Taxation of Carried Interest in Private Equity - Weisbach Apr-2008
Taxation and Equity ADE Fall 2015-2016 Department of Public Economics 1.
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Transcript of Taxation and Equity ADE Fall 2015-2016 Department of Public Economics 1.
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Taxation and Equity
ADEFall 2015-2016
Department of Public Economics
1
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Outline
1. Introduction: What do we mean by equity and why does it matter?
2. The benefit principle
2.1. Definition
2.2. Provision of private goods
2.3. Provision of public goods
2.4. Advantages and drawbacks
3. The ability-to-pay principle
3.1. Definition
3.2. Indicators of the ability-to-pay
3.3. Definition of vertical equity
3.4. Measures of progressivity
3.5. Advantages and drawbacks
4. Summary - key points
2
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Introduction: What do we mean by equity?
• There are different types of public services:
a) A concert in a town’s celebration
b) Healthcare
c) Trash collection
d) Universities
e) Roads
•Should these all be funded in the same way?
3
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Introduction: What do we mean by equity?
4
• Both the French and American revolutions were (at least in part) the result of unfair taxation!
• A British poll tax lead to Thatcher being forced out
The question of how these are funded is very important since it will determine the degree of social acceptance of the tax system
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Introduction: What do we mean by equity?
5
Pareto efficient taxation:
A given level of revenue should be raised by a tax structure such that no one can be made better of without making someone else worse off
The choice among those Pareto efficient structures depends on the social welfare function
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[A short recap: Pareto efficiency]
6Source: Rosen and Gayer
• An allocation is Pareto efficient if no one can be made better off without making at least one individual worse off.
• A case, you probably know: the Contract Curve
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A2
A1
Ax2
Ax1
More preferred
OA
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Bx2
Bx1
More preferred
For consumer B.
OB
B2
B1
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B2
B1
Bx1
Bx2
More preferred
For consumer B.OB
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Edgeworth’s Box
A2
A1
Ax2
Ax1
OA
B2
B1
Bx1
Bx2
OB
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Pareto-Improvement
• An allocation of the endowment that improves the welfare of a consumer without reducing the welfare of another is a Pareto-improving allocation
• Where are the Pareto-improving allocations?
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Pareto-Improvements
A2
A1
Ax2
Ax1
OA
B2
B1
Bx1
Bx2
OB
The set of Pareto-improving allocations
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Person i
Person j
0
0’
y
x
ig
jgg
p1
p
jp2
ip2
p2
p3
p4
The contract curve
[A short recap: Pareto efficiency]
Source: Rosen and Gayer
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Introduction: What do we mean by equity?
14
Fairness (equity) depends on the social welfare function the policy maker applies. Limiting cases are associated with Jeremy Bentham and John Rawls:
1. Objective of Utilitarianism (Bentham): seeking “the greatest good for the greatest number”
• social welfare is defined by the sum of the utilities of the people in the population
• distribution of utilities doesn’t matter here
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Introduction: What do we mean by equity?
15
Fairness (equity) depends on the social welfare function the policy maker applies. Limiting cases are associated with Jeremy Bentham and John Rawls:
1. Objective of Utilitarianism (Bentham): seeking “the greatest good for the greatest number”
• social welfare is defined by the sum of the utilities of the people in the population
• distribution of utilities doesn’t matter here
Assumption: utility is measurable!
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Introduction: What do we mean by equity?
16
2. Objective of Rawlsianism (Rawls): maximizing the welfare of the worst-off individual
• society is as strong as its weakest link• veil of ignorance
• welfare is maximized when the welfare of the individual with the lowest utility is maximized – distribution matters.
)
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Objective of Utilitarianism (Bentham) Example: Utility Possibilities Curve
j’s utility
i’s u
tility
U
U
p3
q
p1
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Objective of Utilitarianism (Bentham)Example: Social Indifference Curve
j’s utility
i’s u
tility W = F(Ui, Uj)
Increasingsocialwelfare
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Objective of Utilitarianism (Bentham) Example: Maximizing Social Welfare
j’s utility
i’s u
tility
i
ii
iii
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Objective of Rawlsianism (Rawls)Example: Maximizing Social Welfare
j’s utility
i’s u
tility
ii)
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Rawls Vs BenthamExample: Maximizing Social Welfare
j’s utility
i’s u
tility
i
ii
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Rawls Vs BenthamExample: Maximizing Social Welfare
j’s utility
i’s u
tility
i
ii
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Rawls Vs BenthamExample: Maximizing Social Welfare
j’s utility
i’s u
tility
i
ii
Preferred by Bentham
Preferred by Rawls
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Introduction: What do we mean by equity?
24
„The subjects of every state ought to contribute towards the support of thegovernment as nearly as possible in proportion to their respective abilities; that is in proportion to the revenue which they respectively enjoy under the protection of the state.”
Source: Smith (1776), Book V, Ch. II, Part II, p. 310
Long historical debate:
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There are two main principles of tax equity (or fairness):
a) The benefit principle
b) The ability-to-pay principle
Introduction: Requirements of equity
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Introduction: Requirements of equity
26
Two principles:
• Horizontal Equity: treat equal people in an equal way
• Vertical Equity: treat different people in different ways
How do we decide who is equal (unequal) to whom?
On what basis do we decide?
• Income?• Wage rate?• Wealth?• Consumption?• Total utility?• Benefit gained from public expenditure?
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Introduction: Requirements of equity
Not as obvious as it seems: Income means also effort!
• Feldstein (1976 JPubE) - On the Theory of Tax Reform translated the principles of equitable taxation into:
• Feldstein’s Horizontal Equity Principle: Two people with the same utility before taxation must have the same utility after taxation.
• Feldstein’s Vertical Equity Principle (No-Reversals Principle): If person i has greater utility than person j before taxation, then person i must have greater utility than person j after taxation.
27
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• Discussed by early thinkers(Locke, Rousseau, Bentham,Mill, and Smith)
• Definition: a tax system is equitable (or fair) if every citizen contributes to the cost of the public goods according to:
a) the benefit received from the Public Sectorb) independently of the ability-to-pay
Smart people benefit more from school. Should smart people pay more taxes?
The Benefit Principle
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• Examples of public revenues according to the benefit principle: • Fees • Public prices • Copayments
• What about straightforward transfers of wealth?• Pensions • Unemployment Benefit approach is not appropriate for these
• Important distinction: Public vs. private goods Numerical example
The Benefit Principle
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[A short recap: Public and private goods]
30
rival
excludable
yes no
yesprivate good(e.g. medical
visits)
natural monopoly
nocommon resource
public good(e.g.
fireworks)
Source: Rosen and Gayer
NOTE: the State can provide both private goods and public goodsNOTE2: not all public goods are provided by the State
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Private goods provided by the public sector:
• the individuals consume different quantities of goods (given that the private goods are excludable and rivalrous).
• Payment according to the quantity consumed:
The Benefit Principle: Private Goods
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The case of medical visits
Question: What are the individual payments given two demand functions and a supply function?
Assumption: Two individuals i=1,2 with the demand functions for medical service:
D1: q1=5-p1
D2: q2=7-p2
The Benefit Principle: Private Goods - Example
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Step 1: Demand function
The aggregated demand is the horizontal aggregation of individual demands (since the total quantity consumed equals the quantities consumed by each individual). Given that p=p1=p2:
The Benefit Principle: Private Goods - Example
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Graphically:
D1+D2
D1 D2
5 7
5
7
12
The Benefit Principle: Private Goods
P
Q
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Step 1: Demand function
The aggregated demand is the horizontal aggregation of individual demands (since the total quantity consumed equals the quantities consumed by each individual). Given that p=p1=p2:
D1+D2: q=q1+q2=(5-p1)+(7-p2)=12-2*p for p<5
q=q2=7-p for p>5 (given that q1=0 for p>5)
The Benefit Principle: Private Goods - Example
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Assumption: The supply of medical service is S: q=1+p
The good will be provided efficiently if: MU1=MU2=MC. This condition exists in equilibrium (D1+D2=S)
Step 2: Calculation the equilibrium price and quantities
S: q=1+p, D: q=12-2p, 12-2p=1+p, 3p=11, p=11/3
Solution: p=3.6
andq1=1.3q2=3.3
The Benefit Principle: Private Goods - Example
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Graphically:
S
D1+D2
D1 D2
5 7
5
7
12
The Benefit Principle: Private Goods
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Assumption: The supply of medical service is S: q=1+p
The good will be provided efficiently if: MU1=MU2=MC. This condition exists in equilibrium (D1+D2=S)
Step 2: Calculation the equilibrium price and quantities
S: q=1+p, D: q=12-2p, 12-2p=1+p, 3p=11, p=11/3
Solution: p=3.6
andq1=1.3q2=3.3
The Benefit Principle: Private Goods - Example
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Graphically:
q=4.6
S
D1+D2
p=3.6
D1 D2
5 7
5
7
12 q2=3.3 q1=1.3
The Benefit Principle: Private Goods
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Assumption: The supply of medical service is S: q=1+p
The good will be provided efficiently if: MU1=MU2=MC. This condition exists in equilibrium (D1+D2=S)
Step 2: Calculation the equilibrium price and quantities
Solution: p=3.6
andq1=1.3q2=3.3
Step 3: Calculate the individual contributions
Solution: Individual 1 pays: T1=p*q1=3.6*1.3=4.7Individual 2 pays: T2=p*q2=3.6*3.3=11.9
The Benefit Principle: Private Goods - Example
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• The individuals consume the same quantity (remember: public goods are nonexludable and nonrivalrous).
• Payment according to the utility function that the good produces:
The Benefit Principle: Public Goods
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The case of fireworks ina town’s celebration
Assumption: 2 individuals i=1, 2 with the next demand functionsof fireworks:
D1: p1=5-q1
D2: p2=7-q2
The Benefit Principle: Public Goods
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Step 1: Demand function
The aggregated demand is the vertical aggregation of individual demands (since the sum of the prices paid by each individual must defray the cost of the total quantity of the public good). Given that q=q1=q2:
D1+D2: p=p1+p2=(5-q1)+(7-q2)=12-2*q for q<=5
p=p2=7-q for q>5 (given that p1=0 for q>5)
The Benefit Principle: Public Goods
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D1+D2
D1 D2
5 7
5
7
12
The Benefit Principle: Public Goods
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Assumption: The supply of fireworks is S: p=q-1
The good will be provided efficiently if: MU1+MU2=MC (Samuelson condition). This condition exists in equilibrium (D1+D2=S), that comes given by:
The Benefit Principle: Public Goods
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SD1+D2
D1 D2
5 7
5
7
12
The Benefit Principle: Public Goods
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Assumption: The supply of fireworks is S: p=q-1
The good will be provided efficiently if: MU1+MU2=MC (Samuelson condition). This condition exists in equilibrium (D1+D2=S), that comes given by:
Step 2: Calculation the equilibrium price and quantities
Solution: q=4.3
and p1=0.7 p2=2.7
Step 3: Calculate the individual contributions
Solution: Individual 1 pays : T1=q*p1=4.3*0.7=3Individual 2 pays: T2=q*p2=4.3*2.7=11.6
The Benefit Principle: Public Goods
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q=4.3
SD1+D2
p=p1+p2=3.4
p2=2.7
p1=0.7D1 D2
5 7
5
7
12
The Benefit Principle: Public Goods
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Advantage: the co-payment (financing a part of the price according to the benefit principle) might rationalize the demand of public goods
Limitation: the provision of a pure public good is suboptimum since the impossibility to observe the individuals’ marginal utilities (the free-rider problem).
Drawback: even when it’s efficient (case of private goods provided by the public sector) isn’t desirable because:
a) The majority of private goods provided by the public sector (transfer payments, education(?)) have a preferential and redistributive nature.
b) Cannot finance redistributive policy
These two drawbacks explain why the taxes based on the benefit principle (public prices, fees) are of a little importance (quantitatively). In practice, the majority of the collection is based on the ability-to-pay principle.
The Benefit Principle: Advantages and drawbacks
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The Ability-to-pay Principle: Definition
Every taxpayer pays taxes according to:
a) The ability to pay
b) independently of the benefits obtained from the public sector
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What do we mean by “ability to pay”?• Income?
• Capital gains, gifts, lottery winnings?• What about the individual’s circumstances?• Double taxation on saving (taxing income and returns on saving)
• Expenditure? • Hobbes:
• Saving and investment are beneficial (pro-social)• Consumption is anti-social (taking things out of the common pool)
• Progressive taxation easier with income
Many countries tax income and expenditure using the ability to pay approach most often
The Ability-to-pay Principle: Definition
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Y
U(Y)• ASSUMPTION: Utility (U) is a
concave function of income
• Should taxes be set such that:
• Everyone’s utility falls by the same amount absolutely?
• Everyone’s utility falls by the same amount proportionally?
The Ability-to-pay Principle: Vertical equity
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Tl
Y
U(Y)
Th
d
d
YhYl
• To make the reduction of welfare (U) equal (in absolute terms) for every taxpayer (d), the tax has to be larger for the taxpayer with greater income (Yh)
• BUT, HOW MUCH LARGER?
• Th must be even larger if we want the change in utility to be equi-proportional
The Ability-to-pay Principle: Vertical equity
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There are 3 options:
• Progressive taxes: the tax increases proportionally in income
• Proportional taxes: the tax is independent of income
• Regressive taxes: the tax decreases proportionally in income
The Ability-to-pay Principle: Vertical equity
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We want a tax system that produces an equitable split of the total sacrifice due to taxation.
1. All income earners sacrifice the same absolute amount of utility• Under diminishing marginal returns, higher earners will need to pay more Euros in tax• Tax could be progressive, neutral or progressive
2. An equi-proportional sacrifice of utility• Necessarily progressive
3. Least aggregate sacrifice of utility• Having paid tax, each earners’ marginal utility of money is equal• Under identical utility functions, everyone has the same post-tax income• Would involve 100% marginal rates
Historically, the dominant choice has been the utilization of progressive income taxes, but rather for redistributive criteria.
The Ability-to-pay Principle: Income and Utility
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εt,B =
B
BT
T
- If εt,B > 1 progressive tax- If εt,B = 1 proportional tax- If εt,B < 1 regressive tax
1. According to the elasticity of the tax burden with regard to the tax base
Let T = tax paid and B = tax base
The Ability-to-pay Principle: 3 Measures of Progressivity
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B
BT
T
B
T
T
B
BTBT
ATR
MTRεt,B = = = =
- If MTR > ATR progressive
tax
- If MTR = ATR
proportional tax
- If MTR < ATR regressive
tax
2. According to the average tax rate and marginal tax rate
ATR: Tax rate that affects the comprehensive tax base
MTR: Tax rate that affects the last unit of the tax base
Let T = tax paid and B = tax base
The Ability-to-pay Principle: 3 Measures of Progressivity
𝜏𝑚𝑎𝑟𝑔𝑖𝑛𝑎𝑙=∆𝑇𝑎𝑥 𝑅𝑒𝑣𝑒𝑛𝑢𝑒∆𝑇𝑎𝑥 𝐵𝑎𝑠𝑒
𝜏𝑎𝑣𝑒𝑟𝑎𝑔𝑒=𝑇𝑎𝑥𝑅𝑒𝑣𝑒𝑛𝑢𝑒𝑇𝑎𝑥 𝐵𝑎𝑠𝑒
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• If > 0 progressive tax
• If = 0 proportional tax
• If < 0 regressive tax
3. According to the relation between the average tax rate and the variation of the tax base
ATRB
T(B)
BB T(B)
B2 MTRB T(B)
B2 B MTR
T(B)
B
B2 MTR ATR
B
ATRB
ATRB
ATRB
The Ability-to-pay Principle: 3 Measures of Progressivity
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Advantages: Generates resources to finance• Pure public goods• Preferential goods• Redistribution between the wealthy and the poor
Drawbacks: Negative effects on the economic efficiency • Taxes are distortionary • High administrative costs
The Ability-to-pay Principle: Advantages and Drawbacks
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1. The benefit principle is Pareto efficient, but it’s…
• difficult to apply in the case of public goods• difficult to finance preferential private goods• doesn’t allow to redistribute
2. Because of this the majority of taxes follows the ability-to-pay principle, that…
• allows to redistribute wealth from the rich to the poor • guarantees the provision of preferential goods to the whole population
…. but
• it’s Pareto inefficient • it has high administrative costs
Summary