- AcademiaImpuestos
- 16/12/2014
This paper deals with optimal income taxation and relative consumption under a welfarist government that fully respects people’s preferences and a paternalist government that does not share the consumer preference for relative consumption. Consistent with previous findings, relative consumption concerns typically lead to higher marginal income tax rates in the welfarist case. A remarkable result is that the optimal tax rules turn out to be very similar when people’s preferences for social comparisons are not respected. Indeed, if the relative consumption concerns are based on mean value comparisons and all consumers are equally positional, or if they are driven by within-type comparisons, the paternalist and welfarist governments can implement their respective first-best allocations through exactly the same marginal income tax formulas. Yet, also in these cases, there are some remaining differences that follow from second-best considerations.
Actualidad
Todas las categorías
-
Academia 171
-
Actualidad 185
-
Ad Concordiam 29
-
Álava / Araba 344
-
Artículos 22
-
Bizkaia 415
-
Concierto Económico 298
-
Cupo 140
-
Difusión 109
-
Europa 235
-
Galería de imágenes 14
-
Gipuzkoa 358
-
Impuestos 660
-
Internacional 58
-
Ituna Newsletter - ES 1
-
Judiciales 80
-
Lucha contra el fraude 55
-
Navarra 115
-
Noticias frescas 477
-
Nuevas publicaciones 78
-
Parlamentos 40
-
Personajes 44
-
Siglo XIX 25
-
Siglo XX 68
-
Siglo XXI 785
-
Varios 42