Exam 19: Distortionary Taxes and Subsidies

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Regardless of whether goods are inferior or normal, the deadweight loss from a per-unit tax is always greater the more price elastic the market demand curve for a good.

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Suppose tastes for consumption now and consumption in the future have constant elasticity of substitution.It may then be the case that a tax on interest income is efficient even if savings fall in response to the tax.

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If supply is perfectly elastic in a consumer goods market, a per unit tax will always be inefficient unless the market demand curve for consumers is perfectly inelastic.

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Suppose tastes for consumption now and consumption in the future have constant elasticity of substitution.It may then be the case that a tax on interest income is efficient even if savings (defined as current income not consumed) fall in response to the tax.

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Suppose demand has price elasticity of 1 everywhere and the industry is perfectly competitive with identical firms.In the long run, tax revenue increases as tax rates increase.

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Regardless of how price elastic labor demand curves are, employers are unaffected by wage taxes if labor supply is perfectly inelastic.

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Which of the following is definitely true for a per-unit tax in the goods market where neither demand nor supply is perfectly inelastic:

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To identify the burden of a per-unit tax on consumers, we have to use the aggregate marginal willingness to pay curve whenever the underlying good is not quasilinear.

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A tax on interest income could be efficient even if it leads to a decrease in savings.

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When the leisure demand curve is relatively inelastic, the bulk of the burden of a wage tax falls on workers.

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Which of the following is true about an increase of a per-unit tax in a goods market where the good is quasilinear assuming neither supply nor demand is perfectly inelastic:

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Regardless of the size of wealth and substitution effects for workers, the benefit of a wage subsidy will accrue disproportionately to workers if the labor supply curve is relatively more wage-inelastic than the labor demand curve.

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Under which of the following scenarios does an increase in the wage tax cause a drop in employment but no deadweight loss?

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The larger the wealth effect, the less likely it is that a wage tax will give rise to a Laffer curve that has a downward sloping portion.

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It is usually more efficient to tax a large base at a low rate than to tax a small base at a high rate.

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A wage tax in a labor market with a perfectly inelastic labor supply curve is efficient.

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In perfectly competitive industries with identical firms, consumers always end up paying the entire burden of a per-unit tax on output in the long run.

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Taxes on interest earned from savings are less inefficient

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The consumer-side deadweight loss from a per-unit tax in the goods market arises from solely from the fact that output falls under the tax.

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The economic benefit of a per-unit subsidy accrues disproportionately to the side of the market that is more price-inelastic.

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