ECON 200 Chapter Notes - Chapter 20: Flat Tax, Tax Rate, Keynesian Economics

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31 Jan 2018
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Taxes pay for public goods and services, including national defense, highways, public schools, and roads. The tax wedge lowers the equilibrium quantity of the good or service being consumed. The value is thus transferred, but not lost: deadweight loss, in contrast, just disappears. Neither buyers nor sellers nor recipients of government services benefit from it: taxes on an efficient market cause the demand curve for the good to shift downward by the amount of tax. This tax is very efficient because the tax must be paid regardless of what taxpayers do: administrative burden, the logistical costs associated with implementing a tax are called the administrative burden. For income taxes, for example, this means multiplying the tax per dollar of income by the number of dollars of income. However, the elasticity of the labor supply with respect to taxes is very low for most people; people will not work harder when they are taxed less.

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