Should-Read: Greg Leiserson: U.S. Inequality and Recent Tax Changes
Should-Read: Greg Leiserson: U.S. Inequality and Recent Tax Changes: “Distribution tables provide a first-order approximation to the change in welfare…
…Change in welfare determined primarily by changes outside the agent’s control: mechanical change in tax and changes in relative prices:
- Behavioral changes have no first-order impact on the well-being of the person changing behavior
(envelope theorem)- Recipe for constructing distribution tables that are informative about welfare:
- compute change in tax liabilities and relative price effects (i.e. incidence assumptions)
- exclude behavioral changes reflecting unconstrained, rational choice
- include other behavioral changes (easier said than done, esp. when there are quantitatively
important market failures)- Converting dollar change in after-tax income into utility requires an assumption about the marginal utility of income (e.g. 1/after-tax income)
- Conceptual difference between individual or family’s marginal utility and social welfare weights
used to evaluate redistributive policies- Policymakers’ desire for distribution tables may not reflect an ex ante desire for information about
welfare impacts, but plausible that the desire for tables excluding behavioral changes/sample families is
an implicit recognition that those changes are different…
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