8 Application: The Costs of Taxation

Similar documents
Chapter 8 Application: The Costs of Taxation

Quantity of trips supplied (millions)

Quantity Tax Incidence Subsidy Welfare Effects Case Study. Equilibrium Chapter 16

chapter >> Consumer and Producer Surplus Section 4: Applying Consumer and Producer Surplus: The Efficiency Costs of a Tax

Chapter 3. The Concept of Elasticity and Consumer and Producer Surplus. Chapter Objectives. Chapter Outline

N. Gregory Mankiw Principles of Economics. Chapter 15. MONOPOLY

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

PAGE 1. Econ Test 2 Fall 2003 Dr. Rupp. Multiple Choice. 1. The price elasticity of demand measures

SUPPLY AND DEMAND : HOW MARKETS WORK

Figure 1, A Monopolistically Competitive Firm

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question on the accompanying scantron.

Monopolistic Competition

ECON 600 Lecture 5: Market Structure - Monopoly. Monopoly: a firm that is the only seller of a good or service with no close substitutes.

Econ 101: Principles of Microeconomics

Gov t Intervention: Price Floors & Price Ceilings / Taxes & Subsidies

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

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Section B. Some Basic Economic Concepts


Chapter 6 Supply, Demand, and Government Policies

Lab 17: Consumer and Producer Surplus

2011 Pearson Education. Elasticities of Demand and Supply: Today add elasticity and slope, cross elasticities

OVERVIEW. 2. If demand is vertical, demand is perfectly inelastic. Every change in price brings no change in quantity.

Microeconomics Topic 3: Understand how various factors shift supply or demand and understand the consequences for equilibrium price and quantity.

Review Question - Chapter 7. MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Elasticity. I. What is Elasticity?

Economics 100 Exam 2

Demand, Supply and Elasticity

Econ 201 Final Exam. Douglas, Fall 2007 Version A Special Codes PLEDGE: I have neither given nor received unauthorized help on this exam.

a. Meaning: The amount (as a percentage of total) that quantity demanded changes as price changes. b. Factors that make demand more price elastic

Exam Prep Questions and Answers

Module 49 Consumer and Producer Surplus

Pre-Test Chapter 26 ed17

MICROECONOMIC PRINCIPLES SPRING 2001 MIDTERM ONE -- Answers. February 16, Table One Labor Hours Needed to Make 1 Pounds Produced in 20 Hours

I. Introduction to Taxation

AP Microeconomics Chapter 12 Outline

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

chapter >> Consumer and Producer Surplus Section 3: Consumer Surplus, Producer Surplus, and the Gains from Trade

Long Run Supply and the Analysis of Competitive Markets. 1 Long Run Competitive Equilibrium

MICROECONOMICS II PROBLEM SET III: MONOPOLY

Jacob: If there is a tax, there is a dead weight loss; why do we speak of a social gain?

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Monopoly and Monopsony Labor Market Behavior

ECON 103, ANSWERS TO HOME WORK ASSIGNMENTS

Tax, Subsidy, and General Equilibrium

Thus MR(Q) = P (Q) Q P (Q 1) (Q 1) < P (Q) Q P (Q) (Q 1) = P (Q), since P (Q 1) > P (Q).

Supply and Demand Fundamental tool of economic analysis Used to discuss unemployment, value of $, protection of the environment, etc.

LABOR UNIONS. Appendix. Key Concepts


Douglas, Spring 2008 February 21, 2008 PLEDGE: I have neither given nor received unauthorized help on this exam.

Employment and Pricing of Inputs

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

Chapter 18. MODERN PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS Third Edition

1. If the price elasticity of demand for a good is.75, the demand for the good can be described as: A) normal. B) elastic. C) inferior. D) inelastic.

Econ 101: Principles of Microeconomics

Economic Efficiency, Government Price Setting, and Taxes

Monopoly WHY MONOPOLIES ARISE

Midterm Exam #2. ECON 101, Section 2 summer 2004 Ying Gao. 1. Print your name and student ID number at the top of this cover sheet.

Maximising Consumer Surplus and Producer Surplus: How do airlines and mobile companies do it?

CEVAPLAR. Solution: a. Given the competitive nature of the industry, Conigan should equate P to MC.

Profit Maximization. 2. product homogeneity

Unit 9: Utility, Externalities, and Factor Markets Lesson 4: Externalities

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Chapter 03 The Concept of Elasticity and Consumer and

Pre-Test Chapter 18 ed17

ELASTICITY Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 3 rd Edition

Problem Set 1 Solutions

Knowledge Enrichment Seminar for Senior Secondary Economics Curriculum. Macroeconomics Series (3): Extension of trade theory

Supplement Unit 1. Demand, Supply, and Adjustments to Dynamic Change

Chapter 14 Monopoly Monopoly and How It Arises

1. Supply and demand are the most important concepts in economics.

Figure 4-1 Price Quantity Quantity Per Pair Demanded Supplied $ $ $ $ $10 2 8

The Circular Flow of Income and Expenditure

Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller

Pricing with Perfect Competition. Business Economics Advanced Pricing Strategies. Pricing with Market Power. Markup Pricing

2007 Thomson South-Western

Final Exam 15 December 2006

Name Eco200: Practice Test 1 Covering Chapters 10 through 15

Elasticities of Demand and Supply

Economics 101 Multiple Choice Questions for Final Examination Miller

Elasticity and Its Application

The economics of the Export-Import Bank: a teaching note

Practice Multiple Choice Questions Answers are bolded. Explanations to come soon!!

Chapter 4 Supply and Demand Macroeconomics In Context (Goodwin, et al.)

Monopoly. E. Glen Weyl. Lecture 8 Price Theory and Market Design Fall University of Chicago

CHAPTER 5 WORKING WITH SUPPLY AND DEMAND Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 2 nd Edition

Chapter 7 Monopoly, Oligopoly and Strategy

Government intervention

CHAPTER 11 PRICE AND OUTPUT IN MONOPOLY, MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION, AND PERFECT COMPETITION

4. According to the graph, assume that Cliff and Paul were both producing wheat and corn, and each were dividing their time equally between the two. T

Elasticity. Ratio of Percentage Changes. Elasticity and Its Application. Price Elasticity of Demand. Price Elasticity of Demand. Elasticity...

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Midterm Exam - Answers. November 3, 2005

Chapter 3 Demand and supply

The formula to measure the rice elastici coefficient is Percentage change in quantity demanded E= Percentage change in price

The Free Market Approach. The Health Care Market. Sellers of Health Care. The Free Market Approach. Real Income

The Taxable Income Elasticity and the Implications of Tax Evasion for Deadweight Loss. Jon Bakija, April 2011

CHAPTER 10 MARKET POWER: MONOPOLY AND MONOPSONY

Workers Total Output Average Marginal

Pre-Test Chapter 25 ed17

Transcription:

Seventh Edition Principles of Economics N. Gregory Mankiw Wojciech Gerson (1831-1901) CHAPTER 8 Application: The Costs of Taxation

In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions How does a tax affect consumer surplus, producer surplus, and total surplus? What is the deadweight loss of a tax? What factors determine the size of this deadweight loss? How does tax revenue depend on the size of the tax?

Review from Chapter 6 A tax drives a wedge between the price buyers pay and the price sellers receive. raises the price buyers pay and lowers the price sellers receive. reduces the quantity bought & sold. These effects are the same whether the tax is imposed on buyers or sellers, so we do not make this distinction in this chapter. 2

The Effects of a Tax Eq m with no tax: Price = P E Quantity = Q E Eq m with tax = $T per unit: P B P E P Size of tax = $T S Buyers pay P B Sellers receive P S Quantity = Q T P S Q T Q E Q 3

The Effects of a Tax P Revenue from tax: $T x Q T P B Size of tax = $T S P E P S Q T Q E Q 4

The Effects of a Tax Next, we apply welfare economics to measure the gains and losses from a tax. We determine consumer surplus (CS), producer surplus (PS), tax revenue, and total surplus with and without the tax. Tax revenue can fund beneficial services (e.g., education, roads, police), so we include it in total surplus. 5

The Effects of a Tax Without a tax, P CS = A + B + C PS = + E + F Tax revenue = 0 Total surplus = CS + PS = A + B + C + + E + F P E A F B C E S Q T Q E Q 6

The Effects of a Tax With the tax, CS = A PS = F Tax revenue = B + Total surplus = A + B + + F P B P S P A F B C E S The tax reduces total surplus by C + E Q T Q E Q 7

The Effects of a Tax P C + E is called the deadweight loss (WL) of the tax, the fall in total surplus that results from a market distortion, such as a tax. P B P S A F B C E S Q T Q Q E 8

About the eadweight Loss Because of the tax, the units between Q T and Q E are not sold. The value of these units to buyers is greater than the cost of producing them, so the tax prevents some mutually beneficial trades. P B P S P Q T Q E S Q 9

ACTIVE LEARNING 1 Analysis of a tax A. Compute CS, PS, and total surplus without a tax. B. If $100 tax per ticket, compute CS, PS, tax revenue, total surplus, and WL. $ 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 P The market for airplane tickets 0 25 50 75 100 125 S Q

ACTIVE LEARNING 1 Answers to A CS = ½ x $200 x 100 = $10,000 PS = ½ x $200 x 100 = $10,000 Total surplus = $10,000 + $10,000 = $20,000 $ 400 350 300 250 P = 200 150 100 50 0 P The market for airplane tickets 0 25 50 75 100 125 S Q

ACTIVE LEARNING 1 Answers to B CS = ½ x $150 x 75 = $5,625 PS = $5,625 Tax revenue = $100 x 75 = $7,500 Total surplus = $18,750 WL = $1,250 $ 400 350 300 P B = 250 200 P S = 150 100 50 0 P A $100 tax on airplane tickets 0 25 50 75 100 125 S Q

What etermines the Size of the WL? Which goods or services should govt tax to raise the revenue it needs? One answer: those with the smallest WL. When is the WL small vs. large? Turns out it depends on the price elasticities of supply and demand. Recall: The price elasticity of demand (or supply) measures how much Q (or Q S ) changes when P changes. 13

WL and the Elasticity of Supply When supply is inelastic, it s harder for firms to leave the market when the tax reduces P S. So, the tax only reduces Q a little, P Size of tax S and WL is small. Q 14

WL and the Elasticity of Supply The more elastic is supply, P the easier for firms to leave the market when the tax reduces P S, the greater Q falls below the surplusmaximizing quantity, the greater the WL. Size of tax S Q 15

WL and the Elasticity of emand P Size of tax S When demand is inelastic, it s harder for consumers to leave the market when the tax raises P B. So, the tax only reduces Q a little, Q and WL is small. 16

WL and the Elasticity of emand P Size of tax S Q The more elastic is demand, the easier for buyers to leave the market when the tax increases P B, the more Q falls below the surplusmaximizing quantity, and the greater the WL. 17

ACTIVE LEARNING 2 Elasticity and the WL of a tax Would the WL of a tax be larger if the tax were on: A. Breakfast cereal or sunscreen? B. Hotel rooms in the short run or hotel rooms in the long run? C. Groceries or meals at fancy restaurants?

ACTIVE LEARNING 2 Answers A. Breakfast cereal or sunscreen From Chapter 5: Breakfast cereal has more close substitutes than sunscreen, so demand for breakfast cereal is more price-elastic than demand for sunscreen. So, a tax on breakfast cereal would cause a larger WL than a tax on sunscreen.

ACTIVE LEARNING 2 Answers B. Hotel rooms in the short run or long run From Chapter 5: The price elasticities of demand and supply for hotel rooms are larger in the long run than in the short run. So, a tax on hotel rooms would cause a larger WL in the long run than in the short run.

ACTIVE LEARNING 2 Answers C. Groceries or meals at fancy restaurants From Chapter 5: Groceries are more of a necessity and therefore less price-elastic than meals at fancy restaurants. So, a tax on restaurant meals would cause a larger WL than a tax on groceries.

ACTIVE LEARNING 3 iscussion question The government must raise tax revenue to pay for schools, police, etc. To do this, it can either tax groceries or meals at fancy restaurants. Which should it tax?

How Big Should the Government Be? A bigger government provides more services, but requires higher taxes, which cause WLs. The larger the WL from taxation, the greater the argument for smaller government. The tax on labor income is especially important; it s the biggest source of govt revenue. For the typical worker, the marginal tax rate (the tax on the last dollar of earnings) is about 40%. How big is the WL from this tax? It depends on elasticity. 23

How Big Should the Government Be? If labor supply is inelastic, then this WL is small. Some economists believe labor supply is inelastic, arguing that most workers work full-time regardless of the wage. 24

How Big Should the Government Be? Other economists believe labor taxes are highly distorting because some groups of workers have elastic supply and can respond to incentives: Many workers can adjust their hours, e.g., by working overtime. Many families have a 2 nd earner with discretion over whether and how much to work. Many elderly choose when to retire based on the wage they earn. Some people work in the underground economy to evade high taxes. 25

The Effects of Changing the Size of the Tax Policymakers often change taxes, raising some and lowering others. What happens to WL and tax revenue when taxes change? We explore this next. 26

WL and the Size of the Tax Initially, the tax is T per unit. P new WL oubling the tax causes the WL to more than double. 2T T initial WL S Q 2 Q 1 Q 27

WL and the Size of the Tax Initially, the tax is T per unit. P new WL Tripling the tax causes the WL to more than triple. 3T T initial WL S Q 3 Q 1 Q 28

WL and the Size of the Tax Implication When tax rates are low, raising them doesn t cause much harm, and lowering them doesn t bring much benefit. When tax rates are high, raising them is very harmful, and cutting them is very beneficial. WL Summary When a tax increases, WL rises even more. Tax size 29

Revenue and the Size of the Tax When the tax is small, increasing it causes tax revenue to rise. P B P B P S P S P 2T T S Q 2 Q 1 Q 30

Revenue and the Size of the Tax P P B P B S When the tax is larger, increasing it causes tax revenue to fall. P S P S 3T 2T Q 3 Q 2 Q 31

Revenue and the Size of the Tax The Laffer curve shows the relationship between the size of the tax and tax revenue. Tax revenue The Laffer curve Tax size 32

Summary A tax on a good reduces the welfare of buyers and sellers. This welfare loss usually exceeds the revenue the tax raises for the govt. The fall in total surplus (consumer surplus, producer surplus, and tax revenue) is called the deadweight loss (WL) of the tax. A tax has a WL because it causes consumers to buy less and producers to sell less, thus shrinking the market below the level that maximizes total surplus.

Summary The price elasticities of demand and supply measure how much buyers and sellers respond to price changes. Therefore, higher elasticities imply higher WLs. An increase in the size of a tax causes the WL to rise even more. An increase in the size of a tax causes revenue to rise at first, but eventually revenue falls because the tax reduces the size of the market.