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5.4: Taxation, surplus and efficiency

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    108387
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    Despite enormous public interest in taxation and its impact on the economy, it is one of the least understood areas of public policy. In this section we will show how an understanding of two fundamental tools of analysis – elasticities and economic surplus – provides powerful insights into the field of taxation.

    We begin with the simplest of cases: The federal government's goods and services tax (GST) or the provincial governments' sales taxes (PST). These taxes combined vary by province, but we suppose that a typical rate is 13 percent. In some provinces these two taxes are harmonized. Note that this is a percentage, or ad valorem, tax, not a specific tax of so many dollars per unit traded.

    Figure 5.4 The efficiency cost of taxation
    img140.png
    The tax shifts S to St and reduces the quantity traded from Q0 to Qt. At Qt the demand value placed on an additional unit exceeds the supply valuation by EtA. Since the tax keeps output at this lower level, the economy cannot take advantage of the additional potential surplus between Qt and Q0. Excess burden = deadweight loss = AEtE0.

    Figure 5.4 illustrates the supply and demand curves for some commodity. In the absence of taxes, the equilibrium E0 is defined by the combination (P0, Q0).

    A 13-percent tax is now imposed, and the new supply curve St lies 13 percent above the no-tax supply S. A tax wedge is therefore imposed between the price the consumer must pay and the price that the supplier receives. The new equilibrium is Et, and the new market price is at Pt. The price received by the supplier is lower than that paid by the buyer by the amount of the tax wedge. The post-tax supply price is denoted by img97.png.

    There are two burdens associated with this tax. The first is the revenue burden, the amount of tax revenue paid by the market participants and received by the government. On each of the Qt units sold, the government receives the amount img141.png. Therefore, tax revenue is the amount img142.pngAimg97.png. As illustrated in Chapter 4, the degree to which the market price Pt rises above the no-tax price P0 depends on the supply and demand elasticities.

    A tax wedge is the difference between the consumer and producer prices.

    The revenue burden is the amount of tax revenue raised by a tax.

    The second burden of the tax is called the excess burden. The concepts of consumer and producer surpluses help us comprehend this. The effect of the tax has been to reduce consumer surplus by img143.png. This is the reduction in the pre-tax surplus given by the triangle img144.pngBimg145.png. By the same reasoning, supplier surplus is reduced by the amount img146.pngAimg97.png; prior to the tax it was img147.png. Consumers and suppliers have therefore seen a reduction in their well-being that is measured by these dollar amounts. Nonetheless, the government has additional revenues amounting to img142.pngAimg97.png, and this tax imposition therefore represents a transfer from the consumers and suppliers in the marketplace to the government. Ultimately, the citizens should benefit from this revenue when it is used by the government, and it is therefore not considered to be a net loss of surplus.

    However, there remains a part of the surplus loss that is not transferred, the triangular area img148.pngA. This component is called the excess burden, for the reason that it represents the component of the economic surplus that is not transferred to the government in the form of tax revenue. It is also called the deadweight loss, DWL.

    The excess burden, or deadweight loss, of a tax is the component of consumer and producer surpluses forming a net loss to the whole economy.

    The intuition behind this concept is not difficult. At the output img149.png, the value placed by consumers on the last unit supplied is img150.png (img151.png), while the production cost of that last unit is img97.png (=A). But the potential surplus (img152.png) associated with producing an additional unit cannot be realized, because the tax dictates that the production equilibrium is at img149.png rather than any higher output. Thus, if output could be increased from img149.png to img153.png, a surplus of value over cost would be realized on every additional unit equal to the vertical distance between the demand and supply functions D and S. Therefore, the loss associated with the tax is the area img148.pngA.

    In public policy debates, this excess burden is rarely discussed. The reason is that notions of consumer and producer surpluses are not well understood by non-economists, despite the fact that the value of lost surpluses is frequently large. Numerous studies have estimated the excess burden associated with raising an additional dollar from the tax system. They rarely find that the excess burden is less than 25 percent of total expenditure. This is a sobering finding. It tells us that if the government wished to implement a new program by raising additional tax revenue, the benefits of the new program should be 25 percent greater than the amount expended on it!

    The impact of taxes and other influences that result in an inefficient use of the economy's resources are frequently called distortions because they necessarily lead the economy away from the efficient output. The magnitude of the excess burden is determined by the elasticities of supply and demand in the markets where taxes are levied. To see this, return to Figure 5.4, and suppose that the demand curve through E0 were more elastic (with the same supply curve, for simplicity). The post-tax equilibrium Et would now yield a lower Qt value and a price between Pt and P0. The resulting tax revenue raised and the magnitude of the excess burden would differ because of the new elasticity.

    A distortion in resource allocation means that production is not at an efficient output.


    This page titled 5.4: Taxation, surplus and efficiency is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Douglas Curtis and Ian Irvine (Lyryx) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.