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Micro Chapter 29 . Presentation 1- Tax Incidence. Public Choice Theory. Economic analysis of government decision making, politics and elections ***majority voting can lead to inefficiency and inconsistency. Tax Incidence. The person or group that pays for the tax. P. 14. 12. 10.
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Micro Chapter 29 Presentation 1- Tax Incidence
Public Choice Theory • Economic analysis of government decision making, politics and elections • ***majority voting can lead to inefficiency and inconsistency
Tax Incidence • The person or group that pays for the tax
P 14 12 10 Price (Per Bottle) 8 6 4 2 0 5 10 15 20 25 Q Quantity (Millions of Bottles Per Month) Tax Incidence Efficiency Loss of a Tax S’ Tax Paid by Consumers S Tax $2 Efficiency Loss (or Deadweight Loss) Tax Paid by Producers D
P P 0 0 Q Q Tax Incidence Demand Elasticity and the Incidence of an Excise Tax St St Tax Tax S S a Pi a Pe b P1 P1 b De Pb Pa c c Dt Q2 Q1 Q2 Q1 Tax Incidence and Elastic Demand- burden on the supplier Tax Incidence and Inelastic Demand- burden on the consumer
P P 0 0 Q Q Tax Incidence Supply Elasticity and the Incidence of an Excise Tax St S Tax Tax St a Pe S a Pi b b P1 P1 Pa c Pb c D D Q1 Q1 Q2 Q2 Tax Incidence and Elastic Supply- consumers pay Tax Incidence and Inelastic Supply- producers pay
Logrolling • The trading of votes by legislators to secure favorable outcomes on decisions concerning the provisions of public and quasi-public goods (ie education, fire protection)
Paradox of Voting • A situation where paired-choice voting by a majority rule fails to provide a consistent ranking of society’s preferences for public goods or services • **may be skewed by the order of the vote- voter apathy
Median Voter Model • Theory that under majority rule the middle voter will be in the dominant position to determine the outcome of an election • Ex- extreme voters prefer middle option over the other extreme
Implications of the Median Voter Model • 1. dissatisfied voters because they either favor more or less government intervention • 2. people “vote with their feet”- move to locations with similar voters
Rent-Seeking Behavior • The appeal to government at taxpayers’ or someone else’s expense • EX- gov’t construction projects to union laborers • Large subsidies to farmers • High tariffs on imported goods
Government Failure • Inefficiencies in resource allocation • Caused by pressure from special interest groups, short-sighted political behavior, and bureaucratic inefficiency
Special Interest Effect • Any result of government promotion of the interests of a small group at the expense of a much larger group • Small number of people obtain a government policy/program that gives them large gains at the expense of a larger group
Pork Barrel Politics • Securing government funds for local projects that benefit only a small amount of constituents while paid for by a large scattering of tax-payers • Added to a non-related bill to obtain votes
Benefits Received Principle • Those who benefit most from government-supplied goods or services should pay the taxes necessary to finance them • EX- gasoline taxes used for highway repairs
Problems with Benefits Received • 1. Very difficult to measure how much individuals benefit from public goods • 2. Tax unemployed workers for unemployment benefits?
Ability-to-Pay Principle • The tax burden should be apportioned according to the taxpayers’ income and wealth