends prior to the tax, followed by large declines in both outcomes after the tax was implemented. We estimate that the tax led to a reduction of .61 BMI points and reduced the obesity rate by 4.5 percentage points. Declines were largest for individuals with lower incomes, those without a college degree, and younger people, which are all groups who tend to consume more SSBs at baseline. We address concerns that our results are driven by the COVID-19 pandemic and provide suggestive evidence that SSB taxes improved these outcomes in other SSB-taxed jurisdictions as well. Our study adds to the growing evidence that SSB taxes can improve public health, rather than only affecting prices, purchasing, or consumption of taxed beverages.
    Keywords: soda tax, health behavior, taxation, obesity
    JEL: H2 H3 I12 I18
    Date: 2025–01
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp17617
  9. By: Asto, Richard; Ortiz Sosa, Marco Antonio; Ruelas-Huanca, Walter
    Abstract: This paper develops a general equilibrium framework that integrates heterogeneous firms with both idiosyncratic productivity and subjective beliefs about public goods provision—specifically, confidence in institutional quality—alongside endogenous informality. We examine the impact of tax policy on the formalization process and highlight the crucial role of firms' trust in public institutions. Our findings reveal that when firms perceive the government as credible, an increase in both tax rates and tax revenues enhances public goods provision, fostering greater formalization. However, in environments with weak institutional trust, formalization policies may yield suboptimal economic outcomes—potentially even worsening conditions compared to scenarios with higher trust levels. This underscores how institutional confidence influences the productivity of formal firms and facilitates their transition into the formal sector. In the long run, effective tax policy can improve overall welfare, but its success is contingent on government credibility. Our research contributes to the literature on informality by providing novel insights for policymakers seeking to enhance formalization and economic welfare, particularly in settings where skepticism about government commitment and institutional capacity prevails.
    Keywords: Informality, Optimal Tax Policy, Entrepreneurship, Tax Evasion
    JEL: E26 E62 H26
    Date: 2025–01–29
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:123490
  10. By: Silvia Appelt; Matej Bajgar; Chiara Criscuolo; Fernando Galindo-Rueda
    Abstract: Recent firm-level studies find R&D tax incentives to be much more effective at stimulating firms' R&D investment than what aggregate analyses indicate. Based on a distributed analysis of official R&D survey and administrative tax relief micro-data for 19 OECD countries, we show that two factors can reconcile these contrasting results. Firstly, a limited uptake of R&D tax incentives in most countries makes aggregate studies underestimate the effectiveness of R&D tax incentives. Secondly, R&D tax incentives are (much) less effective for large and R&D-intensive firms, which account for a small share of R&D-performing firms but most aggregate R&D tax relief, making firm-level studies overstate the aggregate effectiveness of R&D tax incentives.
    Keywords: mental health, employment, earnings, policy evaluation, psychological therapies
    Date: 2025–01–29
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:cep:cepdps:dp2071
  11. By: Johannes Fleck; Jonathan Heathcote; Kjetil Storesletten; Giovanni L. Violante
    Abstract: Combining a variety of survey and administrative data, this paper measures the progressivity of taxes and transfers at the U.S. federal level and separately for each state. The findings are as follows. (i) The federal tax and transfer system is progressive. (ii) State and local tax and transfer systems are close to proportional, on average. (iii) There is substantial heterogeneity in tax levels and tax progressivity across states. (iv) States that are funded mostly by sales and property taxes tend to have regressive tax systems and low average tax rates. States that are funded mostly by income taxes tend to have progressive tax systems and high average tax rates. (v) Regressive states are concentrated in the South and attract more inter-state net migration, especially of high-income migrants. (vi) State progressivity has remained broadly stable between 2005 and 2016. (vii) Incorporating corporate income and business taxes decreases average state progressivity but increases federal progressivity. (viii) Including spending on public goods and services as a transfer has a large positive impact on measured progressivity.
    JEL: E60 H10 R28
    Date: 2025–01
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:33385
  12. By: Ropponen, Olli
    Abstract: Abstract This report examines the behavioral effects of inheritance, estate and gift taxes. It also provides an overview of inheritance, estate and gift tax practices in other countries, as well as the reasons that led to the abolition of inheritance taxes in Sweden and Norway. Economic literature acknowledges various behavioral responses to inheritance, estate and gift taxes from both the bequeather and the heir, with wealthier individuals demonstrating greater sensitivity to such taxes. These responses encompass both real behavioral changes (such as migration) and tax avoidance strategies. These behavioral distortions affect both the efficiency and revenue-raising potential of inheritance, estate and gift taxes. Among OECD countries, a significant number impose inheritance, estate and gift taxes, while others do not, some have abolished them, and a few have never implemented such taxes. Among Nordic countries, Sweden and Norway have abolished these taxes, citing several reasons: they were seen as obstacles to the intergenerational transfer of family businesses, their administrative burden was deemed high, and compared to the administrative burden the revenues collected were relatively low. Additionally, the taxes facilitated tax planning opportunities and were perceived as inequitable.
    Keywords: Inheritance, estate and gift tax, Behavioral responses, Tax elasticities, Tax avoidance
    JEL: D9 H24 H26 H3
    Date: 2025–01–28
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:rif:report:157
  13. By: Laura Montenbruck
    Abstract: This article provides evidence that increased salience of public service provision can strengthen the social contract and increase tax compliance in a low-capacity setting. I conduct a field experiment randomizing information about public service provision across 5, 494 property owners and tenants in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Receiving information increases property tax payments by 20% on average. The effect is driven by increases in tax compliance on both the extensive and intensive margin. Residents of low-value properties are 7–16 percentage points more likely to pay taxes when informed about public services that are both geographically accessible and respond to the citizens’ most urgent needs, suggesting a benefit-based approach to taxation. Revenue effects are largely driven by residents of high-value properties, who depend less on the public provision of services, and for whom the treatment seems to act as a more general signal of government performance.
    Keywords: Social contract, Property tax, Public services, Tax compliance
    JEL: H20 O23 D73
    Date: 2025–01
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bon:boncrc:crctr224_2025_620
  14. By: Gkolfinopoulou, Michalitsa; Theophilopoulou, Angeliki
    Abstract: This study investigates the impact of discretionary tax cuts on income and consumption inequality in the United Kingdom. Using granular survey data from approximately 340, 000 households, we construct quarterly inequality measures spanning 1970 to 2020 to assess the heterogeneous effects of exogenous tax shocks on income and consumption distributions. Employing a structural VAR framework, we find that tax cuts increase inequality in the UK. Specifically, a 1 percent tax cut leads to a 2 percent rise in the Gini coefficients of gross income and consumption within a year, with these effects persisting for nearly three years. The rise in inequality is primarily driven by increased labour earnings from full-time and part-time employment among middle- and high-income households, while low-income households experience a slight negative impact due to reduced social security income. Additionally, temporary reductions in VAT induce a short-term decline in CPI inflation, disproportionately boosting consumption among wealthier households. These findings highlight the unequal distributional effects of tax policy and its implications for inequality dynamics.
    Keywords: Tax shocks; income and consumption inequality; Bayesian SVARs
    JEL: C11 D31 E62 H20
    Date: 2025–01–25
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:123457
  15. By: Julien Albertini (University Lumière Lyon 2, CNRS, Université Jean Monnet Saint-Etienne, emlyon business school, GATE, 69007, Lyon, France); Arthur Poirier (LEDa, Paris Dauphine University); Anthony Terriau (GAINS, Le Mans University)
    Abstract: Introduced in France in the 1990s to reduce the cost of low-skilled labor, payroll tax reductions on low wages were later expanded and extended to higher wages. This study evaluates the impact of the current payroll tax schedule on employment, fiscal surplus, and welfare. We develop a life-cycle matching model in which workers are heterogeneous in terms of age, education, human capital, family status, hours worked and idiosyncratic productivity, and where search effort, hiring and separations are endogenous. Accounting for interactions with the socio-fiscal system, we demonstrate that reducing payroll tax cuts for low wages would result in declines in both employment and fiscal surplus. Furthermore, we show that increasing the minimum wage would significantly reduce employment and fiscal surplus, with the magnitude of the effect depending on whether the payroll tax schedule and other socio-fiscal measures are indexed to the minimum wage. Lastly, we identify the optimal payroll tax schedule, revealing that employment, fiscal surplus, and welfare can all be improved by increasing payroll tax reductions for wages near the minimum wage while reducing them for wages exceeding twice the minimum wage.
    Keywords: Payroll Tax Reductions; Minimum Wage; Search and Matching; Life Cycle
    JEL: J23 J31 J32 J38 J64
    Date: 2025
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:gat:wpaper:2501

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