public finance and expenditure
TRANSCRIPT
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Chapter 18 Public Finance: Expenditures and
TaxesCopyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
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18-2
Government and the Circular Flow
(1) Costs
RESOURCEMARKET
PRODUCTMARKET
BUSINESSES HOUSEHOLDS
(4)Goods and services
(7)Expenditures
(8)Resources
(9)Goods and services
(4)Goods and services
(10)Goods and services
Net taxes(12)
Net taxes(11)
(3) Consumption expenditures(3) Revenues
GOVERNMENT
(2) Land, labor, capital
Entrepreneurial Ability
(2) Resources
(5) Expenditures (6) Goods and services
LO1
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18-3
Government Finance
• Government purchases• Exhaustive
• Transfer payments• Nonexhaustive
• Borrowing and deficit spending• Opportunity cost is low during recession;
high during growth
LO2
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18-4
Government Finance
19.6%
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0 2012
1960
GovernmentPurchases
Governmenttransfer payments
22%
15.3%5%
Year
Perc
enta
ge o
f U.S
. out
put
Government purchases, transfers, and total spending as percentages of U.S. output, 1960 and 2012
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18-5
Global Perspective
LO2
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18-6
Federal Expenditures
LO3
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18-7
Federal Tax Revenues
• Personal income tax• Progressive tax• Marginal tax rate
• Payroll taxes• Corporate income tax• Excise taxes
LO3
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18-8
Federal Tax Revenues
(1)Total Taxable
Income
(2)Marginal Tax
Rate, %
(3)Total Tax
on HighestIncome inBracket
(4) Average Tax Rate on
Highest Income in Bracket % (3) / (1)
$1-$17,850 10 $ 1785 10
$17,851-$72,500 15 9983 14
$72,501-$146,400 25 28,458 19
$146,401-$223,050 28 49,920 22
$223,051-$398,350 33 107,769 27
$398,351-$450,000 35 125,847 28
$450,001 and above 39.6
Federal Personal Tax Rates, 2013*
* For a married couple filing a joint returnLO3
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18-9
State Finances
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18-10
Local Finances
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18-11
Local, State, and Federal Employment
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18-12
Apportioning the Tax Burden
• Size, distribution, and impact of the costs that taxes impose on society
• Benefits-received principle• Ability-to-pay principle
LO6
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18-13
Apportioning the Tax Burden
• Progressive tax – average tax rates increase as income increases
• Regressive tax – average tax rate declines as income increases
• Proportional tax – average rate stays the same as income increases
LO6
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18-14
Apportioning the Tax Burden
• Applications• Personal income tax: progressive• Sales tax: regressive• Corporate tax: proportional• Payroll tax: regressive
LO6
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18-15
Tax Incidence and Efficiency Loss
• Tax incidence• Who really pays the tax?
• Excise tax• Tax burden depends on elasticity• Inelastic vs. elastic• Efficiency loss/deadweight loss• Transfer of surplus to government
LO7
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18-16
Elasticity and Tax Incidence
Pric
e (P
er B
ottl
e)
Quantity(Millions of Bottles Per Month)
S
D
St
Tax $2
LO7
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18-17
Elasticity and Tax Incidence
Elastic Demand Inelastic demand
Tax
a
b
c
a
b
0Q2
P1
Q1
P
Pe
Smaller efficiency loss with inelastic demand
St
S
De
Di
c
STax
St
P1
PPb
Q2 Q1
Pa
P
LO7
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18-18
Elasticity and Tax Incidence
Elastic Supply Inelastic Supply
Smaller efficiency loss with inelastic supply
D D
S
SSt
St
P1Pa
PeP1
Pb
Pi
Q1Q2 Q1Q2
Tax Tax
aa
bb
c
c
0
P P
0 QQ
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18-19
Efficiency Loss of a Tax
Pric
e (P
er B
ottl
e)
Quantity(Millions of Bottles Per Month)
S
D
St
Tax $2
Tax paidby consumers
5 10 15 20 25 Q
P
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
Tax paidby producers
Efficiency loss (ordeadweight loss)
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18-20
Global Perspective
LO8
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18-21
Probable Incidence of U.S. Taxes
Type of tax Probable Incidence
Personal income tax
The household or individual on which it is levied
Payroll taxes Workers pay the full tax levied on their earnings and partof the tax levied on their employers
Corporate income tax
Short Run: Full tax falls on owners of the businessesLong Run: Some of the tax may be borne by workers through lower wages
Sales tax Consumers who buy the taxed products
Specific excise taxes
Consumers, producers or both, depending on elasticities of supply and demand
Property Taxes Owners in the case of land and owner-occupied residences, tenants in the case of rented property, consumers in the case of business property
LO8
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18-22
The U.S. Tax Structure
• The Federal tax system is progressive.• The state and local tax structures are largely
regressive• The overall U.S. tax system is progressive
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18-23
Redistribution vs. Recycling
• Distribution of income• Taxes taken from the rich• Do they to flow to the poor?
• Shows income is transferred to the poor• Bottom 40% received more government
spending than they paid in taxes• Top 40% paid more in taxes than they
received in government spending
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18-24
Redistribution vs. Recycling