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Taxes & Subsidies Economic Welfare Supplement

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Presentation on theme: "Taxes & Subsidies Economic Welfare Supplement"— Presentation transcript:

1 Taxes & Subsidies Economic Welfare Supplement

2 How Do We Analyze the Effects of Taxes and Subsidies
The efficient ideal market “perfectly competitive” market Consumers and suppliers are price-takers, i.e. have no market power

3 Total Social Welfare Ideally the impact of a program should be evaluated as: {Pareto efficient} 1) can at least one person’s welfare be improved 2) without making anyone worse off More realistically: Could the winners compensate the losers? {Pigouvian} Is the deadweight loss of the taxed good less than the surplus gain from the subsidized good?

4 Deadweight Loss Price Consumers Pay Pre-tax price Price Sellers
Receive Reduction in Qty sold

5 Deadweight Loss Retained CS Tax Rev From CS Tax Rev From CS
Retained PS

6 How Do We Evaluate the Impact of the Tax?
Two Parts: Tax Incidence Who pays for it more? Consumers or Producers? Will depend on relative demand/supply elasticities Economic welfare analysis Does the tax (revenue) improve social welfare? Will depend on relative elasticities of: a) good taxed B) good or program financed by the tax

7 What Are the Benefits? Depends on what we do with the taxes
Suppose we use it to subsidize another good Subsidy appears as a reduction in per-unit costs to the firm getting the subsidy

8 Evaluating The Impact Costs: Benefits Will Benefits > Tax
Deadweight loss: sum of reduction in consumer and producer surplus for the taxed good Reflects reduction in Qd and higher price paid Benefits Gain in CS and PS from subsidized cost Will Benefits > Tax Depends on the relative demand elasticities for the 2 goods

9 Evaluating the Impact “A Positive Analysis” (Distributional Consequences) Who gains/loses from the tax and subsidy? Both producers and consumers of the taxed good lose (in terms of lost surpluses) Relative demand/elasticities determine who loses most More inelastic demand -> greater is CS loss Producers and Consumers of subsidized good win (lower price and more Q) Relative demand supply elasticities determine who benefits most

10 Total Social Welfare Ideally the impact of a program should be evaluated as: {Pareto efficient} 1) can any one (or more) person’s welfare be improved 2) without any one else’s welfare being reduced More realistically: Could the winners compensate the losers? {Pigouvian} Is the deadweight loss of the taxed good less than the surplus gain from the subsidized good?


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