Title: Local Government Part II
1Local Government Part II
2Heterogeneous Households and Voting
- One location. The local government collects a
head tax to finance local education. - H unit measure of households.
- Let I be household income.
- Households have heterogeneous income.
- Have preference on two normal goods
- x consumption
- y education
- px 1 and py 1
3Heterogeneous Households and Voting
- Voting Stage 1
- Each Household decides an optimal head tax T
- y T
- Preference Maximization
- Let y(I) be the optimal education level for
households with income I. - y(I) gt 0
4Heterogeneous Households and Voting
- Voting Stage 2 Households coordinate. A head tax
winning majority votes will be implemented. - Let F(I) be the cumulative distributed function
(CDF) of income type I. Let Imed be the median
income level. - Graph
5Heterogeneous Households and Voting
- In one dimensional elections, the median voter
rules - The education level winning the election is
y(Imed). - T y(Imed)
6Alternative Educational Finance Income Tax
- Educational expense is financed by income tax.
The tax rate is t. - Total tax revenue Ttotal
- Education level (one child per HH)
Tax paid by a HH with Income equals I
pdf proportion of HHs with income equals I
Number of HHs with income equals I
Equation A
7Alternative Educational Finance Income Tax
- Median voter picks t that induce y which maximize
his/her utility. - Case I Symmetric distribution of income Imed
Imean - Eg. Standard normal distribution
- The median voter knows that the tax she pays is
going to be the education she receives. So,
picking a tax rate is equivalent to picking a
head tax
8Alternative Educational Finance Income Tax
- The equilibrium level of education is the same as
the case of a head tax y y(Imed) - Finance is different. There is income
redistribution as compared to the head tax. - Individuals with I lt Imed pay less
- Individuals with I gt Imed pay more.
9Alternative Educational Finance Income Tax
- Case II Asymmetric distribution of income
- Eg. Imed lt Imean
- The median voter knows the tax she pays is less
than the education she receives. Some people are
paying education for her. - Education level is greater than the case of a
head tax.
10Jurisdiction Formation A Simple Version of the
Tiebout Model.
- A large number of locations and a large number of
households. - HHs are mobile. Can vote with feet.
- Heterogeneous income I
- Utility function U(x, y ?) depends upon taste
parameter ? such that y(I, ?) is strictly
increasing in ?, where y(I, ?) is the optimal
education level in the Robinson Crusoe Economy
with I and ?.
11Jurisdiction Formation A Simple Version of the
Tiebout Model.
- px 1 and py 1
- Education determined collectively (voting)
- Head Tax
- No spillovers. U depends upon y but on ymean
12Tiebout Equilibrium
- Complete sorting on income and taste. Let
- Then ymin, ymax is the range of education
levels observed and a HH of type (I, ?) moves to
a community with y y(I, ?). - First best. First Welfare Theorem.
13Property Tax instead of Head Tax
- Introduce the third good z, housing, like
earlier, and utility function is U(x, y, z ?) - Tax paid is tz
- Wont have complete sorting because of free rider
problem. - Suppose sorting was complete, how can a HH with
high ? and low I improve his/her welfare? -
14Jurisdictional Spillovers and Scale Economies
- Why larger jurisdictions?
- Jurisdictional Spillovers
- Education spillovers may extend beyond a
jurisdiction. - Free rider problem.
- Make jurisdiction larger to internalize the
spillover. - Education provision may have some sorts of scale
economy. - Specialization
15Jurisdictional Spillovers and Scale Economies
- Drawbacks for having large jurisdictions?
- Less able to accommodate preference diversity
- Less competition
16Who pays the property tax?
- Depends on the elasticities of supply and demand.
- Property tax annual tax on the property value
- Value structure value land value
- Example A city with mobile homes.
- 100,000 80,000 20,000
- Tax on housing firms at 1 tax rate 1,000
800 200
17Land proportion
- Landlords supply land housing firms demand land
- In a very short run (a year), supply is perfectly
inelastic. Demand is elastic. - Landlords pay all the tax
- How do they share tax burden, if supply and
demand have the same elasticity?
18Structure proportion
- Housing firms supply households demand
- If the technology of making mobile homes is CRS,
supply is perfectly elastic. - Households pay all the tax.
19Intergovernmental Grants
- 2/5 of the revenue of local governments
- 1/2 of grants are spent on education
- Good things about these grants
- Internalize jurisdictional spillovers
- Finance the shortage of local revenue in the
short run - Desired spending on local public goods rises
faster than the local tax base
20Intergovernmental Grants
- Conditional grants must be spent on a specific
program. - One dollar grant will not increase the spending
on the specific program by one dollar because of
the income effect.