Module 7 TAXATION. Lecture (28 30) Topics

Similar documents
Suggested Solutions to Assignment 3 (Optional)

I. Introduction to Taxation

CHAPTER 1 Introduction to Taxation

The Relationship between Residential Property Development and Property Tax generation in Ibadan North, Oyo State

National Small Business Network

Chapter 4: Key Conclusions from the Evaluation of the Current Washington Tax Structure

Corporate Income Taxation

Lifetime and annual tax progressivity in Sweden

BIG MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT SMALL BUSINESS AND TAXES

Lesson Description. Grade Level. Concepts. Objectives. Content Standards

READING 11: TAXES AND PRIVATE WEALTH MANAGEMENT IN A GLOBAL CONTEXT

CBO STAFF DISTRIBUTIONAL EFFECTS OF SUBSTITUTING A FLAT-RATE INCOME TAX AND AVALUE-ADDEDTAXFORCURRENT FEDERAL INCOME, PAYROLL, AND EXCISE TAXES

Limitations of deductions of interest payments

Slide 1 NTC4M

MEASURING INCOME FOR DISTRIBUTIONAL ANALYSIS. Joseph Rosenberg Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center July 25, 2013 ABSTRACT

Retiree Drug Coverage under the MMA: Issues for Public Comment to Maximize Enhancement in Drug Coverage and Reductions in Drug Costs for Retirees

Notes - Gruber, Public Finance Chapter 20.3 A calculation that finds the optimal income tax in a simple model: Gruber and Saez (2002).

The impact of direct-indirect taxation on consumer

The Property Tax Is a Bad Tax, but It Need Not Be

Public Authority Debt Structure and New York s Future Generations

Holding companies in Ireland

Taxes and the Common Good. A CPJ position statement on taxation

Overview of the Federal Tax System

Chapter 31. Financial Management in Not-for-Profit Businesses

Quantity of trips supplied (millions)

Chapter 9. The IS-LM/AD-AS Model: A General Framework for Macroeconomic Analysis Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved

Tax Subsidies for Private Health Insurance

White Paper Tax Planning with Life Insurance

The Circular Flow of Income and Expenditure

Demand for Health Insurance

CUSTOMER SERVICE SATISFACTION WAVE 4

WHERE DOES WORKING TAX CREDIT GO?

USES OF CONSUMER PRICE INDICES

The GOD'S CHILD Project Gift of Life Insurance

THE USE OF LIFE INSURANCE IN THE BUSINESS MARKET:

Name Eco200: Practice Test 2 Covering Chapters 10 through 15

Problem Set #5-Key. Economics 305-Intermediate Microeconomic Theory

Fall : Final Exam

If you are truly serious about preparing your children for the future, don't teach them to subtract - teach them to deduct.

PENSIONS AT A GLANCE 2011: RETIREMENT-INCOME SYSTEMS IN OECD COUNTRIES GERMANY

The Consequences of Increasing Oregon s Income Tax Deduction for Federal Income Taxes Paid

S.Y.B.COM. (SEM-III) ECONOMICS

Volume Title: The Effects of Taxation on Capital Accumulation. Volume Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Chapter 1 An Introduction to Taxation and Understanding the Federal Tax Law

Chapter 27: Taxation. 27.1: Introduction. 27.2: The Two Prices with a Tax. 27.2: The Pre-Tax Position

Pre-Test Chapter 11 ed17

Impact of the Recommendations

SPEECH BY MINISTER OF FINANCE MR NHLANHLA NENE. South Africa s tax system and the tax reform agenda for 2015 and beyond BER Conference

WHY STUDY PUBLIC FINANCE?

Tax Subsidies for Health Insurance An Issue Brief

SPECIAL REPORT. Beyond the Headlines: What Do Corporations Pay in Income Tax?

HANDOUTS Property Taxation Review Committee

THE MORTGAGE INTEREST DEDUCTION ACROSS ZIP CODES. Benjamin H. Harris and Lucie Parker Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center December 4, 2014 ABSTRACT

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

The Consequences of Increasing Oregon s Income Tax Deduction for Federal Income Taxes Paid

Government intervention

Tax expenditures and public health financing in Australia. Julie Smith

The Public Policy Foundations of Public School Finance

Sarah Dickson Otago University Degree: Law and BA majoring in Economics

Understanding the 2013 Year-End Distributions Table

Charitable Gifts of Life Insurance 1

CHAPTER 12 ALTERNATIVE MINIMUM TAX SOLUTIONS TO PROBLEM MATERIALS. 1 AMT purpose Unchanged 1 2 AMTI: direct versus indirect calculation

The Taxation of Corporate Groups. Consultation Paper

Hawaii Individual Income Tax Statistics

Federal Tax Policy and UNC

5. Defined Benefit and Defined Contribution Plans: Understanding the Differences

Asymmetric Information in Financial Markets: Adverse Selection Moral Hazard. Market For Lemons. Importance of Financial Development for

INCOME TAX REFORM. What Does It Mean for Taxpayers?

Income tax is levied on the income of households and businesses.

Transfer income/payments : payments received by persons from the federal government in the form of cash social service benefits such as pensions.

A Dynamic Analysis of President Obama s Tax Initiatives

Professional Level Skills Module, Paper P4

INCOME TAXES. Government (public) spending, federal income taxes, state income taxes, marginal vs. average tax rates, tax planning

1 Annex 11: Market failure in broadcasting

Chapter 6: Value Added Tax A Major Replacement Alternative

ASSIGNMENT 1 ST SEMESTER : MACROECONOMICS (MAC) ECONOMICS 1 (ECO101) STUDY UNITS COVERED : STUDY UNITS 1 AND 2. DUE DATE : 3:00 p.m.

Current Individual Income Tax Rates 1. Federal Income Taxation Lecture 7 Slide 1

The Charitable Lead Trust: A Creative Way to Give to Charity Now and to Loved Ones Later

Iowa s S Corporation Apportionment Tax Credit. Tax Credits Program Evaluation Study

Foreign Exchange Risk & Business Investment

Charitable giving techniques

NEW YORK STATE TON-MILE TAX ANALYSIS: ESTIMATION OF UNTAXED COMMERCIAL VEHICLE MILES TRAVELLED

AN ANALYSIS OF ROTH CONVERSIONS 1

2. THE ECONOMIC BENEFITS OF EDUCATION

How To Write A Financial Planning Model In European Venture 2015

Interpretation of Financial Statements

APRIL Private Foundation

ANSWERS TO END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS

GIVE AND YOU SHALL RECEIVE CHARITABLE GIVING, CREATING A PLAN THAT S RIGHT FOR YOU

The Role of Government in the Economy

OIL AND GAS IMPACTS AND THE NEED FOR LOCAL REVENUE HOUSE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE SUBCOMMITTEE ON REVENUE

How To Know If A Health Insurance Tax Is Progressive

Where you hold your investments matters. Mutual funds or ETFs? Why life insurance still plays an important estate planning role

Promoting home ownership: How the FairTax s benefits for homeowners exceed the mortgage interest deduction

TREATY ENTITLEMENT OF NON-CIV FUNDS

Kauffman Dissertation Executive Summary

INDIRECT TAXES. Some of the indirect taxes are:

Analysis of School Finance Equity and Local Wealth Measures in Maryland

HIDDEN TAX PREFERENCES AND THE REAL COSTS OF TUITION TAX CREDITS

Property Tax Relief Project Overview

Transcription:

Module 7 TAXATION Lecture (28 30) Topics 7.1 Types of Taxation 7.2 Computing the Tax Base-Definition 7.3 Measuring the Fairness of Tax Systems 7.4 Average and Marginal Tax Rates 7.5 Effective Versus Statutory Rates 7.6 Measuring the Fairness of Tax Systems 7.7 Defining Equity 7.8 Defining the Income Tax Base 7.9 Deviations Due to Ability-to-Pay Considerations 7.10 Deviations Due to the Costs of Earning Income 7.11 Externality/Public Goods Rationales for Deviating From Haig-Simons 7.12 Charitable Giving 7.13 Spending Crowd-Out Versus Tax Subsidy Crowd-In 7.14 The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence 7.15 The Share of Taxes Paid by Corporations has Fallen by Roughly Two-Thirds 7.16 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence 1

7.17 Statutory Vs. Economic Incidence 7.18 Measuring Tax Burden 7.19 Tax Burden Calculation 7.20 Who Bears Statutory Tax does not Affect Tax Burden 2

Module 7 Lecture 28 Topics 7.1 TYPES OF TAXATION This lecture discusses the institutional and theoretical stage for understanding tax policy. The five most common types of taxes are those on: Direct Taxes Individual income Earnings (like capital gains) Corporate income Wealth Indirect tax Consumption 7.2 COMPUTING THE TAX BASE - DEFINITIONS Taxable income is the amount of income left after subtracting exemptions and deductions from AGI. The tax base is the net income on which taxes are paid. It is analogous to taxable income. 7.3 MEASURING THE FAIRNESS OF TAX SYSTEMS Tax fairness is an important concern to citizens worldwide. Yet, notions of what is fair vary across people. There are several common concepts used to measure fairness. 3

7.4 AVERAGE AND MARGINAL TAX RATES First, there are two key concepts to describe the set of tax rates on income. A marginal tax rate is the percentage that is paid in taxes on the additional rupee earned. An average tax rate is the percentage of total income is that is paid in taxes. 7.5 EFFECTIVE VERSUS STATUTORY RATES Another important distinction is between statutory and effective tax rates. Statutory tax rates are tax rates laid out in the legal tax schedule. Effective tax rates are tax rates an individual actually pays. The two diverge because of the host of exemptions and deductions from taxable income, which reduces the tax base. 7.6 MEASURING THE FAIRNESS OF TAX SYSTEMS Tax Systems: A progressive tax system is one in which effective average tax rates rise with income. A proportional tax system is one in which effective average rates do not change with income, so that everyone pays the same proportion of their income in taxes. A regressive tax system is one in which effective average tax rates fall with income. Most analysts would agree that to be (vertically) equitable, the tax system should be progressive. 7.7 DEFINING EQUITY Vertical equity is the principle that groups with more resources should pay higher taxes than groups with fewer resources. Horizontal equity is the principle that similar individuals who make different economic choices should be treated similarly by the tax system. 4

In reality, horizontal inequities are hard to define, because the person endogenously made a choice to earn more or less. We would refer to vertical equity, unless specified otherwise 7.8 DEFINING THE INCOME TAX BASE The Haig-Simons comprehensive income definition defines taxable resources as the change in an individual s ability to consume during the year. It is best viewed as a measure of ability to pay regardless of the actual choices in terms of consumption and savings. In terms of equity, those who have more resources (even through untaxed channels) have higher income. 7.9 DEVIATIONS DUE TO ABILITY-TO-PAY CONSIDERATIONS First, it is challenging to define an individual s ability to pay taxes. Various shocks affect ability to pay, and are used to justify deductions in the actual tax system: Property and casualty losses Medical expenditures State and local income taxes Although these affect ability to pay, they may be choices to some extent. Individuals have some control over medical expenditures, and some of this deduction may represent consumption. Higher state and local tax payments could reflect greater amenities and local public goods. Thus, full deductions for both are hard to justify with the Haig-Simons definition. 5

7.10 DEVIATIONS DUE TO THE COSTS OF EARNING INCOME The other key problem is that some expenditure is not for consumption but reflect the cost of earning a living. Yet, defining legitimate business expenses is difficult for example, part of a business lunch represents consumption, but how much? Some countries allows for 50% of the expenses of such a meal to be deducted. 7.11 EXTERNALITY/PUBLIC GOODS RATIONALES FOR DEVIATING FROM HAIG-SIMONS Some activities yield external benefits to society, which gives a rationale for deviating from the Haig-Simons income definition. Two major deviations that are justified on such grounds are Charitable giving Home ownership. 7.12 CHARITABLE GIVING The private market is likely to underprovide charitable support for many public goods because of the free-rider problem. Because charitable contributions are tax-deductible, the relative price of giving Re1 to charity is Re (1- % tax deduction). The tax treatment yields a benefit (providing a public good) by deviating from the H-S definition. 6