Application: The Costs of Taxation

  • Welfare economics: study of how resource allocation affects economic well-being.
  • Buyers and sellers benefit from market participation.
  • Market equilibrium maximizes total welfare.

THE DEADWEIGHT LOSS OF TAXATION

  • Taxes impact economic well-being of market participants.
  • Tax on buyers or sellers leads to price changes.
  • Tax places a wedge between buyer and seller prices.
  • Quantity sold falls below the untaxed level.

How a Tax Affects Market Participants

  • Tax revenue: T (size of tax) * Q (quantity sold).
  • Deadweight loss: fall in total surplus due to market distortion.

Changes in Welfare

  • Change in consumer surplus.
  • Change in producer surplus.
  • Change in tax revenue.
  • Deadweight loss exceeds government revenue.

Deadweight Losses and the Gains from Trade

  • Taxes cause deadweight losses, preventing full gains from trade.

DETERMINANTS OF THE DEADWEIGHT LOSS

  • Deadweight loss magnitude depends on elasticities of supply and demand.

The greater the elasticities of demand and supply:

  • Larger decline in equilibrium quantity.
  • Greater deadweight loss of a tax.

The Deadweight Loss Debate

  • Labor taxes seen as highly distorting.
  • Elastic labor supply examples: adjustable hours, second earners, elderly, underground economy.

DEADWEIGHT LOSS AND TAX REVENUE AS TAXES VARY

  • Deadweight loss rises more rapidly than tax size.

For the small tax:

  • Tax revenue is small.

As the tax size increases:

  • Tax revenue grows initially.
  • Market shrinks, tax revenue falls.

As the tax size continues to rise:

  • Deadweight loss grows larger.

CASE STUDY: The Laffer Curve and Supply-side Economics

  • Laffer curve: relationship between tax rates and revenue.
  • Supply-side economics: tax cuts induce more work, potentially increasing tax revenues.

Summary

  • Tax on a good reduces welfare for buyers and sellers.
  • Deadweight loss includes reduced consumer and producer surplus, exceeding tax revenue.
  • Taxes cause buyers to consume less and sellers to produce less.
  • Larger taxes distort incentives more, increasing deadweight loss.
  • Tax revenue initially rises, then falls as the tax size increases.
  • The Laffer curve explores the relationship between tax rates and revenue in supply-side economics.