Title: Optimal Taxation
1Optimal Taxation
- Professor Jane H. Leuthold
- Department of Economics
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Econ 415 Fall 2001
2Topics for today
- The optimal tax problem
- Why not use lump-sum taxes?
- Optimal income taxation
- Optimal commodity taxation and the Ramsey rule
3The optimal tax problem
- How to raise a given amount of tax revenue in the
best possible way. - Best is defined in terms of a social welfare
function.
4Why not use lump-sum taxes?
- If all individuals are identical, then a lump-sum
tax would be the only efficient tax. Why not use
it? - A lump-sum tax burdens the poor.
- A lump-sum tax is impossible if certain
individual characteristics (ability, leisure,
risk aversion) are unobserved and therefore
untaxable.
5Optimal income taxes
- How should the tax rate vary with income so as to
raise a given revenue with least loss of
efficiency? - Assume
- No saving, all income from labor
- Linear tax structure
6Linear (flat-rate) income taxes
Tax
- Proportional taxT1 t1 YATR MTR t1
- Progressive taxT2 t2 (Y A) t2 Y t2
AMTR t2 gt ATR t2 t2 (A/Y)
T2
T1
A
Income
Negative income tax
t2 A
7Average linear income tax rates
Tax rate
t2
ATR t2 t2 (A/Y)
t1
A
Income
8Deadweight loss with a proportional or
progressive tax
SC
w
w(1-t1)
Compensated labor supply curve
w(1-t2)
DWL/R ½ t2 ecS
Labor
9Deadweight loss with a progressive flat-rate
income tax
Income
24w
24w(1-t1)
Tax revenue from proportional tax
E
Leisure
24
10Optimal linear income tax
- More progressive tax systems will lead to greater
deadweight loss. - More egalitarian social welfare functions will
choose more progressive tax systems. - Policy design problem is to balance the
objectives of efficiency and egalitarianism.
11Non-linear income tax
Tax rate
t3
Marginal bracket tax rates
t2
t1
b1
b2
Income
A
12Optimal nonlinear income tax
- Impose high average tax rates and low marginal
tax rates - Make as few people as possible face high marginal
tax rates - Impose high marginal tax rates on those for whom
the tax is least distorting Stiglitz, p. 560
13Linear vs nonlinear tax structures
Tax
- Which taxpayers face the highest marginal tax
rates? - When will deadweight loss be less under the green
tax than under the blue tax?
D
C
A
Income
tA
B
14Zero tax rate on the highest income individual
Income
With a zero tax rate, the same revenue can be
raised with a zero tax rate above E while making
the taxpayer better off.
Zero rate tax above E
A
A
E
After-tax budget constraint
E
Leisure
24
15Optimal commodity tax problem
- If everyone is the same (or equivalently if
equity doesnt matter), how should commodities be
taxed so as to best raise a given revenue? - If equity matters, do the rules for optimal
commodity taxation still hold?
16Optimal commodity taxes
Price
- Assume equity is not an issue.
- There is one untaxed commodity.
- How should taxes be arranged across commodities
to minimize the sum of excess burdens?
DC
St
Pt
S
P
Q Q Rice
DWL ½ t2 PQ ?C
17Frank Ramsey
- Shown in 1925 (age 22) shortly before his death.
- Proposed what is now known as the Ramsey rule
which governs the pattern of optimal commodity
taxes. - Taxes that follow this rule are known as Ramsey
taxes.
18Optimal taxation the Ramsey Rule
If not all commodities can be taxed, then the
optimal taxes satisfy
If the cross-effects are zero, then the optimal
taxes satisfy
t1 constant / eC1 and t2 constant / eC2
which is known as the inverse elasticity rule.
19Ramsey Rule
- If commodities are independent, taxes should be
inversely proportional to the compensated
elasticities of demand. - If commodities are not independent, the optimal
tax structure is such that the percentage
reduction in the compensated demand for each
commodity is the same.
20Equity and the Ramsey Rule
- In general, the Ramsey Rule implies imposing
taxes in an inverse relationship to the
elasticity of demand. - This would result in a regressive tax system
since necessities would be taxed more heavily
than luxuries. - Optimal taxation requires balancing equity and
efficiency objectives.
21A special case
If U a ln X1 (1- a) ln X2 P1 X1 a Y P2 X2
(1-a) Y where Y is income, Then eC1
eC2 and the optimal tax is uniform.
22Optimal taxation in developing economies
- Highly unequal income distributions suggest that
equity is likely to be an important
consideration. - Information on the compensated price elasticities
of demand may not be available. - Differential taxes may cause tax administration
problems.
23Discussion
- Developing countries often use taxes on luxuries
as a major source of income. Is this consistent
with the theory of optimal taxation? Why or why
not?
24Lab 9
- Experiment with different combinations of the tax
rates ?1 and ?2 to find out the combination that
best raises 10 units of revenue. - Convert the model into one where equity doesnt
matter and where utility functions are
Cobb-Douglas. Do your results change?
25Next Time
Lab 9 Optimal taxes in the CGE model Chat How
is the presence of negative externalities like
pollution likely to affect the optimal tax
rules? Next week Consumption taxes VAT