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ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7
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ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7. Topics to be covered: 1 a.Indirect taxes b.Excise taxes c.Reasons for levying excise taxes d.Tax rates e.Reasons for.

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Page 1: ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7. Topics to be covered: 1 a.Indirect taxes b.Excise taxes c.Reasons for levying excise taxes d.Tax rates e.Reasons for.

ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE

Lecture 7

Page 2: ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7. Topics to be covered: 1 a.Indirect taxes b.Excise taxes c.Reasons for levying excise taxes d.Tax rates e.Reasons for.

Topics to be covered:

2

a. Indirect taxes

b. Excise taxes

c. Reasons for levying excise taxes

d. Tax rates

e. Reasons for levying excise taxes

f. Indexation of unit excise tax

g. Ad-valorem tax rate

h. Price elasticity of demand of a good

i. Elasticity of demand

j. Turnover tax

k. Determinants of the degree of cascading

l. The ratio of taxed to nontaxed inputs

m. The degree of price pyramiding

n. Indirect taxes that eliminate cascading

o. Tax at the manufacturing level

p. Tax at wholesale level

q. Retail sales tax

Page 3: ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7. Topics to be covered: 1 a.Indirect taxes b.Excise taxes c.Reasons for levying excise taxes d.Tax rates e.Reasons for.

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INDIRECT TAXES

• Types of Indirect Taxes

1. Excise Taxes

Turnover

2. Sales Taxes Single Stage Taxes

VAT

3. Import Tariffs

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• Indirect taxes are the most important source of

revenue in developing countries.

• Mix of indirect taxes differs widely across countries.

Ranking in terms of importance for LDCs is (1) import

duties, (2) excise tax, and (3) sales tax.

• Developed countries ranking is (1) sales taxes, (2)

excise taxes, and (3) import duties.

Indirect Taxes

Page 5: ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7. Topics to be covered: 1 a.Indirect taxes b.Excise taxes c.Reasons for levying excise taxes d.Tax rates e.Reasons for.

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Indirect Taxes (Cont’d)

• Indirect taxes are levied on the consumption of

certain goods and services.

• Individuals can avoid taxes to some extent by

changing their consumption behavior.

• Indirect taxes can distort the market and cause

inefficiency in production and consumption of goods.

Page 6: ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7. Topics to be covered: 1 a.Indirect taxes b.Excise taxes c.Reasons for levying excise taxes d.Tax rates e.Reasons for.

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TypeAmount

(000,000 TL)% of Tax Revenue

% of GDP

Direct taxes 197,988,800 24.95% 8.93%

Indirect taxes 366,680,000 46.20% 16.54%

-VAT 170,000,000 21.42% 7.67%

-Customs 17,480,000 2.20% 0.79%

- Banking & Insurance 7,200,000 0.91% 0.32%

- Fund Rev (price stability fund) 172,000,000 21.67% 7.76%

Social Security Contributions 115,664,000 14.57% 5.22%

Other Non-tax Revenue 113,331,200 14.28% 5.11%

Total Revenues 793,664,000 100.00% 35.80%

GDP 2,216,802,000

Composition of Tax in North Cyprus

2003

Page 7: ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7. Topics to be covered: 1 a.Indirect taxes b.Excise taxes c.Reasons for levying excise taxes d.Tax rates e.Reasons for.

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Excise Taxes

• Excise taxes are levied on specific goods and services e.g. alcoholic beverages,

cigarettes, gasoline, airline tickets.

• The International Monetary Fund (1974, p. 166) defines excise taxes as taxes “levied on particular products, or on a limited range of products may be imposed at any stage of production or distribution and may be assessed by reference either to the weight, strength, or quantity of the product, or by reference to the value.”

• They are one of the earliest forms of taxation.

• Excise means an exit tax. Usually levied when goods leave the door of the

manufacturing firm’s warehouse.

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Reasons for Levying Excise Taxes

1) Revenue generation: Excise taxes are specific, they are usually

levied on goods and services with inelastic demand. To reduce

the cost of collection, products which are homogeneous and have

a small number of producers could be easily taxed. (eg. gasoline,

diesel fuel)

2) Progressivity: Excise duty can be made progressive to some

extent by levying taxes on those goods which are consumed by

people in high income groups. For example, higher tax on cars

with larger engines. Unfortunately often levied in goods

consumed by the poor. For example, alcohol and tobacco.

3) Easy to administer As excise taxes are imposed on selected

goods, it is easy to administer. Number of producers is small and

the goods are often produced by state monopolies. (gasoline,

alcoholic beverage)

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Tax Rates

• Excise taxes can be levied either as a per unit tax or as an

ad-valorem tax.

• If the tax is levied as an amount (dollars or cents) per unit of

a good, the tax is called a per unit or specific tax. The unit of

the good can be measured in weight, volume, or length.

• Tax liability = Quantity x Tax per unit = Q x T

Page 10: ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7. Topics to be covered: 1 a.Indirect taxes b.Excise taxes c.Reasons for levying excise taxes d.Tax rates e.Reasons for.

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Disadvantages of a Unit Tax

• As prices of goods and services increase (with inflation),

the tax revenue remains the same in nominal values.

• The tax revenue decreases in real terms.

• LDCs may experience frequent drops in tax revenue from

unit excise tax since most of them have periods of high

inflation.

• A per unit tax rate needs to be adjusted from time to time

in keeping with the general price increase to maintain a

certain level of revenue.

Advantage of Unit Tax

• Easy to administer because one has only to estimate the

quantity of goods and services transacted.

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Indexation of Unit Excise Tax

• The unit tax can be indexed as follows:

Ttn = Tt

0 x (Ptn Pt

0)

Where

Tt0= unit tax in year "o"

Ttn = unit tax in year "n"

Ptn = price of commodity in year “n"

Pt0 = average price of commodity in year “0"

• If it is not possible or it is inconvenient to index the unit tax

due to frequent price increases or some other reasons, it is

better to adopt an ad-valorem excise tax system.

Page 12: ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7. Topics to be covered: 1 a.Indirect taxes b.Excise taxes c.Reasons for levying excise taxes d.Tax rates e.Reasons for.

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• In an ad-valorem tax system, the excise tax is levied on value of

sales not the number of units sold.

• The tax rate is a percentage of the price of the good or service.

• When the price of the good or service goes up, the tax revenue

also goes up.

Tax liability=Quantity x Tax rate x Price of the good = Q x P x

t

t is the ad-valorem tax rate.

Q is the quantity sold.

P is the price of commodity sold.

Ad-valorem Tax Rate

Page 13: ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7. Topics to be covered: 1 a.Indirect taxes b.Excise taxes c.Reasons for levying excise taxes d.Tax rates e.Reasons for.

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Advantages of advalorem tax

• The ad valorem tax takes care of the frequent increases in prices and does not require indexing of the rate as is the case with the unit tax rate system.

Disadvantages of advalorem tax

• In the ad-valorem system, the tax point to be used has to be chosen carefully.

• Should the excise tax be levied on price or the manufacturer’s price?

• A manufacturer can lower the amount of tax due by selling the good at a very low price to a distribution company he also owns.

• Hence transferring the profits to distributions company.

• The manufacturing price would be lower than the retail price and the tax revenue would also be lower.

• To avoid the loss of tax revenue, the excise tax at the producer level could be levied using the retail price:

Tax on producer = Q x P x tax rate (ad-valorem)

where Q = the quantity produced (including inventories) and P = retail price.

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• As an excise tax is specific to a good, the consumers can

avoid the tax by changing their consumption behavior.

• Consumers can switch to substitutes and thus, the tax

base may be eroded.

• The price elasticity of demand of the good, becomes an

important consideration.

• Excise taxes should preferably be levied on goods which

have inelastic demands.

Price Elasticity of Demand of a Good

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Inelastic Demand Elastic Demand

T1

Tax

Revenue T1

Tax

Revenue

Q1 Q0

Price

Quantity (Output)

Elasticity of Demand

Quantity (Output)

Q1

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Turnover Tax

• The turnover tax is a multistage tax which is imposed

on every transaction or sale between firms and also

to final consumer.

• Since this tax is imposed on all sales, the tax base is

large and the number of taxpayers is also large.

• The cost of administration and compliance increases

as the number of taxpayers increases.

• As the tax base is large, the tax rate can be low and

still it will raise a certain level of revenue.

• Typically, export sales are exempt from the turnover

tax.

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Example:

•If a 10% tax were levied at the retail level (single stage tax), the tax revenue would have been $15.•To realize the same $15 in a multistage tax system, we would need:

385t = 15 t = 3.9%•So, in case of a turnover tax, the rate is low but the tax has to be collected at all levels.

Level/Stage Cost Tax (with tax rate "t")

Producer price 110 110 x t

Wholesale margin 15 125 x t

Retail margin 25 150 x t

Total Cost 150 385 x t

Level Tax

Producer $4

Wholesale $5

Retail $6

Total $15

Page 18: ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7. Topics to be covered: 1 a.Indirect taxes b.Excise taxes c.Reasons for levying excise taxes d.Tax rates e.Reasons for.

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Disadvantages of the Turnover Tax

• The tax base for the turnover tax is large as there are a large

number of taxpayers.

• This increases the administrator and compliance cost of the

tax system.

• If a firm can integrate its activities, the tax can be avoided. In

the above example, if all the three activities of producer,

retailer and wholesaler can be integrated in a single firm, then

the total tax paid would have been $6 =(150) (0.039).

• This reduces the tax revenue.

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Disadvantages of the Turnover Tax (Cont’d)

• A multistage taxes the same item more than once causing a

cascading of the effective rate of tax.

• A Turnover tax can cause effective tax rates to differ across

commodities creating economic efficiency costs.

Advantages of the Turnover Tax

• A turnover tax can collect large amounts of tax revenue as the

tax base is large.

• In Bolivia, where the VAT is 13%, and the turnover tax is only

3%, the collections from the turnover tax are half the total

collections from VAT.

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Determinants of the Degree of Cascading

• The degree to which the true burden of a cascading tax

is passed on to the final consumer depends the

demand and supply elasticities of items i.e. the

degrees which the tax can be shifter forward to

consumers.

(a) Number of production and distribution stages prior to

retail level

(b) Proportion of taxed vs. exempt goods at each stage of

production and distribution

Page 21: ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7. Topics to be covered: 1 a.Indirect taxes b.Excise taxes c.Reasons for levying excise taxes d.Tax rates e.Reasons for.

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Demand and Supply Elasticities and the Forward Shifting of the Tax Burden

P0

P1

T

T’

S’

S D’

DP

Q

P = * P0

* P

(a) Complete forward shifting

P0

P1

T

T’

S’

S D’

D

P

Q

P < * P0

* P

(b) Partial forward shifting

D = 0

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Demand and Supply Elasticities and the Forward Shifting on the Tax Burden (Cont’d)

P1=P0

P1

T

T’

S’

S

D’D

P

Q

P = 0

* P

(c) No forward shifting

P0

P1T

T’

S’S

D’

DP

Q

P = * P0 * P

(d) Complete forward shifting

D = - S =

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The Ratio of Taxed to Nontaxed Inputs

• The magnitude of the tax burden contained in the producer

prices at each stage along the production-chain depends on

the ratio of taxed to nontaxed inputs at that stage, as well as

such ratios at earlier stages.

• The lower these ratios, the smaller the tax burden.

• Food prices, normally contain a relatively low tax

component, as most agricultural inputs used in food

production are tax-exempt.

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The Degree of Price Pyramiding

• Price pyramiding at any given stage of production or distribution

occurs when the seller raises his output price in excess of the tax

burden on his inputs, for example, if he has some monopolistic

power and is, therefore, able to engage in that kind of pricing

behavior. P > MC

• Very little evidence that such pricing behavior occurs in long run.

The number of stages in the production-distribution chain

• The greater the number of stages of production and distribution a

commodity passes through before reaching the final consumer,

the greater the number of times taxed inputs would be subject to

multiple taxation, and the higher the degree of the resultant

cascading

Page 25: ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7. Topics to be covered: 1 a.Indirect taxes b.Excise taxes c.Reasons for levying excise taxes d.Tax rates e.Reasons for.

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• Although turnover tax has obvious weaknesses, it is a powerful instrument for raising revenues in a country lacking a sophisticated tax administration.

• Sometimes a low rate of turnover tax (2 or 3%) is used in addition to a VAT.

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Indirect Taxes that Eliminate CascadingSingle Stage Sales Tax

• Can be levied either at the manufacturing stage, or the wholesale stage or the retail stage.

• Single stage tax avoids cascading and also reduces the problem of tax evasion.

• The tax base in a single stage tax is small as compared to a multistage tax, the tax rate has to be high.

• This can encourage tax evasion. • In a single stage tax system, while the small number of taxpayers

reduces administrative costs, the high tax rate may encourage evasion.

• These two factors work in opposite directions.• Adoption of a multistage tax system or a single stage tax system

may depend upon the country’s level of development and the tendency of evasion among the taxpayers.

• Important issue to determine where is the tax point i.e. who will be a registered taxpayer.

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Tax at the Manufacturing Level

• If the tax is levied at the manufacturing level, all sales to other

producers must be tax exempt while sales to wholesalers,

retailers or final consumers must be taxed.

• This is called ring-fencing.

• This exemption raises the problem of determining those

genuine manufacturers who should be issued licenses that will

allow them to purchase inputs free of tax.

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Tax at the Manufacturing Level (Cont’d)

• A tax at the manufacturing level also creates an

incentive for the firms to reduce their manufacturing

prices and increase the wholesale price that they

charge to the distributors which they will also own.

• This will not reduce the retail price but the tax base

would decrease due to an artificial reduction in

manufacturer's prices.

• The manufacturers can pass on to the wholesalers

they own a part of the additional profits due to the

lower amount of taxes.

Page 29: ECON 635: PUBLIC FINANCE Lecture 7. Topics to be covered: 1 a.Indirect taxes b.Excise taxes c.Reasons for levying excise taxes d.Tax rates e.Reasons for.

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Alternative Sales Prices of Manufacturer

• Since Pwp would be more than Pr

p and Pcp, the lower

prices Prp or Pc

p can encourage erosion of tax base.

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Tax at Wholesale Level

• The tax base will be usually larger than in the case of tax at

manufacturer level, as some additional costs are incurred by the

wholesales in packaging and transportation.

• A smaller tax rate will bring in the same tax revenue.

• The tax on the sales prices wholesalers will encourage some

manufacturers to sell their goods to retailers or final consumers

directly, thereby increasing their own margin on sales.

• A major problem is that there is no homogeneous wholesale sector. It

is being estimated by direct sales of manufacturers to retailers.

• Impossible to design and administrate an effective wholesale level

single stage sales tax.

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Retail Sales TaxAdvantage• As it covers higher value added, the tax base is larger and the tax

revenue would increase.

Disadvantage• As the number of retailers is larger as compared to the manufacturers

and wholesalers, the administrative costs are higher.

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Retail Sales Tax

• In this case the ring fence around the taxpayers is different than in the case of manufacturers level tax.

• Everybody is exempt from tax except the final consumers.

• Manufacturers can use tax free goods as inputs.

• All the retailers have to be registered as taxpayers in order to keep records of the taxes paid.

• If the economy is well developed and the retailers keep proper records/ accounts, it is effective to tax at the retail level.

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Retail Sales Tax

• Large retailers need to have a good sales recording system in order to prevent their employees from stealing.

• If there are a large number of informal sector retailers and record keeping is not satisfactory, there could be a large scale tax evasion. In this case it is better to tax at manufacturers level.

• It is difficult to apply a multiple rate structure with a retail sales tax.

• As the number of taxpayers is large, the administration of a multiple rate system would be more costly.