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14 December 2011. HMRC-HMT Economics of Taxation 2011 http://darp.lse.ac.uk/HMRC-HMT. 10.2 Policy design. Policy Design. Overview. Background. Objectives and constraints. Locating the subject within public economics. Optimal policy C&B. Optimal policy Strategic. Tax design. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Frank Cow
ell: Frank C
owell: H
MRC
-HM
T Economics of Taxation
HM
RC-H
MT Econom
ics of Taxation
HMRC-HMT Economics of Taxation 2011
http://darp.lse.ac.uk/HMRC-HMT
10.2 Policy design10.2 Policy design
14 December 2011
Frank Cow
ell: Frank C
owell: H
MRC
-HM
T Economics of Taxation
HM
RC-H
MT Econom
ics of Taxation 2
Overview...Background
Objectives and constraints
Optimal policy C&B
Tax design
Policy Design
Locating the subject within public economics
Optimal policy Strategic
Frank Cow
ell: Frank C
owell: H
MRC
-HM
T Economics of Taxation
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MT Econom
ics of Taxation 3
Issues in enforcement policy design
Identify main policy rules based on utilitarian ethics using the principal model types
Objectives reconcile with utilitarian goals? what guidance for tax agencies?
Implications for tax policy what guidance for tax agencies? impact of level and structure of income tax on tax evasion? and vice versa?
Feedback to tax design For overviews: Cowell (2004), Slemrod and Yitzhaki (2002)
Frank Cow
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owell: H
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T Economics of Taxation
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Government
Taxpayers
The principal economic actors
Tax Authority
The key players
Delegation Tax farming
Corruption model
Control & reporting, simple constitution
Further delegation
Inspector InspectorInspector
Control & reporting, full delegation
Frank Cow
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Government Control? Government is denied direct information about citizens
Is therefore denied some measure of control Multi-layered structure
Different types of concealed information and control failure? Leads to different types of economic model
Fundamental difference between types of “control failure” 1 Tax-evasion: Assumes effectively a two-level model
Version 1 (Government, taxpayer). Assumes complete internal compliance; external non-compliance.
Version 2 (Tax authority, taxpayer). A simplified model of delegation. 2 Corruption: focus on incentives facing the inspector level
Taxpayer offers payment to inspector to reduce prob of punishment Inspector is monitored by authority.
Frank Cow
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Questions in enforcement policy
Policy questions from previous lecture What is the optimum degree of enforcement? Can smart auditing improve efficiency? Move beyond this to broader questions
Should we try to eliminate evasion? Often an implicit objective But on what grounds?
Implications of devolution of function Not just lack of control Also the type of objective function
Implications for tax design?
Frank Cow
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owell: H
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Connection with previous topic Related to compliance lecture Examine general issues of “breakdown” in fiscal
relationships tax under-reporting is one example also black/shadow economy
And the mechanisms that may act as insulation institutions social factors
Frank Cow
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owell: H
MRC
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T Economics of Taxation
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MT Econom
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Overview...Background
Objectives and constraints
Optimal policy C&B
Policy Design
Limitations of standard utilitarian model
Optimal policy Strategic
Frank Cow
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owell: H
MRC
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T Economics of Taxation
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Modelling issues
What is the appropriate objective? Law enforcement? Eliminate evasion? Welfare of law-abiding citizens? Utilitarianism?
What institutional structure? Direct government-taxpayer relation? Tax collection/enforcement agencies?
What components of the enforcement problem? requires a multi-stage approach see Cowell (1989)
Frank Cow
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owell: H
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T Economics of Taxation
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Utilitarian enforcement problem Basic behavioural model
taxpayer maximises expected utility Eu(c) = Eu([1 – t] y + r te) y: taxable income t: proportionate tax rate e: concealed income r : rate of return to evasion (= – s with prob p, 1 with prob 1 – p)
Outcome of basic model determines optimal evasion response e* = e(p, s, t; y, a) in general depends on both tax and enforcement parameters (p, s, t) and
on personal characteristics (y, a) Welfare model
Take expected utility of representative taxpayer as welfare criterion W = [1 – p] u([1 – t] y + te) + p u([1 – t] y – ste) where y = y , a = a (representative taxpayer) (so we can drop y, a from optimal evasion response)
Frank Cow
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owell: H
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T Economics of Taxation
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Fundamental constraints Realities for the government / tax agency
a fixed revenue requirement R cost of enforcement (p) where is an increasing function in utilitarian modelmay include private compliance costs
Government budget constraint R R which implies ty –rte – (p) R where r is the expected rate of return to evasion, 1– p – ps zero evasion if p p0 where (p0) = ty –R
Welfare contour for utilitarianism [1 – p] u([1 – t] y + te) + p u([1 – t] y – ste) = const where e = e(p, s, t)
Evasion eliminated where rate of return is zero: s = [1−p]/p gives zero-evasion contour where welfare is u([1 – t] y) = W0 so determines boundary of “honesty set”
Frank Cow
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owell: H
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Model types
Problem essentially has three control variables, p, s, t Three stages in the approach to the solution Keep t fixed
enforcement authority has considerable, but not total, discretion can trade off severity of penalty against probability of detection
Keep s or p fixed unmovable penal system inflexible police system trade off tax against an enforcement parameter
Vary p, s, t together Total flexibility
Frank Cow
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The problem if t is fixed
0 1
s
p
R R
zero
-eva
sion
line
W
W0
s [1−p]/p
p0
A
B
The feasible set
A: The zero-evasion point W0 welfare contour through AWelfare contoursB: the optimum
The “enforced honesty set”
(pp00) = ty ty ––R
WW00 satisfies satisfies s = [1−p]/p
Welfare increases Welfare increases “South-West”“South-West”
Frank Cow
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owell: H
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The problem if p is fixed
0 1
s
t
R R
W
1−p——pA
Draw feasible set The “enforced honesty” set A welfare contour Welfare contours Optimum
Frank Cow
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The problem if p,s,t all variable
01
s
pA
objective
constraint
Optimisation problem againTransform the problem
“Enforced honesty” set
Revenue increases to North-East
R = constant
reve
nue
Tax authority moves this way?
Frank Cow
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Overview...Background
Objectives and constraints
Optimal policy C&B
Policy Design
A utilitarian approach
Optimal policy Strategic
Frank Cow
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MRC
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Optimal degree of enforcement? Take a standard welfare-economics approach
choose the optimal p, given fixed s, t Basic utilitarian model
homogeneous population simple revenue target a type of cost-benefit approach to enforcement
Individual (slightly extended) income: y = wh consumption: c = [1 t]y + rte leisure: ℓ = 1 h utility: u(c, ℓ)
Government/tax authority enforcement cost per taxpayer: (p) revenue requirement: R expected revenue leakage per tax dollar: r =1 p ps budget constraint: twh [1 p ps]t e(, w) (p) ≥R / n
Utilitarian model, homogenous population objective function: v(, w) = max Eu(c, ℓ) Lagrangean: v(, w) + [twh [1 p ps]t e(, w) (p) R / n ]
Frank Cow
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Choosing p for given (s,t)
MC is marginal audit cost is monotonic increasing
MB is marginal audit yields + supply side and risk effects may not be monotonic may go to zero
Optimum where MB = MC p = [1+s]te r te/p w0ℓ/p e(, w) + vp/
0 1
p
p
Bp
p*
Probabilities, costs and benefitsMarginal cost of auditMarginal benefit of auditOptimum investigation effort
Frank Cow
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Extensions – agent interaction Cost-benefit approach is essentially individualistic
compute MB for each agent Social interaction models
prevent epidemics? shift the equilibrium? manipulate expectations? Iyer et al 2010)) raise search costs?
Focus on smart use of information recognise that agents may have better market information than tax authority exploit information about all agents’ behaviour
Example: tax compliance by firms use of information: compare simple auditing with relative auditing relationships amongst firms is essential to the impact of policy choice Cournot behaviour: get effect on output as well as tax receipts collusion amongst firms – smart auditing less effective (Bayer and Cowell 2009)
Examine smart auditing further in a reporting model
Frank Cow
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owell: H
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Overview...Background
Objectives and constraints
Optimal policy C&B
Policy Design
Strategic approach to audit policy
Optimal policy Strategic
Frank Cow
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Tax-payer v. Tax-collector game Model ingredientsModel ingredients
tax rate tax rate tt, surcharge , surcharge s,s, cost of audit cost of audit are exogenously determined are exogenously determined tax enforcement powers are delegated, like contract farmingtax enforcement powers are delegated, like contract farming
To find a solution we need to look closely at:To find a solution we need to look closely at: the structure of taxpayer population the structure of taxpayer population control that can be exercised by tax authoritycontrol that can be exercised by tax authority
Essence of model is taxpayer heterogeneity differ by income and by attitude to tax-paying authority does not know individual taxpayer attributes and incomes...and incomes... but does know distribution in the population
Take a simple 2x2 version:
type income attitude pop proportionpoor y0 ??? 0
honest rich y0 + y always pay 1
chancers y0 + y cheat if can 2
Frank Cow
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A mixed-strategy approach
Each side expects the other to play probabilistically: tax authority investigates low incomes with probability p taxpayer cheats with probability
Expected net tax receiptsT = 12 – ty + 2p[[1 + s]t y – ] – 0p
Marginal impact on receipts from increasing p is:2[[1 + s]t y – ] – 0
This is positive if is greater than a threshold value:0
2[[1+s]t y – ]
Frank Cow
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Equilibrium concepts Taxpayers and tax agency each form beliefs about the
other’s actions Equilibrium where each adopts a consistent set of
beliefs What is the optimal “tailored” audit strategy? Two types of relationship between taxpayer and tax
authority: tax authority precommits to a strategy tax authority does not precommit see Reinganum and Wilde (1985, 1986)
Frank Cow
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Precommitment: policy If the tax authority were permissive, net receipts would be low:
T|=1,p=0 = 1ty If authority can commit it ought to audit all low-income reports:
p = 0 if report is y0 + y p = 1 if report is y0
Tax receipts net of audit costs are T|=0,p=1 = 12ty – 0
This amounts to a “Punish the poor” policy Is this in fact optimal?
viability credibility
Frank Cow
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Precommitment: optimality? Condition 1 for financial viability is:
T|=0,p=1 ≥ T|=1,p=0 12ty – 0p ≥ 1ty 2ty ≥ 0
Condition 2 for financial viability is: net return from investigating a false report must be non-negative sty – ≥ 0
Combining the two conditions sty – ≥ s – 2/0ty satisfied if audit cost is not too high and there are not too many honest people
Credibility: everyone sees that only the genuinely poor people are audited no revenue is ever raised in equilibrium policy may not be credible in a repeated setting
Frank Cow
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No commitment: outline Tax authority:
believes probability that a chancer will cheat is perceived probability of catching an evader is 2/[02] expected net tax receipts can be written as:
0const + 0+2
is pivotal value of belief Chancers:
believe that probability of audit is p expected utility if cheat is: pu(ty0t–
sty)pu(ty0y) expected utility if don’t cheat is: u(ty0y) there is a pivotal probability satisfied p which equates these two utilities if u is risk neutral then p = 1 / [1+s]
Solution: tax authority’s best response given belief defines reaction function p() chancers’ best response given belief p defines reaction function (p) equilibrium where beliefs consistent – where reaction functions intersect
Frank Cow
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owell: H
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No commitment: Solution
1
0 1
p*
taxpayerreaction
tax authorityreaction
p
p()
(p)
• (p*,*)
always audit if proportion always audit if proportion of cheats is believed highof cheats is believed high
always cheat if probability always cheat if probability of detection is believed lowof detection is believed low
The strategy space Tax authority’s strategy Chancer’s strategy Equilibrium
pp 1 / [1 + 1 / [1 +ss]]
00
22[[1+[[1+ss]]tt y – y – ]]
Frank Cow
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owell: H
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How the model works Response to tax-enforcement parameters:Response to tax-enforcement parameters:
∂∂/∂/∂ > 0> 0 ∂∂pp/∂/∂ = 0= 0 ∂∂/∂/∂t t < 0< 0 ∂∂pp/∂/∂t t ≥ 0≥ 0 ∂∂/∂/∂s s < 0< 0 ∂∂pp/∂/∂s s < 0< 0
Changing population proportions:Changing population proportions: ∂∂/∂/∂ > 0> 0 ∂∂pp/∂/∂ = 0= 0 ∂∂/∂/∂ < 0< 0 ∂∂pp/∂/∂ = 0= 0
Frank Cow
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owell: H
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T Economics of Taxation
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Assessment
Compliance is a central component of public economics Arises naturally from the issues concerning the provision of public
goods Analysed using standard microeconomic techniques
Incentives issues similar to those of labour supply Important to model the interactions involved in evasion
Perceptions of others’ behaviour may be important. Also interaction between tax-payers and enforcement agencies
Crucial issues on policy concern the institutional background What is the nature of the optimisation problem?
Is a standard reporting model appropriate? What information should each party be assumed to have?
Frank Cow
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owell: H
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T Economics of Taxation
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References Cowell, F. A. (1989) “Honesty is sometimes the best policy,” Cowell, F. A. (1989) “Honesty is sometimes the best policy,” European Economic European Economic
ReviewReview, , 3333,605-617 ,605-617 * Cowell, F. A. (2004) “Carrots and Sticks in Enforcement” in Aaron, H. J. and * Cowell, F. A. (2004) “Carrots and Sticks in Enforcement” in Aaron, H. J. and
Slemrod, J. (ed.) Slemrod, J. (ed.) The Crisis in Tax AdministrationThe Crisis in Tax Administration, The Brookings Institution, , The Brookings Institution, Washington DC, 230-275 Washington DC, 230-275
Iyengar, R. (2008) “I'd rather be Hanged for a Sheep than a Lamb: The Iyengar, R. (2008) “I'd rather be Hanged for a Sheep than a Lamb: The Unintended Consequences of 'Three-Strikes' Laws,” NBER Working Paper, 13784Unintended Consequences of 'Three-Strikes' Laws,” NBER Working Paper, 13784
Iyer, G.S. , Reckers, P.M.J. and Sanders, D.L. (2010) “Increasing Tax Compliance Iyer, G.S. , Reckers, P.M.J. and Sanders, D.L. (2010) “Increasing Tax Compliance in Washington State: A Field Experiment,” in Washington State: A Field Experiment,” National Tax JournaNational Tax Journal, l, 6363,7-32,,7-32,
Reinganum, J. F. and L. L. Wilde (1985) “Income tax compliance in a principal-Reinganum, J. F. and L. L. Wilde (1985) “Income tax compliance in a principal-agent framework agent framework ,,” ” Journal of Public EconomicsJournal of Public Economics, , 2626, 1-18., 1-18.
Reinganum, J. F. and L. L. Wilde (1986) “Equilibrium verification and reporting Reinganum, J. F. and L. L. Wilde (1986) “Equilibrium verification and reporting policies in a model of tax compliance,” policies in a model of tax compliance,” International Economic Review,International Economic Review, 2727, 739-, 739-760. 760.
* Slemrod, J. and Yitzhaki, S. (2002) “Tax avoidance, evasion and * Slemrod, J. and Yitzhaki, S. (2002) “Tax avoidance, evasion and administration,” administration,” Handbook of Public EconomicsHandbook of Public Economics, Volume 3, pp 1423-1470, North-, Volume 3, pp 1423-1470, North-Holland, ElsevierHolland, Elsevier