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Discriminatory Taxes are Unpopular: Even when they are Efficient and Distributionally Fair

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

We explore the political acceptance of taxation in commodity markets. Participants in our experiment earn incomes by trading and must collectively choose one of the two tax regimes to raise a given tax revenue. A “uniform tax” (UT) imposes the same tax rate on all markets and is fair in that it yields the same – but low – income to participants in all markets. The “discriminatory tax” (DT) imposes a higher burden on markets with inelastic demand and is therefore efficient but it is also unfair in that incomes are unequal across markets. We find that DT is unpopular, as predicted. Surprisingly, however, DT remains unpopular when they are both efficient and produce a fair (equal) distribution. We conclude that non-discrimination (equal treatment) is a salient fairness principle in taxation that shapes voting on commodity taxes above and beyond concerns for efficiency and equal distribution
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)463-476
Number of pages14
JournalJournal of Economic Behavior & Organization
Volume108
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 502045 Behavioural economics
  • 502024 Public economy
  • 502038 Taxation

Keywords

  • IB
  • Cat2
  • VWL
  • VCEE
  • Behavioral public economics
  • Voting
  • Efficiency
  • Taxation
  • Fairness

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