The deadweight economic loss from taxes ( ) A. does not depend on tax rates. B. is higher when tax rates are higher than when tax rates are lower. C. is lower when tax rates are higher than when tax rates are lower. D. does not depend on the slope of the demand curve. ...
Taxes, Deadweight Loss and Intertemporal Female Labor Supply: Evidence from Panel Datadoi:10.2139/SSRN.1810817Anil KumarCenter for Policy Research, Maxwell School, Syracuse University
General equilibrium models have shown that substantial shifting of organizational form in response to tax rates implies a large deadweight loss of taxation. This paper estimates the impact of taxes on organizational form using data from 1900-1939. The results indicate that the effect of taxes is ...
Deadweight loss is the A、. reduction in total surplus that results from a tax. B、. loss of profit to businesses when a tax is imposed. C、. reduction in consumer surplus when a tax is placed on buyers. D、. decline in government revenue when taxes are reduced in a market. 答案:A...
2. How do excise taxes impact economic surplus and deadweight loss? If there are no externalities, excise taxes reduce consumer surplus and producer surplus and create deadweight loss. Below you will seeconsumer surplus and producer surplusbefore and after a per-unit tax as well as wheredeadweight...
Whether or not goods are inelastic may affect the deadweight welfare loss, and the quantity of resources consumed in their production. But the amount of tax revenue generated depends on the willingness of buyers to pay large sums for goods, and on the sensitivity of elasticity to price changes...
Henderson, David R.Hoover Digest: Research & Opinion on Public Policy
Taxes, Deadweight Loss and Intertemporal Female Labor Supply: Evidence from Panel Datadoi:10.2139/ssrn.1810817Very few existing studies have estimated female labor supply elasticities using a U.S. panel data set, though cross-sectional studies abound. Also, most existiSocial Science Electronic ...
General equilibrium models have shown that substantial shifting of organizational form in response to tax rates implies a large deadweight loss of taxation. This paper estimates the impact of taxes on organizational form using data from 1900-1939. The results indicate that the effect of taxes is ...
(1998): Taxes, organizational form, and the deadweight loss of the corporate income tax, Journal of Public Economics 69, 143-152.Goolsbee, Austan, 1998, "Taxes, Organizational Form, and the Deadweight Loss of the Corporate Income Tax," Journal of Public Economics 69(1), July, pp. 143-...