Title: Consumption Taxes
1Consumption Taxes
- Professor Jane H. Leuthold
- Department of Economics
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Econ 415 Fall 2001
2Topics for today
- Consumption as a tax base
- Types of consumption taxes
- Value added taxes
- Methods of collection
- Rate structure
- Treatment of capital
- Comparison with a retail sales tax
- Incidence of the VAT
- Comparison with a Flat Tax
3Consumption as a tax base
- A proportional consumption tax, a proportional
wage tax, a flat tax, and a value added tax are
equivalent taxes. All are equivalent to taxing
lifetime income assuming no inheritances or
bequests. - C0 W0 - SC1 W1 S(1 r)C0 C1/(1r) Y
W0 W1/(1r)
4Types of consumption taxes
- Direct consumption taxes
- Expenditures tax
- Flat tax
- Indirect consumption taxes
- Excise taxes
- Sales taxes
5Direct consumption taxes
- Expenditures (cash flow) tax
- Applied to the difference between income and
saving in qualified accounts - Can apply progressive rates
- Should include imputed rental value of housing
- Flat tax
- Individual tax on wage income and a business tax
on sales minus wages, materials purchases, and
purchases of new capital equipment
6Indirect consumption taxes
- Excise taxes
- Apply to one or a few commodities
- May be unit or ad valorem
- Important source of revenue in LDCs
- Sales taxes
- Apply to wide range of commodities
- Single stage (retail or manufacturing sales tax)
- Multiple stage
- Turnover tax t sales
- VAT t (sales - purchases)
7Turnover tax
- Raises much revenue with a low rate, but has
several disadvantages - 1. It artificially encourages vertical
integration of industries, eliminating stages in
order to minimize the tax. - 2. It results in very different effective tax
rates across commodities depending on the number
of sales transactions involved in the production
and distribution process. - It is expensive to administer because it must be
collected from a large number of firms. - 4. Results in cumulative taxation of goods as
they move through successive stages of production
and distribution (cascading).
8Value-added tax
- Tax on the value added to intermediate products
at each stage of production - Used in more than 50 countries of the world, but
not the US
9Value Added Tax Example
How would this VAT compare with a retail sales
tax of equal yield?
What rate turnover tax would raise the same
revenue as the 20 VAT?
10VAT vs. retail sales tax
- The VAT collects a substantial part of the tax
revenue (80 or more) at import, manufacturing,
and wholesale levels, while the retail sales tax
puts the entire impact on the retail sector. - The potential for evasion with a retail tax is
greater unless retailing is highly
commercialized, records good, and a strong audit
program established.
11VAT Treatment of Capital
Consumption-type VAT
Income-type VAT
Capital is depreciated over the service life of
the asset.
Capital is expensed (written off fully in year of
purchase).
VAT t(sales - purchases of materials -
depreciation of capital)
VAT t(sales - purchases of materials -
purchases of capital)
12VAT Methods of Collection
Subtraction method
VAT t (S - P)
Credit (invoice) method
VAT tS - tP
13Administration of VAT
- Relatively expensive (.5 to 1 of revenues) to
administer - Exempting small firms lowers administrative costs
- Multiple rates and zero rating increases
administrative costs
14VAT rate structure
May be single rate or differential rates. Many
countries apply reduced rates to food and other
necessities. Several impose high rates on
luxuries. VAT is generally rebated on export
sales.
15VAT Exemption vs Zero-Rating
Exemption
Zero-Rating
Firm pays no tax but receives credit.
Firm pays no tax and receives no credit.
VAT 0
VAT -t purchases
16Incidence of a VAT
- Partial equilibrium
- General equilibrium
17Partial Equilibrium Incidence of a VAT
18General Equilibrium Incidence of a VAT
19Flat Tax and the VAT
Individuals IFT t(Wages Pension and
Retirement benefits) - I where I
exemption Businesses BFT t(Sales - Purchases
- Wages - Pensions - Purchases of capital
equipment) Flat tax FT t(Sales Purchases
Purchases of capital equipment)
I consumption VAT - I
20Flat Tax and the VAT
Flat tax
VAT
Earnings
I/t
Earnings
I
Flat tax tE I VAT tE
21Effect on investment
Effect of replacing a comprehensive income tax
with a equal yield comprehensiveconsumption tax
Yield
S
rG
r
rN
D
IY
IC
Investment
22Effect on work
Effect of replacing a consumption tax with a
equal yield income tax
Wages
S
Note tC gt tY for equal yield taxes
DWG
WG (1-tC)
WG(1-tY)
HC
HY
Labor hours
23Consumption tax elasticities
- Measure the responsiveness of consumption tax
revenue to changes in GDPln TC a b ln GDP - Can be decomposed into the tax-to-base and
base-to-income elasticitiesln TC c d ln Cln
C e f ln GDP - Expectation b df
24Advantage of high tax to base elasticity
- Base-to-income elasticities are largely
determined by the way in which the structure of
the economy changes with economic growth. - Tax-to-base elasticities indicate revenue growth
within control of tax authorities. - High tax to base elasticities may be raised by an
improvement of tax administration.
25Lab 10
- Estimate the tax-to-base and base-to-income tax
elasticities for goods and services taxes using
your country data - Include a dummy variable to control for major
discretionary tax changes - Test to see whether elasticities are greater than
one
26Next Time
Lab 10 Consumption Tax Elasticities Chat If
Mr. Ramsey were here to give advice on the design
of the rate structure of the VAT, what advice
would he give? Would you agree with him? Why or
why not? Next week Trade taxes
Sunday Oct 28 7-9 pm Halloween Party!