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Lecture 3. Equality of opportunity. Erik Schokkaert (KULeuven, Department of Economics). Structure. Roemer's model of "equality of opportunity" An application to optimal income taxation An alternative: Van de gaer's approach Comparing different approaches.
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Lecture 3. Equality of opportunity Erik Schokkaert (KULeuven, Department of Economics)
Structure • Roemer's model of "equality of opportunity" • An application to optimal income taxation • An alternative: Van de gaer's approach • Comparing different approaches
1. Roemer's model of "equality of opportunity" • Make a distinction between characteristics for which persons are responsible ("effort") and for which they are not ("circumstances") • Persons who are identical wrt the “compensation characteristics” are of the same “type” • Persons who are identical wrt the “responsibility characterics” have exerted the same “effort” level
Relation between effort and output for various types instruments
"Effort" dependent on type high SES low SES 5 8 cigarettes smoked
Equality of opportunity-criterion • "equalize" outcomes at a given level of π (remember EWEP or EIER!)
Special cases • if everybody has the same π: • if there is only one type: MAXIMIN UTILITARIANISM this is very different from the responsibility axioms in Fleurbaey!
2. Application: optimal income taxation • circumstance (type): level of education of parents • outcome function - instruments φ: post-tax income = (1 – a) x + c therefore: φ=(a,c) • effort is the residual: π in income distribution per type
=> OUTCOME AS A FUNCTION OF π
"Final" objective function: (in the monotonic case) maximize the average income of the worst-off type
Modelling behavioural reactions • individuals have utility function • hence,
Objective function: "maximize the average post-fisc income of the worst-off type": post-tax income = (1-a)x +c
The optimal tax rate • interpretation 1: η • interpretation 2: (B – A)
value of the objective function at the observed policy value of the objective function at the (proportional) benchmark value of the objective function at the EOP-policy
Roemer: Van de gaer: Comparing the rules
both rules coincide: • in the extreme cases (one type OR everybody the same effort) • if there is a dominance relation between the different outcome functions
In general: different intuitions • Compensation of results (Roemer): try to equalize outcomes for different types at the same effort level • Compensation at the level of opportunity sets (Van de gaer): try to equalize the value of opportunity sets of different types • axiomatic analysis in Ooghe, Schokkaert, Van de gaer (Social Choice and Welfare, February 2007)
4. Comparing both approachesSchokkaert, Van de gaer, Vandenbroucke, Luttens (Mathematical Social Sciences, 2004) • Individuals differ in two dimensions • Independently distributed with density functions fw(w) and fe(e) • Quasi-linear utility function (cfr Roemer et al., 2003) • Budget constraint Y=B+(1-t)wL • Labor supply L=(e(1-t)w)εL0
SUBJECTIVE OUTCOME EGALITARIANISM OBJECTIVE OUTCOME EGALITARIANISM SUBJECTIVE OPPORTUNITY EGALITARIANISM OBJECTIVE OPPORTUNITY EGALITARIANISM
Optimal subjective outcome egalitarian tax rate NOTE: worst-off individual has characteristics (eL,,wL) • Smaller than tBI • If eLdecreases (the laziest person in society gets lazier), the optimal marginal tax rate will increase
SUBJECTIVE OUTCOME EGALITARIANISM OBJECTIVE OUTCOME EGALITARIANISM SUBJECTIVE OPPORTUNITY EGALITARIANISM OBJECTIVE OPPORTUNITY EGALITARIANISM
Optimal subjective opportunity egalitarian tax rate • Smaller than optimal subjective outcome egalitarian tax rate • Independent of the distribution of e
SUBJECTIVE OUTCOME EGALITARIANISM OBJECTIVE OUTCOME EGALITARIANISM SUBJECTIVE OPPORTUNITY EGALITARIANISM OBJECTIVE OPPORTUNITY EGALITARIANISM
tE(A) tBI tE(W) g (eL, wL) (1,1) (1,wL)
Objective egalitarianism and subjective Pareto-efficiency 1 • Individuals with larger values of (larger labor income) prefer a lower tax rate • Tax rates are not Pareto-efficient if • smaller than tax rate preferred by (1,1) - easily possible for large values of g (e.g. income as advantage); • larger than tax rate preferred by (eL, wL) - definitely true for low values of g.
Objective egalitarianism and subjective Pareto-efficiency 2 • Political feasibility? (but then why not go for the option of the median voter?) • Ethical trade-offs: • Pareto-efficiency as a side-constraint • reject subjectivism altogether (extreme case of laundering subjective preferences?)
SUBJECTIVE OUTCOME EGALITARIANISM OBJECTIVE OUTCOME EGALITARIANISM SUBJECTIVE OPPORTUNITY EGALITARIANISM OBJECTIVE OPPORTUNITY EGALITARIANISM
tI(A) tS(A) tBI tE(W) g
tE(A) tI(A) tS(A) tBI tE(W) g
Optimal tax rates (subjective cases) introducing opportunity considerations has a minor influence important effects of ε
Results for ε=0.30 introducing “advantage” matters for low values of g Introducing opportunity considerations has a minor influence
ε = 0.06 versus ε=1 Effects of ε: (a) level of optimal tax; (b) breakpoint
Conclusion • It is possible to derive operational tax rules from rather complex objective functions • Real debate is about the choice of the objective function • How to interpret equality of opportunity? • How to trade off compensation versus responsibility? • Where do “reference preferences” come from? • What about (subjective) Pareto-efficiency? How to correct "happiness" measures?