Title: Public Economics
1Chapter 15 Income Taxation
2Reading
- Essential reading
- Hindriks, J and G.D. Myles Intermediate Public
Economics. (Cambridge MIT Press, 2005) Chapter
15. - Further reading
- Blundell, R. (1992) Labour supply and taxation
a survey, Fiscal Studies, 13, 1540. - Feldstein, M. (1995) The effect of marginal tax
rates on taxable income a panel study of the
1986 tax reform act, Journal of Political
Economy, 103, 551572. - Hindriks, J. (2001) Is there a demand for income
tax progressivity?, Economics Letters, 73,
4350. - Kanbur, S.M.R. and M. Tuomala (1994) Inherent
inequality and the optimal graduation of marginal
tax rates, Scandinavian Journal of Economics,
96, 275282.
3Reading
- Myles, G.D. (2000) On the optimal marginal rate
of income tax, Economics Letters, 66, 113119. - Romer, T. (1975) Individual welfare, majority
voting and the properties of a linear income tax,
Journal of Public Economics, 7, 163168. - Roberts, K. (1977) Voting over income tax
schedules, Journal of Public Economics, 8,
329340. - Tuomala, M. Optimal Income Tax and
Redistribution. (Oxford Clarendon Press, 1990)
ISBN 0198286058 hbk. - Challenging reading
- Diamond, P.A. (1998) Optimal income taxation an
example with a U-shaped pattern of optimal
marginal tax rates, American Economic Review,
88, 8395. - Mirrlees, J.A. (1971) An exploration in the
theory of optimum income tax, Review of Economic
Studies, 38, 175208.
4Reading
- Seade, J.K. (1977) On the shape of optimal tax
schedules, Journal of Public Economics, 7,
203235. - Saez, E. (2001) Using elasticities to derive
optimal tax rates, Review of Economic Studies,
68, 205229. - Weymark, J.A. (1986) A reduced-form optimal
income tax problem, Journal of Public Economics,
30, 199217.
5Income Taxation
- Income taxation is a major source of government
revenue - It is also a major source of contention
- The income tax is a disincentive to effort and
enterprise so the rate of tax should be kept as
low as possible - Income taxation is well-suited to the task of
redistribution which requires that high earners
pay proportionately more tax on their incomes
than low earners - The determination of the optimal income tax
involves the resolution of these contrasting views
6Taxation and Labor Supply
- The effect of income taxation on labor supply can
be investigated using the standard model of
consumer choice - This highlights the importance of competing
income and substitution effects - Assume
- The consumer has a given set of preferences over
allocations of consumption and leisure - The consumer has a fixed stock of time to divide
between labour supply and leisure - The choice is made to maximize utility
7Taxation and Labor Supply
- Preferences are represented by
- U U(x, L - l) U(x, l)
- L is the stock of time, l is labor supply, and x
is consumption - Leisure time is L - l
- Labour is assumed unpleasant so ?U/?l lt 0
- Each hour of labour earns wage w
- Income before taxation is wl
- With tax rate t the budget constraint is
- px (1 t)wl
8Taxation and Labor Supply
- Alternatively the preferences of the consumer can
be be written in terms of income - Let z wl denote income before tax
- Utility in terms of income is
- U U(x, z/w)
- The budget constraint becomes
- px (1 - t)z
- The consumers indifference curves depend upon
the wage rate
9Taxation and Labor Supply
- Fig. 15.1a depicts the choice between leisure and
consumption - The budget constraint depends on the wage
- Fig. 15.1b depicts the choice between before tax
income and consumption - The indifference curves depend on the wage
- In both cases the budget constraint depends on
the tax rate
Figure 15.1 Labor supply decision
10Taxation and Labor Supply
- The initial choice is at a
- In Fig. 15.2a an increase in w shifts the budget
constraint - In Fig. 15.2b an increase in w shifts the
indifference curve - The choice moves to c
- a to b is the substitution effect
- b to c is the income effect
- The total effect can raise or lower labor supply
but increases income
Figure 15.2 Effect of a wage increase
11Taxation and Labor Supply
- Income z in Figs. 15.3a and b is a threshold
level of income below which income is untaxed - The budget constraint is kinked at b
- Points a and c are interior solutions
- Point b is a corner solution
- A consumer at a corner may be unaffected by a tax
change
Figure 15.3 A tax threshold
12Taxation and Labor Supply
- For many tax systems the marginal rate of tax has
several discrete increases - Figs 15.4a and b display the case of four
marginal rates - The marginal rates increase with income
- The budget constraint is kinked at each point of
increase
Figure 15.4 Several thresholds
13Taxation and Labor Supply
- It may not be possible to continuously vary hours
of work - A minimum working week gives a choice between 0
hours and the minimum lm - This causes a discontinuity in the budget
constraint - Figs. 15.5a and b show a discontinuity in labor
supply as the tax rate changes
Figure 15.5 Taxation and the participation
decision
14Empirical Evidence
- The theoretical analysis of labor supply makes
three major points - The effect of a wage or tax change depends on
income and substitution effects - Kinks in the budget constraint can make behaviour
insensitive to taxes - The participation decision can be sensitive to
taxation - The theory does not predict the size of these
effects - Empirical evidence is required to provide
quantification
15Empirical Evidence
- Evidence on the effect of income taxes can be
found in - The results of taxpayer surveys
- Econometric estimates of labor supply functions
- Two points are important in choosing s survey
sample - Labor supply is insensitive to taxation if
working hours are determined by the firm or by
union/firm agreement - The effect of taxation can only be judged when
workers who have the freedom to vary hours of
labor
16Empirical Evidence
- Surveys usually conclude that changes in the tax
rate have little effect on the labor supply
decision - If correct the labor supply function is
approximately vertical - This results from the income effect almost
entirely offsetting the substitution effect - This predicts taxation will have little labor
supply effect - Different groups in the population may have
different reactions to changes in the tax system - This is now considered by reviewing some
econometric analysis
17Empirical Evidence
- Tab. 15.1 reports estimates of labor supply
elasticities for three groups - The substitution effect (compensated wage) is
positive but the income effect is always negative - The elasticity for married men is the lowest
- The elasticity for unmarried women is the largest
- Participation effect
Table 15.1 Labor-supply elasticities Source
Blundell (1992)
18Optimal Income Taxation
- The optimal income tax balances efficiency and
equity to maximise welfare - A interesting model must have the following
attributes - An unequal distribution of income so there is an
equity motivation for taxation - The income tax must affect labor so that it has
efficiency effects - There must be no restrictions placed on the
optimal tax function - The Mirrlees model of income taxation is the
simplest that has these attributes
19Optimal Income Taxation
- All consumers have identical preferences but
differ in their level of skill - The level of skill determines the hourly wage
- Income is the product of skill and hours worked
- The level of skill is private information and
cannot be observed by the government - This makes it impossible to tax directly.
- A tax levied on skill would be the first-best
policy but this not feasible - The government employs an income tax as a
second-best policy
20Optimal Income Taxation
- The government is subject to two constraints when
it chooses the tax function - The income tax must meet the governments revenue
requirement - The tax function must be incentive compatible
- View the government as assigning to each consumer
an allocation of labor and consumption - Incentive compatibility requires that each
consumer must find it utility maximizing to
choose the allocation intended for them - No alternative allocation should be preferred
21Optimal Income Taxation
- If a consumer of skill level s supplies l hours
of labour they earn income of sl before tax - Denote the income of a consumer with skill s by
z(s) - For a consumer with income z the income tax paid
is given by T(z) - T(z) is the tax function the analysis aims to
determine - A consumer who earns income z(s) can consume
- x(s) c(z(s)) z(s) T(z(s))
-
22Optimal Income Taxation
- Fig. 15.6 illustrates the budget constraint
- Without taxation the budget constraint is the 45o
line - T(z) lt 0 when the consumption function is above
the 45o line - T(z) gt 0 when the consumption function is below
the line - The gradient of the consumption function is 1 T'
Figure 15.6 Taxation and the Consumption
function
23Optimal Income Taxation
- Preferences are assumed to satisfy the agent
monotonicity condition - At any point (z, x) the indifference curve of a
consumer of skill s1 is steeper than the curve of
a consumer of skill s2 if s2 gt s1 - This is shown in Fig. 15.7
- Consumers of lower skill are less willing to
supply labor
Figure 15.7 Agent monotonicity
24Optimal Income Taxation
- Fig. 15.8 shows the consequence of agent
monotonicity - The low-skill consumer chooses a
- The indifference curve of the high-skill is
flatter and cannot be at a tangency - The choice for the high-skill must be further to
the right - Income is increasing with skill
Figure 15.8 Income and skill
25Optimal Income Taxation
- Consider the consumption function in Fig. 15.9
- No consumer will locate on the downward-sloping
section - This part of the consumption function can be
replaced by the flat dashed section - This shows c'(z) gt 0 so 1 T'(z) gt 0
- The marginal tax rate is less than 100 percent
Figure 15.9 Upper limit on tax rate
26Optimal Income Taxation
- Fig. 15.10 shows the marginal tax rate must be
positive - Start with c1 with c1' gt 1 and move to c2 with
c2' 1 - c2 chosen so tax revenue is unchanged
- High-skill moves from h1 to h2, low-skill from l1
to l2 - Consumption is transferred from high skill to low
skill so welfare rises - c1 could not be optimal
Figure 15.10 Lower limit on tax rate
27Optimal Income Taxation
- The highest-skill consumer should face a zero
marginal rate of tax - In Fig. 15.11 ABC does not have this property
- Replace with ABD where BD has gradient of 1
- Highest-skill consumer moves to b
- Utility rises but tax payment is unchanged
- No-one is worse-off
- ABC cannot be optimal
Figure 15.11 Zero marginal rate of tax
28Optimal Income Taxation
- A tax system is progressive if the marginal rate
of tax increases with income - A zero rate at the top shows progressivity cannot
be optimal - Most tax systems are progressive
- This result is valid only for the highest-skill
consumer - The implications for lower skills are limited
- Observed systems may only be wrong at the very
top - Result questions preconceptions about the
structure of taxes
29Two Specializations
- There are two specializations of the general
model that provide additional insight - The quasi-linear model restricts the form of the
individual utility function - The individual utility function becomes
- U u(x) z/s
- Rawlsian taxation adopts a specific social
welfare function - Social welfare is evaluated by
- W minU
30Two Specializations
- Assume there are just two consumers
- The high-skill is sh and the low-skill sl
- The optimal tax problem is equivalent to choosing
the allocations ah and al for these consumers - Incentive compatibility requires that the
consumer of skill i prefers allocation i - The low-skill will never mimic the high-skill so
only one incentive compatibility constraint is
binding - u(xh) zh/sh u(xl) zl/sh
31Two Specializations
- Fig. 15.12 illustrates the role of allocations
- The allocations al and ah are incentive
compatible - These cannot be optimal since xh can be reduced
and xl raised without violating incentive
compatibility - The change raises welfare
- The high-skill must be indifferent between al and
ah
Figure 15.12 Allocations and the consumption
function
32Two Specializations
- The resource constraint xl xh zl zh and the
incentive compatibility condition can be solved
to give - zl (1/2)xl xh shu(xh)
u(xl) - zh (1/2)xl xh shu(xh)
u(xl) - Using these the optimal allocation of consumption
for utilitarian social welfare solves - max blu(xl) bhu(xh) (slsh)/2slshxl
xh - Where bl (3sl sh)/2sl and bh (slsh)/2sl
33Two Specializations
- The welfare weights bl and bh incorporate
incentive compatibility and resource implications - For the high-skill the solution to the
optimization is u'(xh) 1/sh so that MRSh 1 - This captures the zero marginal rate for the
highest-skilled - For the low skill u'(xl) (slsh)/sh(3sl sh)
so MRSl sh (3sl sh)/sl(slsh) lt 1 - The low-skill faces a positive marginal rate of
tax
34Two Specializations
- Rawlsian taxation aims to maximize the utility of
the worst-off - Assume all tax revenue is redistributed as a
lump-sum grant - It can then be assumed that the optimal Rawlsian
tax maximizes the grant - A consumer of skill s earns income z(s) so z-1(s)
is the skill level associated to each income - If F(s) is the cumulative distribution of skill
then G(z) F(z-1(s)) is the cumulative
distribution for income
35Two Specializations
- Since revenue is maximized any small change in
the tax function must have no effect on revenue - Consider a increase in the marginal rate of DT'
at income z - Tax payments increase from all those with income
above z - Holding labor supply constant the total increase
is 1 G(z)zDT' - The tax increase reduces labor supply and leads
to a revenue loss g(z)T'zesDT'/(1 T') where es
is the elasticity of labor supply
36Two Specializations
- At the optimum the gain must equal the loss
- 1 G(z)zDT' g(z)T'zesDT'/(1 T')
- Solving this equation
- T'/(1 T') 1 G(z)/esg(z)
- This implies the marginal tax rate (T') will be
high at income z when - The labor supply elasticity is low
- There are few taxpayers with income z
- Even for Rawlsian taxation there will not be
progressivity unless 1 G(z)/esg(z) increases
in z
37Numerical Results
- The theory describes some characteristics of the
optimal income tax function - A numerical analysis is required to generate more
precise results - Numerical results employ the social welfare
function - The social welfare function is utilitarian if e
0 - Higher values of e give more concern for equity
38Numerical Results
- The density function for the skill distribution
is given by f(s) - This is assumed to be log-normal with a standard
deviation of s 0.39 - This value is similar to that for observed income
distributions - But skill and income may not have the same
distribution - The individual utility function is Cobb-Douglas
- U log(x) log(1 l)
39Numerical Results
- Tab.15.2 presents the optimal tax rates for a
utilitarian welfare function - The average rate of tax is negative for the
low-skilled but increases with skill - The negative tax is an income supplement
- The marginal tax rate first rises with skill and
then falls. - The maximum rate is around the median of the
skill distribution
Table 15.2 Utilitarian case (e 0)
40Numerical Results
- The results in Tab. 15.3 involve a greater
concern for equity - The average tax rate starts lower but rises
higher - The marginal tax rate is higher for all income
levels - The marginal rate is highest at a low income
level
Table 15.3 Some equity considerations (e 1)
41Numerical Results
- The outcome is a negative income tax with the
government supplementing income - The maximum average rate of tax is low
- The marginal tax rate first rises with income and
then falls. - The system is not marginal rate progressive
- The marginal rate of tax is close to constant
- The consumption function is almost a straight
line - The zero tax for the highest-skill consumer is
reflected in the fall of the marginal rate at
high incomes
42Tax Mix Separation Principle
- Governments use both income and consumption taxes
- Chap. 14 showed that efficient commodity taxes
should be inversely related to the elasticity of
demand - This implies a system of differential commodity
taxation - The question to address now is the role of
differential commodity taxation when there is an
optimal nonlinear income tax - The answer is dependent on the relation between
commodity demand and labor supply
43Tax Mix Separation Principle
- Recall that the success of the income tax is
limited by incentive compatibility - The high-skill will mimic the low-skill
- Differential commodity taxes are justified if
they relax the incentive compatibility constraint - This can be done by making the consumption bundle
of the low-skill less attractive to the
high-skill - If the utility function is separable between
consumption and labor incentive compatibility
cannot be relaxed - Separable utility has the form U U(u(x), l)
44Tax Mix Separation Principle
- Fig. 15.13 displays nonseparable preferences
- Changing prices from p to p' makes the
consumption plan of the low-skill less attractive
to the high-skill - The utility of the low-skill is not affected
- Incentive compatibility is relaxed
Figure 15.13 Differetial taxation and
nonseparability
45Voting over a Flat Tax
- The political process determine the tax system
through voting - Assume skills are distributed with cumulative
distribution F(s), mean and median sm - A vote is taken over a linear tax with lump-sum
benefit b and constant marginal tax rate t - Consumer preferences are represented by the
quasi-linear utility function - U x (1/2)(z/s)2
46Voting over a Flat Tax
- Given the budget constraint x 1 tz b the
chosen income of a consumer with skill s is - z(s) 1 ts2
- The government budget constraint is
- b tE(z(s)) t1
tE(s2) - Substituting for b and z in the utility function
and maximizing over t gives the optimal tax of
the median voter - tm (E(s2) sm2)/(2E(s2)
sm2)
47Voting over a Flat Tax
- Using the choice of income the tax can be written
- tm (E(z) zm)/(2E(z) zm)
- The model predicts the political tax rate is
determined by the position of the median voter in
the income distribution - As income inequality rises (E(z) zm increases)
the tax rate rises - In practice median income is below mean income so
voters will vote for redistribution