Ramsey Strikes Back: Optimal Commodity Taxes and Redistribution in the Presence of Salience Effects

Author:

Allcott Hunt1,Lockwood Benjamin2,Taubinsky Dmitry3

Affiliation:

1. New York University and NBER (email: )

2. Wharton and NBER (email: )

3. UC Berkeley and NBER (email: )

Abstract

An influential result in modern optimal tax theory, the Atkinson and Stiglitz (1976) theorem, holds that for a broad class of utility functions, all redistribution should be carried out through labor income taxation, rather than differential taxes on commodities or capital. An important requirement for that result is that commodity taxes are known and fully salient when consumers make income-determining choices. This paper allows for the possibility consumers may be inattentive to (or unaware of) some commodity taxes when making choices about income. We show that commodity taxes are useful for redistribution in this setting. In fact, the optimal commodity taxes essentially follow the classic “many person Ramsey rule” (Diamond 1975), scaled by the degree of inattention. As a result, to the extent that commodity taxes are not (fully) salient, goods should be taxed when they are less elastically consumed, and when they are consumed primarily by richer consumers. We extend this result to the setting of corrective taxes, and show how non-salient corrective taxes should be adjusted for distributional reasons.

Publisher

American Economic Association

Cited by 9 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

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2. Inattention and the Taxation Bias;Journal of the European Economic Association;2023-10-06

3. Salience and Taxation with Imperfect Competition;Review of Economic Studies;2023-03-02

4. Redistributive Regulations and Deadweight Loss;Journal of Benefit-Cost Analysis;2023

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