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Optimal income taxation with unemployment and wage responses: a sufficient statistics approach

By: Kroft, Kory, Kavan Kucko, and Johannes Schmieder.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: American Economic Journal: Economic Policy Description: 12(1), Feb, 2020: p 254-392.Subject(s): Employment, Unemployment, Wages; Intergenerational income distribution, Aggregate human capital, Aggregate labor productivity In: American Economic Journal: Economic PolicySummary: We derive a sufficient statistics tax formula in a model that incorporates unemployment and endogenous wages to study the shape of the optimal income tax. Key sufficient statistics are the macro employment response to taxation, the micro and macro participation response to taxation, and the wage-moderating effect of tax progressivity. We empirically implement the tax formula by estimating the micro and macro elasticities using policy variation from the United States. Our results suggest that the optimal tax more closely resembles a negative income tax than an earned income tax credit relative to the case where unemployment and wage responses are ignored. - Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
12(1), Feb, 2020: p 254-392 Available AR123221

We derive a sufficient statistics tax formula in a model that incorporates unemployment and endogenous wages to study the shape of the optimal income tax. Key sufficient statistics are the macro employment response to taxation, the micro and macro participation response to taxation, and the wage-moderating effect of tax progressivity. We empirically implement the tax formula by estimating the micro and macro elasticities using policy variation from the United States. Our results suggest that the optimal tax more closely resembles a negative income tax than an earned income tax credit relative to the case where unemployment and wage responses are ignored. - Reproduced

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