Transcript Chapter 8

Chapter 8
The Costs of Taxation
Ratna K. Shrestha
Overview
The Deadweight Loss of Taxation
 The Determinants of Deadweight Loss
 The Relation Between Deadweight Loss and
Tax Revenue as Taxes Vary
 How does the application of a tax affect the
market system?

Market Efficiency
 The
economic well-being of a society is
measured as the sum of consumer surplus and
producer surplus.
 Market Efficiency is attained when total surplus
is maximized,
 In a perfectly competitive market, total surplus
is maximized at a point where Supply =
Demand.
Market Efficiency without Taxation
P
Consumer
Surplus
S
PE
Producer
Surplus
D
Q
Taxes! Taxes! Taxes!
 Who
pays the tax on a good? The buyer or
the seller?
 How is the burden of a tax divided between
buyer and seller?
When the government levies a tax on a good,
the equilibrium quantity of the good falls.
The size of the market for that good shrinks.
The Effects of Tax
Price
It does not matter which side of the
market (D or S) the tax is imposed.
Supply
Price buyers
pay
Size of tax (T)
Tax
revenue
(T × Q)
Price sellers
receive
Demand
Quantity
sold (Q)
0
Quantity
with tax
Quantity
without tax
Quantity
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Deadweight Loss of Taxation
P
 A tax
places a wedge
between the price
Pb
buyers pay and the
price sellers receive.
 It results in a
Deadweight Loss, the
loss in consumer and Ps
producer surplus
combined.
S
Tax! Loss!
D
Qtax
Qno tax
Q
Deadweight Loss of Taxation
 When
a tax is levied on buyers, the demand
curve shifts (vertical shift) downward by the size
of the tax.
 When a tax is levied on sellers, the supply
curve shifts upward by that amount.
 The losses to buyers and sellers exceed the tax
revenue raised by the government, leading to a
Deadweight Loss.
Deadweight Loss of Taxation: Example
 On
the graph (next slide), the current market
situation of P = $0.50 per unit of a product
results in 1,000 units being offered for sale and
purchased.
 Suppose a twenty cent tax per quantity
($0.20/quantity) is imposed on the suppliers.
Sellers “collect” the tax and send the tax
revenue to the government.
Deadweight Loss of Taxation
P
Supply
$.50
Demand
1000
Q
Deadweight Loss of Taxation
P
Supply
A
$.60
B
$.50
D
$.40
C
E
$.20 tax
imposed
F
Demand
800 1000
Q
Deadweight Loss of Taxation: Example
 The
twenty cent tax (per quantity) results in
new prices to consumers and producers:
– Consumers pay $0.60
– Sellers receive $0.40 (= $0.6 – 0.2)
 The Tax Revenue from the imposed tax is =
$0.2 x 800 = $160.
 The loss in quantity demanded and the
quantity supplied is 200 units (=1000 - 800).
Deadweight Loss of Taxation
P
Tax Revenue
Supply
$.60
$.50
$.40
Demand
800 1000
Q
Changes in Welfare from a Tax
See slide #11
Without Tax
With Tax
Change
CS
A+B+C
A
- (B+C)
PS
D+E+F
F
- (D+E)
Tax Revenue
None
B+D
+ (B+D)
Total Surplus
A+B+C+
D+E+F
A+B+D+F
- (C+E)
Deadweight Loss of Taxation
P
Supply
$.60
$.50
$.40
Loss in
Quantity
Demand
800 1000
Q
Deadweight Loss of Taxation
P
Supply
$.60
Deadweight
Loss = $20
$.50
$.40
Demand
800 1000
Q
Deadweight Loss of Taxation: Example
 The
value of the loss to society due to the
twenty cent tax = $20 (1/2 x0.2x 200). This
loss is called deadweight loss.
 Taxes cause deadweight losses because they
prevent buyers and sellers from realizing some
of the gains from trade (next graph).
 Tax results in Q2 amount being sold and
purchased. Although, the value of one more
unit of Q (beyond Q2) is higher to the consumer
than its cost of production (MC), this production
is not realized.
Why Taxes Cause Deadweight Loss?
Price
Lost gains
from trade
PB
Supply
Size of tax
Price
without tax
PS
Cost to
sellers
Value to
buyers
0
Q2
Demand
Quantity
Q1
Reduction in quantity due to the tax
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
Determinants of Deadweight Loss
 The
magnitude of the Deadweight Loss (DWL)
depends upon how large a decline in market
exchange (decline in Q) occurs as a result of
the tax. In the previous example, the decrease
in Q = Q1 - Q2
 The size in the decline in market exchange
depends upon how sensitive consumers and
producers are to changes in prices: that is the
Elasticity of Supply and Demand.
 The more elastic demand and supply are, the
greater will be the decline in equilibrium
quantity and the greater the DWL.
More Elastic Demand and Supply
S0
PE
D0
QE
More Elastic Demand and Supply
S2
Amount
of Tax
P2
S0
PE
D0
Q2
QE
More Elastic Demand and Supply
S2
Amount
of Tax
P2
S0
Deadweight
Loss!
PE
P1
D0
Q2
QE
Determinants of Deadweight Loss
A
tax causes a deadweight loss because it
induces buyers and sellers to change their
behavior.
– Higher prices (P2) cause buyers to buy
less.
– Lower prices (P1) received causes sellers
to offer less.
 This market distortion (decline in equilibrium
Q) caused by taxes increases with the
elasticity of supply and demand.
Less Elastic Demand and Supply
S0
PE
D0
QE
Less Elastic Demand and Supply
S2
P2
S0
Amount of Tax
Deadweight
Loss!
PE
P1
D0
Q2 QE
Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue
 The
deadweight loss of a tax rises more rapidly
than the tax rate.
– If we double the tax rate, the area of the
triangle hence deadweight loss increases
four times.
 With each increase in the tax rate, tax revenues
will rise slowly, reach a maximum, and then
decline (Laffer Curve).
 In 1974, A. Laffer suggested that the US
economy was in the downward sloping portion
of the Laffer Curve.
Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue
P
Deadweight Loss
PB
PS
Supply
A small tax causes
a small deadweight
loss and raises a
small revenue
Tax
Revenue
Demand
Q2 Q1
Q
Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue
P
Deadweight
Loss
PB
Supply
A larger tax causes a
larger deadweight
loss and raises a
larger revenue
Tax
Revenue
PS
Demand
Q2
Q1
Q
Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue
P
Deadweight
Loss
PB
Tax
Revenue
Supply
A very large tax has a
very large deadweight
loss but may in fact
reduce the revenue.
PS
Demand
Q2
Q1
Q
Tax Size Vs. Revenue and DWL
$
Revenue (Laffer Curve) Deadweight Loss
Tax Size
Case Study:Deadweight Loss Debate
 How
big should the government be?
 The larger the deadweight loss of taxation, the
larger the cost of any government program.
 The most important tax on Canadian economy is
tax on labor
 Economists disagree on the size of deadweight
loss caused by labor taxation. Those who believe
labor tax is highly distorting argue that……
Many workers can adjust the number of hours
they work. Higher the net wage, the more
overtime hours they choose to work.
Case Study:Deadweight Loss Debate
Labor tax affects the decision of the second
earners (usually married women with children) to
work.
 Many retires decision to work also depends on
net wage rate.
 Higher labor tax encourages jobs that pays
“cash under the table.”
When two political candidates debate on
whether to reduce tax, a part of the
disagreement lies on the different views about
elasticity of labor supply.
Costs of Taxation: Conclusion
 When
a tax is imposed on a good, the tax
reduces consumer and producer surplus by an
amount that is greater than the tax revenue
generated.
 The
difference between the decrease in total
consumer and producer surplus and the tax
revenue generated is referred to as the
Deadweight Loss of a tax.
Costs of Taxation: Conclusion
 As
the tax rate gets larger, the deadweight loss
increases more proportionately than the tax
increase.
 With
the increase in the tax rate, the percentage
decrease in market equilibrium quantity
becomes greater. As a result, tax revenues
begin to decrease after some point.