Payroll Tax An Ad Valorem Tax Statutory distinction between employers and employees is irrelevant. Economic incidence depends on elasticity of Supply and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Profit maximization.
Advertisements

Section 3: Elasticity of Demand What Is Elasticity of Demand?
Assoc. Prof. Y.KuştepeliECN 242 PUBLIC ECONOMICS 1 TAXATION AND INCOME DISTRIBUTION.
Bell Ringer 12/4/08 Identify each as Elastic or Inelastic AND give and example of each 2. 1.
Demand and Supply Professor Heather Grob ECN101.
A Definition of Economics
Chapter 11 © 2006 Thomson Learning/South-Western Applying the Competitive Model.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 14 TAXATION AND INCOME DISTRIBUTION.
Chapter 12 – Taxation and Income Distribution
Chapter 9 – Profit maximization
Ch. 17: Demand and Supply in Factor Markets Objectives – The firm’s choice of the quantities of labor and capital to employ. – People’s choices of the.
Taxation, income distribution, and efficiency
TAXATION AND INCOME DISTRIBUTION
Ch. 18: Demand and Supply in Factor Markets
Part 7 Further Topics © 2006 Thomson Learning/South-Western.
Chapter 9 Perfect Competition In A Single Market
1 Chapter 11: Monopoly We are now back in partial equilibrium. So far we assumed perfect competition. In this chapter, we study the other extreme, when.
Taxation and Income Distribution
Market Structure In economics, market structure (also known as market form) describes the state of a market with respect to competition. The major market.
Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence
Chapter 29: Labor Demand and Supply
1 of 23 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. CHAPTER OUTLINE 10 Input Demand: The Labor and Land Markets Input Markets: Basic Concepts Demand for Inputs: A Derived.
Overview Introduction Setting up the Model
Labour and Capital Market
Chapter 28 Labor Demand and Supply (How many laborers should a firm hire, and at what wage?)
 Desire to want something and the ability to pay for it.
PUBLIC SECTOR ECONOMICS: The Role of Government in the American Economy Randall Holcombe 15 CHAPTER Taxes On Business Income and Wealth.
Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 1 of
Class 3.  Factor Markets refers to the markets where services of the factors of production are bought and sold  Labor Markets  Capital Markets  The.
Perfect Competition A perfectly competitive industry is one that obeys the following assumptions:  there are a large number of firms, each producing the.
Chapter 5 Labor Market Equilibrium. 2 Competitive Markets (firms and workers can freely enter and exit ) Equilibrium outcome will be efficient  Monopsonies.
Chapter Six Profit Maximization: Seeking Competitive Advantage.
Profit Maximization CHAPTER 9 © 2016 CENGAGE LEARNING. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. MAY NOT BE COPIED, SCANNED, OR DUPLICATED, IN WHOLE OR IN PART, EXCEPT FOR.
Mr. Weiss Test 2 – Sections 9 & 10 – Vocabulary Review 1. substitution effect; 2. price elasticity of demand; 3. perfectly inelastic demand; 4. perfectly.
19.5 Conclusion The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence 19.3 General Equilibrium Tax Incidence 19.2 Tax Incidence Extensions 19.1 The Three.
Law of Supply and the Supply Curve Chapter 7 Section 3.
The theory of taxation (Stiglitz ch. 17, 18, 19; Gruber ch
Public Finance and Public Policy Jonathan Gruber Third Edition Copyright © 2010 Worth Publishers 1 of 36 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence.
CH 5.1 Supply Law of Supply Supply Curve Elasticity of supply Law of Supply Supply Curve Elasticity of supply.
Most Important Micro Graphs. Non-graph Concepts Comparative Advantage problems –Calculating opportunity costs –Calculating terms of trade Elasticity –Calculating.
Chapter 3 Specific Factors and Income Distribution.
Public Finance (MPA405) Dr. Khurrum S. Mughal. Lecture 25: Taxation, Prices Efficiency, and the Distribution of Income Public Finance.
1 Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium Chapter 3.
1 Impact, Incidence and shifting of Taxes. 2 The term impact is used to express the immediate result of or original imposition of the tax. The impact.
1 Chapter 1 Appendix. 2 Indifference Curve Analysis Market Baskets are combinations of various goods. Indifference Curves are curves connecting various.
Chapter 19 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, 2/e, Jonathan Gruber 1 of
Chapter 22: The Competitive Firm Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin 13e.
Competition and the Market Dr. Mohamed Riyazh Khan DoMS - SNSCE.
Markets for Land and Capital. 1. Land and Capital ▫Demand in the markets for land and capital  If you maintain the assumption that the markets for goods.
VOCABULARY REVIEW CHAPTERS 4-6. Vocabulary Chapter 4 ____________ is the amount of money a firm receives by selling its goods. Total revenue When the.
Tax Incidence General Equilibrium Analysis (AGZ, pg ) 2015.
TAXATION AND INCOME DISTRIBUTION
Study Unit 5 Ms. K Amusa.
AP Microeconomics Final Review
Supply Review Economics Mr. Bordelon.
Taxation and Income Distribution
Taxation and Income Distribution
What almost always happens to quantity demanded as price drops?
TAXATION AND INCOME DISTRIBUTION
Partial Equilibrium Models
The Costs of Production
Factor Market Class 6.
Taxation and income distribution
Main Topics for Free Responses Since 1995
AP MICRO REVIEW FINAL EXAM
Public Finance, 10th Edition
TAXATION AND INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INCIDENCE OF TAXATION AND THE EXCESS BURDEN (WELFARE COST) OF TAXATION
Econ 100 Lecture 4.2 Perfect Competition.
Perfect Competition Econ 100 Lecture 5.4 Perfect Competition
Presentation transcript:

Payroll Tax An Ad Valorem Tax Statutory distinction between employers and employees is irrelevant. Economic incidence depends on elasticity of Supply and Demand.  e.g.: If labor supply is perfectly inelastic workers pay all of tax regardless of statutory incidence.

Capital Taxation Like other taxes--Draw S & D, statutory incidence determines which curve moves.  Shift if unit tax.  Pivot if ad valorem tax. Open Economy: Normal S & D  owners of capital will bear part of tax Open Economy, perfectly mobile capital: S is perfectly elastic.  Capitalists bear no tax.  Generally, the more open the economy the better able capitalist are to avoid tax.

Tax on Monopoly Previously looked at competitive models. Unit tax on good sold by monopolist.  Shifts D & MR down by amount of tax. Leads to decrease in quantity. Consumers pay more, monopolist nets less. Profits shrink. Despite its power, monopolists can suffer from taxation.

Taxation of Oligopolist Incidence depends on how prices change. Economists don’t have a single, generally accepted model of how oligopolists set prices. Therefore, economists are uncertain about tax incidence under oligopolies. However, for an oligopolist the best thing they can do is form a cartel and increase there profits by acting like a monopolist. (restrict Q, increase P) To the extent taxes cause oligopolies to cut back on output, they move closer to the cartel solution. This causes their before-tax profits to increase--perhaps by enough to completely offset the burden of the tax.

Profit Taxes Remember Economic profits are supranormal or excess accounting profits. A profit tax has no affect on MR or MC. Thus the firm won’t change Q or P. Therefore, profit taxes are completely absorbed by firms. With no economic distortions, the tax is efficient. May be hard to implement because you would need to determine normal profits.

Land Taxes and Capitalization Land is durable and fixed in supply. In competitive markets the price of land should reflect the present value of a stream of after-tax rents. When the tax is imposed the price of land falls by the PV of all future tax payments. This process is called capitalization. The burden of the tax forever is on whoever owns the land at the time the tax is announced

General Equilibrium Have been looking at only one market--partial equilibrium. Now want to look at how, for example, a tax in the auto industry will affect the markets for steel and beer. To keep it simple we will look at a world where there is no savings and only two commodities (food and manufactures) and two factors of production (capital and labor).

Different Taxes Partial Factor taxes:  t KF = tax on capital used to make food.  also: t KM, t LF, t LM. Factor taxes:  t K, t L Consumption tax:  t F, t M Income tax:  t

Tax Equivalence Any two sets of taxes that generate the same change in relative prices have equivalent incidence effects. A tax on both goods is the same as an income tax. A tax on both factors in an industry is the same as a consumption tax on that industry. A partial factor tax on one factor in both industries is the same as a general factor tax.

Harberger Model Assumptions:  Constant Returns to Scale  One industry is capital intensive the other labor intensive.  Perfect factor mobility  Competitive profit maximizers  Fixed amount of capital and labor  Consumers have identical preferences.  Look at differential tax incidence

A Commodity tax: t F Increases relative price of food, people buy less food, more manufactures. Some of the K & L used in food production goes into manufactures production. If food is relatively more capital intensive, then the only way the manufacturing sector will absorb lots of capital is if the price of capital falls in both sectors. More generally, a tax on the output of a particular sector will hurt all of the suppliers of the input used intensively in that sector.

Commodity Tax (cont.) Things which increase the damage done to capitalists by a tax on food.  The more elastic the demand for food.  The greater the difference in K/L ratios between the food and manufactures sectors.  The harder it is to substitute capital for labor in the manufactures sector. Because capitalists and laborers have identical preferences, we don’t need to look at the tax effects on the uses side of the budget.

Other Taxes Income Tax (t): Factor supplies are by assumption fixed. Thus, this tax burden cannot be shifted. The burden falls in proportion to people’s incomes. Tax on Labor (t L ) Since both sectors are taxed, labor won’t migrate between sectors. Since labor supply is fixed (inelastic), workers bear full burden of tax

Partial Factor Tax (T KM ) Output Effect: The price in the taxed sector (manufactures) will rise causing a decrease in the quantity demanded by consumers  Will decrease the relative price of the intensively used factor Factor Substitution Effect: The price on the taxed factor (capital) will increase causing the manufacturing sector to use less capital and more labor. If Manufacturing is capital intensive, both effects work in the same direction, and the relative price of capital must fall. If Manufacturing is labor intensive, the net result is theoretically ambiguous. This partial factor tax could actually hurt labor.  Hurts capital as long as labor can be substituted for capital

Changing the Assumptions Different Consumer tastes: Affects distribution on uses side.  For example, if capitalists consume a lot of manufactures and these goods are labor intensive, then a tax on capital may hurt labor. Mobility of Factors: If a factor is immobile, the taxed factor will bear the entire burden of a partial factor tax. It cannot escape the tax by migrating to another sector. Variability of factors: If factors are variable, then in the long run, less of the taxed factor will be supplied.  For example, if capital is taxed, less will be supplied in long run, this will increase returns to capital, and weaken the returns to labor. That is, in the long run, some of the tax can be shifted onto labor.