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Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thom son Learning.
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Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

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Page 1: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Application:The Costs of Taxation

Chapter 8

Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Page 2: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Examine how taxes reduce consumer and producer surplus

learn the meaning and cause of the deadweight loss of a tax

consider why some taxes have larger deadweight losses than others

examine how tax revenue and deadweight loss vary with the size of a tax

Chapter 8 Application:The Cost of Taxation

Page 3: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

The Costs of Taxation

How do taxes affect the economic well-being of market participants?

Page 4: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

The Costs of Taxation

It does not matter whether a tax on a good is levied on buyers or sellers of the good…the price paid by buyers rises, and the price received by sellers falls.

Page 5: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

The Effects of a Tax...Price

0 QuantityQuantity without tax

Supply

Demand

Price without

tax

Price buyers

pay

Quantity with tax

Size of tax

Price sellers

receive

Page 6: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

The Effects of a Tax

A tax places a wedge between the price buyers pay and the price sellers receive.

Because of this tax wedge, the quantity sold falls below the level that would be sold without a tax.

The size of the market for that good shrinks.

Page 7: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Tax Revenue

T = the size of the tax

Q = the quantity of the good sold

TQ = the government’s tax revenue

Page 8: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Tax Revenue...Price

0 QuantityQuantity without tax

Supply

Demand

Price sellers

receive

Quantity with tax

Size of tax (T)

Quantity sold (Q)

Tax Revenue (T x Q)

Price buyers

pay

Page 9: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

How a Tax Affects Welfare...

Quantity0

Price

Demand

Supply

Q1

A

BC

F

D E

Q2

Tax reduces consumer surplus by (B+C) and producer surplus by (D+E)

Tax revenue = (B+D)

Deadweight Loss = (C+E)

Price buyerspay = PB

P1

Price without tax

=

PSPrice sellers receive

=

Page 10: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Changes in Welfare from a Tax

Without Tax With Tax Change

Consumer Surplus A + B + C A - (B + C)

Producer Surplus 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 )

The area C+E shows the fall in total surplus and is the deadweight loss of the tax.

Page 11: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

How a Tax Affects Welfare

The change in total welfare includes: The change in consumer surplus, The change in producer surplus, The change in tax revenue. The losses to buyers and sellers exceed

the revenue raised by the government. This fall in total surplus is called the

deadweight loss.

Page 12: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Deadweight Losses and the Gains from Trade

Taxes cause deadweight losses because they prevent buyers and sellers from realizing some of the gains from trade.

Page 13: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

The Deadweight Loss...

Quantity0

Price

Demand

Supply

Q1

PB

Price = P1

without tax

PS

Q2

Size of tax

Lost gains from trade

Cost to sellers

Value to buyers

Reduction in quantity due to the tax

Page 14: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Determinants of Deadweight Loss

What determines whether the deadweight loss from a tax is large or small?

The magnitude of the deadweight loss depends on how much the quantity supplied and quantity demanded respond to changes in the price.

That, in turn, depends on the price elasticities of supply and demand.

Page 15: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Tax Distortions and Elasticities...

Quantity

Price

Demand

Supply

0

When supply isrelatively inelastic,the deadweight loss of a tax is small.

(a) Inelastic Supply

Size of

tax

Page 16: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Tax Distortions and Elasticities...

Quantity

Price

Demand

Supply

0

Size of

tax

When supply isrelatively elastic,the deadweight loss of a tax is large.

(b) Elastic Supply

Page 17: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Tax Distortions and Elasticities...

Quantity

Price

Demand

Supply

0

When demand isrelatively inelastic,the deadweight loss of a tax is small.

(c) Inelastic Demand

Size of

tax

Page 18: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Tax Distortions and Elasticities...

Quantity

Price

Demand

Supply

0

Size of

tax

When demand isrelatively elastic,the deadweight loss of a tax is large.

(d) Elastic Demand

Page 19: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Determinants of Deadweight Loss

The greater the elasticities of demand and supply: the larger will be the decline in

equilibrium quantity and, the greater the deadweight loss of a tax.

Page 20: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

The Deadweight Loss Debate

Some economists argue that labor taxes are highly distorting and believe

that labor supply is more elastic.

Page 21: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

The Deadweight Loss Debate

Some examples of workers who may respond more to incentives:

Workers who can adjust the number of hours they work

Families with second earners Elderly who can choose when to retire Workers in the underground economy

(i.e. those engaging in illegal activity)

Page 22: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue as Taxes Vary

With each increase in the tax rate, the deadweight loss of the tax rises even more rapidly than

the size of the tax.

Page 23: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue...

PB

QuantityQ20

Price

Q1

Demand

Supply

Tax revenuePS

Deadweightloss

(a) Small Tax

Page 24: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Demand

Supply

Taxrevenue

PB

QuantityQ20

Price

Q1

PS

Deadweightloss

Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue...

(b) Medium Tax

Page 25: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Tax r

even

ue

PB

QuantityQ20

Price

Q1

Demand

Supply

PS

Deadweightloss

Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue...

(c) Large Tax

Page 26: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue

For the small tax, tax revenue is small.

As the size of the tax rises, tax revenue grows.

But as the size of the tax continues to rise, tax revenue falls because the higher tax reduces the size of the market.

Page 27: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue Vary with the Size of the Tax...

(a) Deadweight Loss

DeadweightLoss

0Tax Size

Page 28: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue Vary with the Size of the Tax...

(b) Revenue (the Laffer curve)TaxRevenue

0 Tax Size

Page 29: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue Vary with the Size of the Tax

As the size of a tax increases, its deadweight loss quickly gets larger.

By contrast, tax revenue first rises with the size of a tax; but then, as the tax gets larger, the market shrinks so much that tax revenue starts to fall.

Page 30: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

The Laffer Curve and Supply-Side Economics

The Laffer curve depicts the relationship between tax rates and tax revenue.

Supply-side economics refers to the views of Reagan and Laffer who proposed that a tax cut would induce more people to work and thereby have the potential to increase tax revenues.

Page 31: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Summary

A tax on a good reduces the welfare of buyers and sellers of the good. And the reduction in consumer and producer surplus usually exceeds the revenues raised by the government.

Page 32: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Summary

The fall in total surplus – the sum of consumer surplus, producer surplus, and tax revenue – is called the deadweight loss of the tax.

Page 33: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Summary

Taxes have a deadweight loss because they cause buyers to consume less and sellers to produce less.

This change in behavior shrinks the size of the market below the level that maximizes total surplus.

Page 34: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Summary

As a tax grows larger, it distorts incentives more, and its deadweight loss grows larger.

Tax revenue first rises with the size of a tax.

Eventually, however, a larger tax reduces tax revenue because it reduces the size of the market.

Page 35: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Graphical Review

Page 36: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

The Effects of a Tax...Price

0 QuantityQuantity without tax

Supply

Demand

Price without

tax

Price buyers

pay

Quantity with tax

Size of tax

Price sellers

receive

Page 37: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Tax Revenue...Price

0 QuantityQuantity without tax

Supply

Demand

Price sellers

receive

Quantity with tax

Size of tax (T)

Quantity sold (Q)

Tax Revenue (T x Q)

Price buyers

pay

Page 38: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

How a Tax Affects Welfare...

Quantity0

Price

Demand

Supply

Q1

A

BC

F

D E

Q2

Tax reduces consumer surplus by (B+C) and producer surplus by (D+E)

Tax revenue = (B+D)

Deadweight Loss = (C+E)

Price buyerspay = PB

P1

Price without tax

=

PSPrice sellers receive

=

Page 39: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

The Deadweight Loss...

Quantity0

Price

Demand

Supply

Q1

PB

Price = P1

without tax

PS

Q2

Size of tax

Lost gains from trade

Cost to sellers

Value to buyers

Reduction in quantity due to the tax

Page 40: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Tax Distortions and Elasticities...

Quantity

Price

Demand

Supply

0

When supply isrelatively inelastic,the deadweight loss of a tax is small.

(a) Inelastic Supply

Size of

tax

Page 41: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Tax Distortions and Elasticities...

Quantity

Price

Demand

Supply

0

Size of

tax

When supply isrelatively elastic,the deadweight loss of a tax is large.

(b) Elastic Supply

Page 42: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Tax Distortions and Elasticities...

Quantity

Price

Demand

Supply

0

When demand isrelatively inelastic,the deadweight loss of a tax is small.

(c) Inelastic Demand

Size of

tax

Page 43: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Tax Distortions and Elasticities...

Quantity

Price

Demand

Supply

0

Size of

tax

When demand isrelatively elastic,the deadweight loss of a tax is large.

(d) Elastic Demand

Page 44: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue...

PB

QuantityQ20

Price

Q1

Demand

Supply

Tax revenuePS

Deadweightloss

(a) Small Tax

Page 45: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Demand

Supply

Taxrevenue

PB

QuantityQ20

Price

Q1

PS

Deadweightloss

Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue...

(b) Medium Tax

Page 46: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Tax r

even

ue

PB

QuantityQ20

Price

Q1

Demand

Supply

PS

Deadweightloss

Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue...

(c) Large Tax

Page 47: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue Vary with the Size of the Tax...

(a) Deadweight Loss

DeadweightLoss

0Tax Size

Page 48: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

Deadweight Loss and Tax Revenue Vary with the Size of the Tax...

(b) Revenue (the Laffer curve)TaxRevenue

0 Tax Size

Page 49: Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.

The end

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